| |||||||||||
|
Management 101: Creating Structures The basic principles of management are the same, regardless of the organization. I learned a lot of what I know serving in the East Berlin, Conn. Volunteer Fire Department.
There are many facets to business management. For our 101 course, we'll concentrate on management structures. Centralized vs. distributed The person who previously exercised full control needs to understand that s/he is going to have to relinquish that control and can no longer have her/his fingers in everything. (This is key. I've seen some rather large companies whose CEO/president still wanted to okay everything.) Employees, on the other hand, need to realize that they may not be able to get a decision as quickly as they might have in the past. Good management is based on stable reporting relationships. On a day-to-day basis there should be no reason for an employee to go to his boss's boss for answers. The point of departmentalization is to increase productivity, not decrease it. But if they're designed incorrectly, management structures can quickly put up too many hurdles, and slow a company down. Managers need to be empowered to make decisionswithin defined limitswithout checking with the next in rank. Keeping the chain intact Not too big, not too small Functional organization Of course, business functions never divide up perfectly. You will always have some cross over, and consequently, some leeway in organizing them into logical groups. For example, Technical Support could go under Tech or Customer Service. If the company is large enough, Tech Support would probably become a group on its own. In smaller companies they would probably go under Tech but close to Customer Service. go to page 2: A title is a title . . . is a title
|
|
|||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||
#