By Shivam Sharma CSE
MANAGMENT
Management is the act of getting people together to accomplish desired
goals and objectives using available resources efficiently and effectively. Management
comprises planning, organizing, staffing, leading or directing, and controlling
an organization (a group of one or more people or entities) or effort for the
purpose of accomplishing a goal. Resourcing encompasses the deployment and
manipulation of human resources, financial resources, technological resources
and natural resources.
Since organizations can be viewed as systems, management can also be
defined as human action, including design, to facilitate the production of
useful outcomes from a system. This view opens the opportunity to 'manage'
oneself, a pre-requisite to attempting to manage others.
HISTORY
• Organization and
coordination of the activities of an enterprise in accordance with certain
policies and in achievement of clearly defined objectives. Management is often
included as a factor of production along with machines, materials and money.
According to the management guru Peter Drucker (1909–2005), the basic task of a
management is twofold: marketing and innovation.
• Directors and managers
have the power and responsibility to make decisions in order to manage an
enterprise when given the authority by the shareholders. As a discipline,
management comprises the interlocking functions of formulating corporate policy
and organizing, planning, controlling, and directing the firm's resources to
achieve the policy's objectives. The size of management can range from one
person in a small firm to hundreds or thousands of managers in multinational
companies. In large firms the board of directors formulates the policy which is
implemented by the chief executive officer.
Nature of managerial work
In for-profit work, management has as its primary function the satisfaction
of a range of stakeholders. This typically involves making a profit (for the
shareholders), creating valued products at a reasonable cost (for customers)
and providing rewarding employment opportunities (for employees). In nonprofit
management, add the importance of keeping the faith of donors. In most models
of management/governance, shareholders vote for the board of directors, and the
board then hires senior management. Some organizations have experimented with
other methods (such as employee-voting models) of selecting or reviewing
managers; but this occurs only very rarely.
In the public sector of countries constituted as representative
democracies, voters elect politicians to public office. Such politicians hire
many managers and administrators, and in some countries like the United States
political appointees lose their jobs on the election of a new
president/governor/mayor.
Theoretical scope
At first, one views management functionally, such as measuring quantity,
adjusting plans, setting and meeting goals,foresighting/forecasting. This
applies even in situations when planning does not take place. From this
perspective, Henri Fayol (1841–1925)[2] considers management to consist of six
functions: forecasting, planning, organizing, commanding, coordinating and
controlling. He was one of the most influential contributors to modern concepts
of management.
Another way of thinking, Mary Parker Follett (1868–1933), defined
management as "the art of getting things done through people". She
described management as philosophy.[3]
Some people, however, find this definition useful but far too narrow. The
phrase "management is what managers do" occurs widely, suggesting the
difficulty of defining management, the shifting nature of definitions and the
connection of managerial practices with the existence of a managerial cadre or
class.
One habit of thought regards management as equivalent to "business
administration" and thus excludes management in places outside commerce,
as for example in charities and in the public sector. More realistically,
however, every organization must manage its work through leading
employees,people, planning, controlling and organizing processes, technology,
etc. to maximize effectiveness. Nonetheless, many people refer to university
departments which teach management as "business schools." Some
institutions (such as the Harvard Business School) use that name while others
(such as the Yale School of Management) employ the more inclusive term
"management."
Historical development
Difficulties arise in tracing the history of management. Some see it (by
definition) as a late modern (in the sense of late modernity)
conceptualization. On those terms it cannot have a pre-modern history, only
harbingers (such as stewards). Others, however, detect management-like-thought
back to Sumerian traders and to the builders of the pyramids of ancient Egypt.
Slave-owners through the centuries faced the problems of exploiting/motivating
a dependent but sometimes unenthusiastic or recalcitrant workforce, but many
pre-industrial enterprises, given their small scale, did not feel compelled to
face the issues of management systematically. However, innovations such as the
spread of Arabic numerals (5th to 15th centuries) and the codification of
double-entry book-keeping (1494) provided tools for management assessment,
planning and control.
Given the scale of most commercial operations and the lack of mechanized
record-keeping and recording before the industrial revolution, it made sense
for most owners of enterprises in those times to carry out management functions
by and for themselves. But with growing size and complexity of organizations,
the split between owners (individuals, industrial dynasties or groups of
shareholders) and day-to-day managers (independent specialists in planning and
control) gradually became more common.
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