Chapters 1-2 Flashcards
what is the primary responsibility of top management?
To Determine an organization’s goals, strategy, and design
What is an organization’s mission?
- sometimes called official goals
- refers to the formally stated definition of business scope and outcomes the organization is trying to achieve
What is a mission statement?
- communicates to current and prospective employees, customers, investors, suppliers, and competitors what the organization stands for and what it is trying to achieve.
- communicates legitimacy to internal and external stakeholders
What are operative goals?
- designate the ends sought through the actual operating procedures of the organization and explain what the organization is actually trying to do.
- describe specific measurable outcomes
- often concerned with the short run
What are your typical Operative Goal Categories?
1) Overall performance
2) Resources
3) Market
4) Employee Development
5) Innovation and Change
6) Productivity
compare Official goals and Operative Goals?
- Official goals describe a value system for the organization
- Official goals legitimize the organization
- Operative goals represent the primary task of the organization
- Operative goals are more explicit and well defined.
- Operative goals can provide employees with a sense of direction so they know what they are working toward
Compare Strategy vs Goals?
- Strategy is a plan for interacting with the competitive environment to achieve organizational goals.
- Goals define where the organization wants to go
- Strategy is how the organization will get there
Explain Porter’s Competitive Strategies?
- low-cost leadership > increase market share by emphasizing low cost compared to competitors
- Differentiation > attempt to distinguish their products or services from other in the industry
- Focus > organization concentrates on a specific market or buyer group
What is Miles and Snow’s Strategy Typology based on?
- based on the idea that managers seek to formulate strategies that will be congruent with the external environment
What are the four strategies associated with Miles and Snow?
- Prospector: strategy is to innovate, take risks, seek out new opportunities, and grow
- Defender: almost the opposite of prospector. concerned with stability or even retrenchment. seeks to hold onto current customers but neither innovates nor seeks to grow
- Analyzer: maintain a stable business while innovating on the periphery
- Reactor: not really a strategy at all. respond to environmental threats and opportunities in an ad hoc fashion. Top management has not defined a long-range plan or given the organization an explicit mission or goal.
how does organizational culture affect organization design?
An organizational culture that values teamwork, collaboration, creativity, and open communication among all employees and managers,for example, would not function well with a tight, vertical structure and strict rules and regulations.
What are the three contingency approaches to measuring effectiveness on different parts of the organization?
- Goal Approach
- Resource based
- Internal-process
Discuss the Resource-Based Approach?
- assumes organizations must be successful in obtaining and managing valued resources in order to be effective
- Indicators: obtaining and successfully managing resources is the criterion by which organizational effectiveness is assessed.
- Usefulness: is valuable when other indicators of performance are difficult to obtain.
Discuss the Internal-Process Approach of measuring effectiveness?
- effectiveness is measured as internal organizational health and efficiency
- Indicators: One main indicator is the organization’s economic efficiency.
- Usefulness: important because efficient use of resources and harmonious internal functioning are ways to assess organizational effectiveness. However, total output and the organization’s relationship with the external environment are not evaluated
What are the seven indicators of an effective organization as seen from an internal process approach?
- Strong corporate culture and positive work climate
- Team spirit, group loyalty, and teamwork
- Confidence, trust, and communication between workers and management
- Decision making near sources of info, regardless of where those sources are on the organizational chart
- Undistorted horizontal and vertical communications; sharing of relevant facts and feelings
- Rewards to managers for performance, growth, and development of subordinates and for creating an effective work group
- Interaction between the organization and its parts, with conflict that occurs over projects resolved in the interest of the organization