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Role of the Manager
'Managers create and maintain a superstructure while
shaping the behaviour of others within and around it'
Chapman (2001). She suggests that the roles of managers
are changing as new forms of organizations evolve, thus more flexible and fluid
arrangements of people and other resources are required. Chapman (ibid) notes
that later theorists who attempted to relate
Fayol's
(1919) objectives or functions of management to the everyday
activities of managers found it very difficult. She cites Stewart (1982) who
argues that more attention needs to be given to the dynamic aspects of
managerial jobs and work; and Kotter (1982) who describes managerial work in
terms of 'agendas and networks'.
Classical Management
theory
Warner &
Witzel (2004) on the other hand still favour the management theories
of Fayol (ibid) arguing that his ideas focussed
on the whole organization and not on the specialist functions of Taylorist
scientific management. Management is divided into seven separate tasks known by
the acronym POSDCORB; planning; organizing; staffing; directing; coordinating;
reporting; budgeting. Although criticized for being too functionalist it is
important to note that the tasks are not seen as mutually exclusive. Fayol
argued that all management tasks could fit into one of these seven categories
and that all seven were in some way the task of every manager. Hence Fayol's
theory is said to remain the best simple description and classification of the
daily tasks and duties of management yet developed. [pp.108-9]
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Increasing Organizational
Effectiveness
Chapman (ibid) identifies key processes for organizational effectiveness to
which managers can add value. These include establishing broader relationships
as entrepreneurs and adopting supportive roles as coaches or institutional
leaders (citing Garvin, 1998). Managers should be freer to develop in their
roles and expand their options and territory as opportunities arise. It is also
suggested that the idea of the manager as an individual per se should give way
to an understanding of how the 'players' contribute to the manager's behaviour.
It is emphasized that the exercise of judgement, not just in major strategic
decisions but also in an everyday sense, sensitive to the workplace and the
wider commercial situation, can be a source of new growth and revitalization of
the business. Influence is a second key managerial process, shaping the
behaviour of others to obtain support and cooperation. The dimensions of
influence identified as critical include the capacity to motivate, persuade,
appreciate, understand and negotiate.
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