1 / 24

MANAGERIALISM

MANAGERIALISM. PPA 400 Lecture by Daphne H. Washington. WHAT IS MANAGERIALISM. Emerged within the Reinventing Gov’t movement Entrepreneurial management Using creativity to transform organizations Policy revolutionaries Forcefully argue for creative solutions.

cheng
Download Presentation

MANAGERIALISM

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MANAGERIALISM PPA 400 Lecture by Daphne H. Washington

  2. WHAT IS MANAGERIALISM • Emerged within the Reinventing Gov’t movement • Entrepreneurial management • Using creativity to transform organizations • Policy revolutionaries • Forcefully argue for creative solutions

  3. REENGINEERING • Use of behavioral and technological sciences • More sophisticated and radical than simple reorganization • Focuses on cost, quality , service and speed

  4. REENGINEERING • Usually Includes the Following Steps: • Process Mapping • Customer Assessments • Process Visioning

  5. REENGINEERING • Is a Radical Change Strategy • Means Starting Over • Requires looking at old processes with new eyes • Must challenge old assumptions

  6. REENGINEERING • Barriers Include: • Bureaucratic turf issues • Employee Resistance to Change • Lack of incentives • General skepticism

  7. REENGINEERING • Examples from the Class??

  8. EMPOWERMENT • Gaining Power, by Giving away Power • Manure Theory • Productive Power • Only works where manager is self-confident, doesn’t feel threatened by subordinates, and can delegate effectively

  9. EMPOWERMENT • Self Directed Work Teams • Highly trained • 6 – 18 people in group • Fully responsible for well-defined segment of work

  10. SELF DIRECTED TEAMS • Results in Fewer Job Categories Needs Authority to go with responsibility Needs appropriate Reward system Frees upper management to Coach & Plan

  11. ENTRPRENEURIALISM • Managers need to be transformational leaders • Entrepreneurial vision needed at every level in organization • Citizens desire government to operate like business • But can It? Shouldn’t It have Constraints?

  12. CONSTRAINTS • Gov’t Operations aren’t inefficient solely because Stupid People work there. • Inefficiency is due to : • Competing interests • Accountability • Due Process

  13. PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT Primary responsibility of org’s leader Is the Systematic Integration of all aspects of the enterprise • View is toward performance outcomes

  14. COMPONENTS OF • Specifying clear and Measurable Goals • Systematic use of performance indicators • Use of Performance Appraisals • Use of Performance Incentives • Linking people & $ resources to budget cycle • Regular review at end of each planning cycle

  15. THE POLITICS OF Can originate with an elected official Can be coincidental to someone’s term in office Can be the result of public demand or expectation

  16. MANAGEMENT CONTROL • To respond to the need to report to external groups • To allow administrators to find out what’s going on inside an organization

  17. CONTRACTING FOR PERFORMANCE • Formal, Informal or Psychological • Between Supervisors & Subordinates • Between Organizations • Between organization and private sector • Between organization and clients • Not the same as Employment Contract

  18. EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT • Defines Role • Responsibilities (Do’s and Don’ts) • Terms and Conditions of Employment • (e.g. reasons for discipline and termination)

  19. PERFORMANCE CONTRACT • Contains specific goals • Contains rewards and sanctions if key targets are (or not) achieved • Rewards often financial • Applies usually to executive level • Can apply in other areas where output improvement can be measured • Model links individual to organizational performance

  20. PURCHASER - PROVIDER • One government agency enters in a contract with another who will deliver the services. • Contract specifies outcomes desired or performance efficiency criteria • May contain penalties • Should contain incentives

  21. PRODUCTIVITY MEASUREMENT • In public sector; • Measured by relationship between the Quantity and Quality of outcomes .. • Minus the Quantity of Resources used to produce the goods or service

  22. BARRIERS • Rigid rules • Inflexible systems preventing or thwarting hiring, promoting or termination. • Lack of ability to reward and punish • Lack of ability to easily get additional funds if needed • Inability to reap benefit from savings or efficiencies

  23. T Q M • Brainchild of Edwards Deming • Uses statistical quality control methods • Key is management creating a culture receptive to the Quality concept • Difficult to sustain • Argued that annual performance measurements focused on defects

  24. Customer Centered • New attitude of government • Correctly views citizen as customer • 8 Principles governing customer service • Survey often, Post Standards and Results, Benchmark Performance, Provide Choices, Make information easily available, Pleasant surroundings, Provide Redress for poor service

More Related