Lecture 2 B.SC (Construction Management)
Lecture 2 B.SC (Construction Management)
SAFAT Collage of
Science & Technology
Is a collection of AAstructured
structuredsocial
socialsystem
Is a collection of people
people who work system consisting
consisting ofand
of groups
who work together and
together and groups andworking
individuals individuals
coordinate their actions to
coordinate their workingtotogether
together to
meet some
achieve a wide variety of
actions to achieve a meet some agreed-
agreed-upon objectives.
goal
wide variety of goal upon objectives.
Traditional Organization and Management
Concepts
Management concepts and practice are influenced by the
ideologies of the broader society. Adam Smith (1776) in Wealth
of notion, provided the capitalistic ethic with its grand theory.
He argued for economic freedoms on the premise that
maximizing their self-interests, each persons would benefit the
total society. A systematic body of knowledge concerning
organization and management is the product of the late
nineteenth and the twentieth century. It is closely associated
with the industrial revaluation and the rise of large-scale
enterprises, which required the development of new
organization and management theory is based on contribution
from a number of sources, including scientific management,
administrative management theorists, the bureaucratic model,
microeconomic, and public administration. Eagle (1848) and
Marx (1876) saw the capitalistic system as a primary threat to
the social structure and recommended revolutionary remedies.
In 1936, Keynes provided the theoretical explanation for the
breakdown. (the great depression of the 1930s0
Evolution Of Management
Quantitative Systems
Systematic Administrative Continge
management theory Current and
management management ncy
future revolutions
theory
Scientific Human
Management relations Organizational
behavior
Bureaucracy
Traditional (Classical ) Management Theory:
(1) Scientific Management Movement: Frederick W.
Taylor (1856-1915); the primary emphasis was on
planning, standardizing and improving the efficiency
of human work.
(2) Administrative Management Theory:
Henri Foyal (1841-1925) and H. Giant (1861-1919) ;
the primary emphasis was the fourteen principles
provided the basic foundation of this school.
(3) Bureaucratic Management Theory:
Max Weber (1864-1920); his viewed as the most
efficient form of complex organization.
Systematic Management
Key concepts
Systematized manufacturing operations
Coordination of procedures and processes built into internal operations
Emphasis on economical operations, inventory management, and cost
control
Contributions
Beginning of formal management in the United States
Promotion of efficient, uninterrupted production
Limitations
Ignored relationship between an organization and it environment
Ignored differences in managers’ and workers’ views
Scientific management
1942
Five principle of Taylor
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Physiological. Includes hunger, thirst, shelter, sex, and other bodily
needs.
• Safety. Includes security and protection from physical and
emotional harm.
e what one is capable of becoming.
Presence Absence
Key Point:
Satisfaction and dissatisfaction are not opposites
but separate constructs
39
Systems Theory
Key concepts
Organization is viewed as a managed system
Management must interact with the environment
Organizational goals must address effectiveness and efficiency
Organizations contain a series of subsystems
There are many avenues to the same outcome
Synergies enable the whole to be more than the sum of the parts
Contributions
Recognized the importance of the relationship between the
organization and the environment
Limitations
Does not provide specific guidance on the functions of managers
Management and Organizational Behavioral
Science Research
Pugh (1979) defined ‘organization theory’ as the
study of the structure and functioning of
organizations and behaviour of groups and
individuals between them.
Organization and management of construction
activity, being a rather new and interdisciplinary
field of study, showed a relatively low development
in comparison with general organization theory
The system approach to organizational
effectiveness combines elements from the
foregoing models and organizational process,
emphasizing their significance in terms of the
subsystems of the organization as well the
environment (Etzioni, 60; Parsons, 56; Metron, 57
ed. Sey et al., 1981).
Kast and Rosenzweig (1981) viewed the
organization as an open socio-technical system
composed of a number of subsystems, as illustrated
in Fig. 3. Under this view, an organization is not
simply a technical or a social system. Rather, it is
the structuring and integration of human activities
around various technologies.
Applying this concept to the construction industry,
the organization of a building project becomes a
process of structuring and integrating human
activities around various technologies. The network
of relationships and procedures created by the
organization structure of a project can be
considered as the third sub-system, mediating
Technical sub-
system
Structural
Goals and sub-system
values sub- Managerial
system sub-system
Psychosocial
sub-system
System/environment interaction
Input – Output flow of materials, energy
and information
The modified Kast and Rosenzweig (1981)
model (Fig. 3) by Harding (1980), (see Fig.
4) called for a view of construction
organization as a system composed of six
subsystems:
the people subsystem,
the technology subsystem,
the managing subsystem,
the purpose subsystem,
the culture subsystem, and
the structure subsystem.
