Management is the
process of coordinating work activities so that they are completed efficiently
and effectively with and through other people. The process represents the
ongoing functions or primary activities engaged in by managers. These functions
are typically labeled planning, organizing, leading, and controlling.
Managerial Concerns
Efficiency is often
described as "doing the things right"--- refers to getting the most
output from the least amount of inputs. Because managers deal with limited
inputs—including resources such as people, money, and equipment—they are concerned
with the efficient use of those resources.
Effectiveness is often
described as "doing the right things"—that is, those work activities that
will help the organization reach its goals.
Who are Managers?
Someone who coordinates and oversees the work of other people
so that organizational goals can be accomplished is called manager. They were
the organizational members who told others what to do and how to do it. It was
easy to differentiate managers from non-managerial employees. Managers can be
classified into three categories:
First-Line Managers
They manage the work of
non-managerial employees.
Middle Managers
They manage the work of first-line
managers.
Top Managers
They are responsible for making
organization-wide decisions and establishing plans and goals that affect the
entire organization.
What do Managers Do?
In the early part of the twentieth century, a French industrialist by the name of Henri Fayol
proposed that all managers perform five management functions: planning, organizing, commanding, coordinating, and controlling.
The planning function involves the process of defining goals, establishing strategies to achieve goals,developing plans to integrate and coordinate activities. Arranging and structuring work to accomplish organizational
goals is called organizing. Leading is the process to work with and through people to accomplish goals.
The final management function managers perform is controlling. After the goals are set and the plans are formulated (planning), the structural arrangements determined (organizing), and the people hired, trained, and motivated (leading), there has to be some evaluation of whether things are going as planned.To ensure that work is going as it should, managers must monitor and evaluate
performance.
performance.
The management process is the set of ongoing decisions and work
activities in which managers engage as they plan, organize, lead, and control.
activities in which managers engage as they plan, organize, lead, and control.