Business Management Responsible Management Of Roles Within Case Study

PAGES
2
WORDS
556
Cite

Business Management Responsible Management of Roles within the Business Culture: The Acme Minerals Extraction Company Case Study

The case study of the Acme Minerals Extraction Company is characterized by a conflict arising from two groups within the organization, composed of the geologists, geophysicists, and engineers (first group) and the skilled and semi-skilled laborers (second group). This faction between the 'brains' and 'brawns' group in Acme has brought about increased organizational instability and lower productivity due to the groups' conflict. Suzanne Howard, who spearheaded the establishment of a program "that would improve productivity and morale" among the company's employees, developed a four-step plan that aims to bring together the brain and brawn groups. The model of Responsible Management of Power, wherein empowerment among employees is achieved through a four-way process, characterizes the program. Howard has first gone through the process of...

...

The second step involves consultation and influence-sharing among the groups' members, and "problem chat" sessions for the employees. After consulting with the employees, Howard encouraged participation among the employees by forming the SPITS program, and eventually achieved delegation from all employees within the three groups through social interaction, as illustrated in the increased level of productivity and decline of costs after the program was successfully employed in Acme.
However, Acme's success in applying Howard's program was, expectedly, limited only to the Acme setting. When the program was applied to Acme's Lubbock plant, the program backfired because the plant's organizational culture is entirely different with that of the organizational culture of Acme in Wichita. Since every business organization has its own culture, i.e., its members of Acme…

Cite this Document:

"Business Management Responsible Management Of Roles Within" (2004, February 09) Retrieved April 19, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/business-management-responsible-management-161633

"Business Management Responsible Management Of Roles Within" 09 February 2004. Web.19 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/business-management-responsible-management-161633>

"Business Management Responsible Management Of Roles Within", 09 February 2004, Accessed.19 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/business-management-responsible-management-161633

Related Documents

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 author targets several common learning disabilities which can riddle even powerful organizations, they are: identifying with only one position, external enemies, the illusion of taking charge, fixation on events, the parable of the boiled frog,

Likewise, Lynn points out that, "Japan's recent economic problems may have far more to do with its financial and bureaucratic systems than its managerial systems." According to Everett and Strach, "Japan experienced a decade of zero growth in the 1990s and slumped into recession," but, "The global dynamism and success of Canon, Hoya, Honda, Toyota, TDK, Rohm and Sony, known as the 'seven samurai,' contrasted with the quagmire of

Business Management Each company must face the decision on their own as to what sort of ethical guidelines they want to follow. While Friedman (1970) made the case that a business only has social responsibility to earn profits, this theory is not airtight. It is based on agency theory, that management is working as agents of the shareholders. The shareholders are rational investors whose only desire is to make more money.

It would also be appropriate where management is too removed from the impact of their operational decisions to gauge the effects of those decisions on the working conditions of the employees who are responsible for implementing them. Finally, the participative leadership style would also be appropriate for introduction where long-time experienced personnel are exhibiting a lack of morale or enthusiasm for their work or where there is a low

Business - Management The Four Major Functions of Business Management At the turn of the twentieth century, Henri Fayol, a French industrialist, outlined his theory of business management. He proposed that managers focus their responsibilities in the areas of planning, organizing, leading, and controlling. In planning, goals are defined, strategies are established, and activities coordinated. It is a decisional role that involves entrepreneurial activities, problem solving, negotiating, and techniques in persuasion. The planning

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 processes. These thought processes guide certain behaviors through decisions and action to be applied in response to satisfy certain need. Two significant approaches are Vroom's expectancy theory and Adam's equity