Fig 4 Harding’s Model of Construction Organization
(1980)
Subsystem/environment
interaction
Purpose sub-
system
People sub-
Managing system
subsystem
Culture
sub-system
System/environment
interaction
Technology
Structure sub-system
sub-system
Shaddad (1983, pp.82-87) argued that Harding's (1980,
pp.16-22) model does not put emphasis on the role of
the managerial subsystem as an integrating and
controlling factor of the other subsystem. Shaddad
(1983), proposed a more comprehensive model (see Fig.
5), suggesting that the project managerial activities can
achieve a maximum productivity of the construction
project by the following
seven subsystems: -
- Organization of the environmental subsystem,
- Organization of the resources composition subsystem,
- Organization of the capital resources subsystem,
- Organization of the information subsystem,
- Organization of the structural subsystem,
- Organization of the training and selection subsystem,
&
- Organization of the motivational subsystem,
Fig 5 Modified Model of a Construction Organization by
Shaddad (1983)
Fig 5 Modified Model of a Construction
Organization by Shaddad (1983)
Political
Designer
Client
ORGANIZTION OF
MOTIVATIONAL
SUBSYSTEM
VARIABLE 2.6 Fin-
Indu anc-
strial ORGANIZTION OF ial
- relat ENVIROMENT
SUBSYSTEM VARIABLE
ion 2.7
ORGANIZTION OF
INFORMATION
SUBSYSTEM
VARIABLE 2.5
ORGANIZTION OF PROJECT
TRAINING & MANAGERIAL
SELECTION ACTIVITIES
SUBSYSTEM VARIABLE 1.1
VARIABLE 2.1
ORGANIZTION OF
COMPOSITION Soc-
SUBSYSTEM VARIABLE
2.4
ial
Indu ORGANIZTION OF
STRuCTURAL
str SUBSYSTEM VARIABLE
-ialis 2.2 ORGANIZTION OF
CAPITAL SUBSYSTEM
ation VARIABLE 2.3
Supplier
Producer
Social
Geographical
The subsequent stages of this study will be directed
towards the operationalization and integration of
the seven interrelated subsystem variables
(Shaddad's model Fig. 5) with the aim of developing
the conceptual framework of the determinates of
performance of the project as in organizations-
behaviour science model (Fig. 6). The variables listed
above will be taken into consideration in terms of
both:
- Parents’ organization,
- The project organization.
The weighing of these variables may differ
according to the level in question. It is also
necessary to consider the interaction of these levels
in the formulation of the model. The
operationalization of the variables in the framework
presented will be followed by empirical testing of
the model.
The basic casual model in Fig. 6 (Conceptual Framework
of the Determinates of Productivity in
Organizations-Behaviour Science Approach (Kopelman,
1986) links project managerial activities the primary
variable, with system performance, the end result. The
model as hypothesized states that system performance the
end-result variable, is a function of all seven variables
causing changes in system performance through a number
of unspecified intervening variables. Although considerable
improvement in system performance of the project can be
achieved through improvement in any one of these
subsystems to maximize system performance. Feedback
mechanisms are fundamental to any process based upon
the scientific method.
Environment
Organizational
Characteristics
Objective
Performance
Feedback
Judgmental Work Behavior
Performance Productivity
Feedback
Job design
Work schedule
Work Performance
Productivity
End
Results
Organizational
Effectiveness
Productivity
Fig. 5
Environment
Proposed of the Framework of an Analytical Model
in Evaluating
of the Effectiveness of Project Organization
FEEDBACK
ORGANIZTION OF
MOTIVATIONAL
SUBSYSTEM
VARIABLE 2.6
ORGANIZTION OF
ENVIROMENT
SUBSYSTEM
VARIABLE 2.7 ORGANIZTION OF
INFORMATION
SUBSYSTEM
VARIABLE 2.5
ORGANIZTION HUMAN
OF TRAINING & RESOURCES
SELECTION MANAGEMENT
SUBSYSTEM VARIABLE 3.1
VARIABLE 2.1
ORGANIZTION OF
COMPOSITION
SUBSYSTEM
VARIABLE 2.4
ORGANIZTION OF
STRUCTURAL
SUBSYSTEM
VARIABLE 2.2 ORGANIZTION OF
CAPITAL SUBSYSTEM
VARIABLE 2.3
OUTPUT
Feedback
PROJECT PERFORMANCE
END VARIABLE 1.1
Fig. 8 Modified and Basic Model linking Project Managerial Activities With System Performance of a Project