1000 Search Results for Theory on Work and Management
Managing Human Resources
Change and conflict are some of the manager's current challenges. This thesis tries to inquire into the change processes and managers response to conflicts that arise as a result of change resistance. The manifestation of co Continue Reading...
Management
There are a number of different definitions of management. The dictionary definition from Google is "the process of dealing with or controlling things or people." The Merriam-Webster definition adds that the process must be done "with a d Continue Reading...
Theory X and Theory Y
When working with people, regardless of the organization, one must be cognizant of the way individuals are motivated. Motivation, in fact, is one of the basic driving forces that allow individuals to work, change, and even actu Continue Reading...
Management and Business
Management Theories and Principles of Each Reading
The Fifth Discipline forces managers to look at the way in which learning disabilities which are common to organizations can actually stunt their growth and progress. The au Continue Reading...
In addition, given its bureaucratic and restricted nature, budgets become out of date within a few months. This challenge is associated with the frequent changes to assumptions arising from changes in the market like commodity prices, demand, exchan Continue Reading...
Work Situation
Standard Chartered Bank in America Houston, Texas
Standard Chartered Bank is a multinational bank with several branches across the world offering different financial services in different regions. The bank is headquartered in New Yor Continue Reading...
Management as a Profession
According to the Merriam Webster dictionary, a Profession is: a. A calling requiring specialized knowledge and often long and intensive academic preparation b. A principal calling, vocation, or employment and c. The whole Continue Reading...
Management
Functions Management Model
This paper is divided into three parts. The first part discusses the implications of the four functions of management model for today's managers and defends why these four functions are still applicable to each Continue Reading...
Management Organizational Structure
Organizational structure of an organization is highly determined by the kind of the products, services it is engaged in. Equally important is the size of the organization in determining which type of management st Continue Reading...
Work-Related Attitudes: Prejudice, Job Satisfaction, And Organizational Commitment
Area of the Study:
A worker's attitude heavily impacts his behavior and his performance in any organization. A positive attitude results in an increase in overall pr Continue Reading...
Theory X & Theory Y
Douglas McGregor's Theory X Theory Y are a set of dichotomous views about human nature that guide management. Theory X holds that humans generally dislike work, are irresponsible and require close supervision to do their jobs Continue Reading...
Management
As organizations become larger in both scope and scale, the need for both management and leadership compounds. Many organization problems today, correlate heavily to a lack of true management. Aspects such as fraud, high employee turnover Continue Reading...
In my opinion, valuable organizational change is a process. It is nothing that comes from one day to the other. It requires the combined efforts of the organization as a whole: Skilled managers and the commitment of an organization's workforce alike Continue Reading...
The clear line drawn between accounting and managing, for example, illustrates that traditional accounting systems are of little use to the managers, and that they should have their own accounting systems to meet their needs.
Another way in which F Continue Reading...
Management
Scientific management vs. Human relations Management
The theory of scientific management's objective was to improve economic efficacy, especially within the realm of labor productivity, where efficiency was quite variable. The components Continue Reading...
Need theories discover the kinds of needs that motivate people but it lacks to explain how people decide to behave in a certain manner for the satisfaction of their needs (Campbell, 1983).
b) Process Theories: These theories explain the thought pro Continue Reading...
' The researchers did include one anecdote of a South African woman of Indian ancestry, and how she dealt with the unconscious racism of her colleagues, drawing upon a positive sense of community solidarity and avoiding some of the negative emotions Continue Reading...
In other words, he expects for his efforts to be accordingly remunerated or rewarded with a promotion, a full time job offer for a trainee and so on (Stuart-Kotze, 2008).
In implementing these individual needs, organizational managers have develope Continue Reading...
Managing to Keep Apple Fresh: Organizational Culture
Issue Identification
Employees
Competitors
Critical Discussion
Path-goal Model
Today, Apple can be regarded one of the most successful companies in the industry within which it operates. At s Continue Reading...
Managing Organizations/Hotel Management
Managing Organizations
The Marriot Corporation
A look at Six Sigma and the 7S McKinsey Framework
The Marriott Hotel Chain is a global brand offering resort and luxury hotel furnishings at popular vacation a Continue Reading...
