Chap 2 Lect
Chap 2 Lect
The Evolution of
Management Theory
Figure 2.2
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Weber’s
Weber’s Five
Five Principles
Principles of
of Bureaucracy
Bureaucracy
• Authority is the power to hold people
accountable for their actions.
• Positions in the firm should be held based on
performance, not social contacts.
• Position duties are clearly identified so that
people know what is expected of them.
• Lines of authority should be clearly identified
such that workers know who reports to who.
• Rules, standard operating procedures (SOPs),
and norms guide the firm’s operations.
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Fayol’s
Fayol’s Principles
Principles of
of Management
Management
• Division of Labor: allows for job specialization.
Fayol noted jobs can have too much specialization
leading to poor quality and worker dissatisfaction.
• Authority and Responsibility
Fayol included both formal and informal authority
resulting from special expertise.
• Unity of Command
Employees should have only one boss.
Figure 2.4
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Other
Other System
System Considerations
Considerations
• Closed system
A system that is self-contained and thus not
affected by changes occurring in its external
environment.
Often undergoes entropy and loses its ability to
control itself, and fails.
• Synergy
Performance that results when individuals and
departments coordinate their actions
• Performance gains of the whole surpass the sum of
the performance of the individual components.