Quite often the term management is
used to refer to both the persons who occupy managerial positions as well as to
the activities which managers perform. In fact, there can be five different
concepts of management:
1. Management as an economic resource:
According
to an economist, management is one of the factors of production, the other
factors being land, labor, capital and entrepreneurship. In a small enterprise,
the owner may himself act as the manager. But in large corporations, there is a
divorce between ownership and management.
Management
is the most active factor of production because it assembles and integrates the
other factors. The efficient use of land and capital depends upon labor which
is in turn governed by management.
Management
coordinates the other Ms (manpower, methods, markets, materials, machinery and
money) of an organization and, therefore, it occupies a unique place among the
productive factors as can be seen.
The
efficiency of management factor can be improved through training and
development of executives. The importance of management increases with the
tempo of industrialization.
The
economic and social development of mankind since the Second World War has
occurred as a result of systematic and purposeful work on developing managers.
We no
longer talk of capital and labor but of management and labor. As an economic
resource, management makes a productive enterprise out of physical and human
resources.
Efficient
management is the most important input in the success of an organization. The
inputs of manpower, materials, machinery and money do not by themselves ensure
growth; they become productive through the catalyst of management.
2. Management as a class or elite:
Sociologists
look upon management as a distinct class in society with its own status
system. With the growing importance of organizations and the need for their
efficient management, managers have become a very powerful or elite group in
society.
In the
words of Peter Ducker, the professional executive has become the key leadership
figure in modern industrial society. As a team or group of persons, management
consists of all those who are responsible for the establishment and
accomplishment of objectives through the direction of others.
These
people are individually known as 'managers'. Any person who performs the
managerial job is a manager. Managers have the required knowledge and skills.
The managerial class exercises leadership and coordinates the efforts of human
beings.
This class
includes various types of managers e.g., family managers, professional managers, civil servants who manage public enterprises, etc. The management
team of an organization is comprised of all executive right from the chief
executive unto the supervisor.
For
instance, the statement that the management of X company is very good refers
to the managers of that company. As a competent class,- managers strike a
balance among diverse interest.
3. Management as a system of authority:
Experts in
the field of administration consider management as a system of authority. According to Her bison and Myers, "management is a rule-making and rule-
enforcing body, and within itself it is bound together by a web of
relationships between superiors and subordinates".
There is a
hierarchy of authority among people operating in an organization. Managers at
different levels possess varying degrees of authority. In general, the higher
level managers have the authority to lay down the goals and policies of the
enterprise while those at the lower level are authorized to execute the plans
and policies to achieve the desired goals.
There
should be well defined superior subordinate relationships at all levels of decision making. Management is "a multipurpose organ that manages a business and
manages managers and manages worker and work".
Over the
decades there have been different approaches to management authority, e.g.,
authoritarian, humanitarian, constitutional and par-deceptive approach.
4. Management as a separate discipline:
As a field
of study or academic discipline, management is an organized body of knowledge.
It is comparatively a new field of learning and is being taught in universities
and institutes of management. Several specialized courses have been developed
in different branches of management.
Management discipline is a part of social sciences and humanities. It provides the
principles and practices and a person must learn them in order to become a
successful manager.
Today,
management is a very popular subject and there is great rush for admission into
management courses. The growing importance of management discipline has been
described as 'Managerial Revolution'. Management is a young and growing
discipline and its status is likely to increase in the times to come,
5. Management as a process:
As a
process, management is a series of inter-related activities by which managers
determine and accomplish goals in organized Endeavor. It is a rational,
intellectual, dynamic and continuous process, common to all organizations.
Management is an important process of coordinating and integrating specialized
activities of several persons for the achievement of common objectives.
It is the
process through which all the resources are organized and utilized to attain
maximum output and efficiency through minimum in out. The process of managing
consists of planning (preparing for future), organizing (combining resources),
staffing, directing (guiding and supervising people) and controlling (keeping
on the right track) of human efforts in order to achieve common objectives.
This is the
most popular interpretation of the term management because it describes what
managers do. The true character of management can be seen as a process composed
of several elements or functions. Management is what managers do.
The
different concepts of management described above are not contradictory to one
another. They are merely different ways of looking at management. In fact,
management is a synthesis of alt these view points.
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