Leadership is an
ability which, either inborn or developed through hard work and ingenuity,
presents the members of the organization with a paragon to forging action
toward rational goals. While it is the responsibility of managerial
personnel to is Continue Reading...
Employees of today know that they must be constantly sharpening their skills.
Keeping people "excited" and "nimble" through continued training ensures that companies will have an extensive stock of in-house talent to promote during crunch times, an Continue Reading...
" [Michael E. Thorn p.4]
IMPACT OF Management FUNCTION ON OPERATIONS Management
This section analyses the impact that the previously discussed functions of management has on the operations management.
Planning is the most important pillar of opera Continue Reading...
519). The point before proceeding is that when employees sense that their organization is ethically responsible vis-a-vis citizenship, their work engagement is "likely stimulated" (Lin, p. 521). The procedure Lin follows in this research is to condu Continue Reading...
Management Theories
Historical records show that people always organized themselves in order to work together towards a common objective and they coordinated their efforts to achieve this objective (Accel-Team 2004). It was not until the latter part Continue Reading...
3. What are the main developments that have enabled more flexible work arrangements to flourish?
The pervasive adoption of the Internet as a means to collaborate, communicate and accomplished shared objectives has been the single greatest contribu Continue Reading...
Some or all such authority may be in fact unlimited. This is when a committee can counterbalance authority and diffuse power within an organization since effectively only a small faction is making important decisions. The best use of committees is t Continue Reading...
The information security system also helps in the provision of guidelines in the analysis and in the evaluation of security systems which are considered vulnerable to be used based on the former or initially used security measures in the organizati Continue Reading...
Management Control Systems as a Catalyst of Strategic Agility and Organizational Performance
The continual evolution of Management Control Systems as a Package (MCSP) today encompasses accounting, finance, human resources, market-based data, managem Continue Reading...
Management
Undercover Boss is a great show for illustrating core management concepts. A season five episode features the CEO of the Larry H. Miller Company, owner of the Utah Jazz along with eighty other concerns. This episode features issues relate Continue Reading...
Management of Work-Related Stress
Who is responsible for the management of work-related stress? While there are those who are convinced that the responsibility of managing work-related stress lies primarily with the management of an organization, ot Continue Reading...
Should the outcomes perform well against the goals, then the performance appraisal process must undergo a re-evaluation. Theories about the underperformance of key outcomes can be matched against feedback from the appraisers and the employees. From Continue Reading...
He wished to build the happiest place on the planet and this message continues to be handed over to the new recruits who join the organization presently also. Disney exists to give a guarantee to the Americans that are there for real. Disneyland is Continue Reading...
"The most important issues which have to be addressed here are precise monitoring (diagnosis) of current results and their comparison with what has been planned. Effective managerial control must always be followed by feedback for correcting initial Continue Reading...
The people belonging to the third corporate culture are from the engineering culture. This culture is personified by engineers and technical specialists, who believe on the awesome power of the technology in solving the organizational culture. Thes Continue Reading...
It is not that managers do not see the benefit in conflict that they eschew it; it is that conflict is high-risk and can have significant negative externalities, some of which linger with the organization for a long time. Managers are less enthusias Continue Reading...
Management Approach That Offers the Best Outcomes
for Knowledge Development
Understanding business, and what that process contains, is extremely complex. It takes years of study and focus to gain even a rudimentary idea of all a company has to do t Continue Reading...
Operations and Supply Chain Management. Upper Saddle River, NJ: McGraw Hill Higher Education. 13th Edition.
Wayne Norman, Chris McDonald. (2004). Getting to the Bottom of the "Triple Bottom Line." Business Ethics Quarterly, 14(2), 243-262.
L Wang, Continue Reading...
Long-Term Employment -- Japanese organizations tend to have longer employee cycles than U.S. companies. Many U.S. companies treat employees as replaceable parts. It is far more cost-effective and efficient to retain expertise than continually retra Continue Reading...
This is consistent with contingency theory -- not only must the managerial system be broadly appropriate for the firm type, but is must also be fine-tuned to meet the specific structural and environmental needs of the firm. The subsystems must be co Continue Reading...