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Managing Stability

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Title: Managing Stability


1
Managing Stability Managing Change
  • HDCS 4393/4394 InternshipDr. Shirley Ezell

2
Myths
  • 1. There ought to be significant distinctions
    between managers who manage what appears to be
    stable systems and those who can cope effectively
    with change.
  • 2. Only line managers with product
    responsibilities can assume general management
    like responsibilities with management
    interrelationships among functions, and balancing
    and trading off among various activities, with
    bottom line results that measure effectiveness.
  • 3. So-called self-managing autonomous groups or
    teams require little external leadership.

3
Intervention
  • What Are 3 Kinds of Managerial Interventions?
  • 1. Systems Maintenance (Maintaining work)
  • 2. Adaptation
  • 3. Consequential Change

4
Intervention (Cont.)
  • In Systems Maintenance good managers spend
    significant time identifying causes of system
    malfunctioning.
    They look at quality,
    service,
    integrated whole ,
    efficiency,
    and even safety.

5
Systems Maintenance
  • When customers complain about late delivery,
    changes in tooling take too long, new employees
    make too many errors or quality defects in the
    products, the manager can take the following
    steps
  • 1. Manager can work with sophisticated technology
    with all interfaces designed and fine tuned to
    company needs and collect real time data.
  • 2. Manager can look for ways to improve system
    continually.
  • 3.One can always use training or
    retraining or staff development.
  • 4. In contrast, less effective managers
    are passive until some plan or budget
    deviation forces them to take
    action.

6
Change is Required to Get Stability
  • Good managers will be finding ways in which their
    systems have subpart performance, or can improve
    performance with regularity.
  • All managers need to be change agents.
  • The response required for failure is adaptation.

7
Managers are not Islands unto Themselves
  • If quality and performance and service are to
    remain at high level, such external changes
    require internal adaptations. And they are very
    similar in terms of leadership energy and skill.

8
A Line Managers Struggle
  • There are many lessons to be learned from Kay
    Cohens experience in this chapter.
  • Kay managed a relatively self-contained unit that
    produced a variety of glues and adhesives for
    other manufacturers. She was relatively new on
    the job and knew that some of her fellow managers
    questioned whether a woman could
    make it on the manufacturing side of
    the business.

9
Beginning to Plan for Change
  • As she put her plans and budgets together for
    1991, she realized that she could improve
    performance. Her sales revenues depended on the
    divisions marketing department, and most of her
    raw materials were purchased in small quantities
    from large chemical companies. This gave her
    little room to maneuver on price, however she
    knew that her employees worked as an effective
    team, morale was high and quality was excellent.

10
Beginning to Plan for Change (Cont.)
  • Improvement Kay realized that she depended on
    an internal source for unique solvents that were
    used to make about ½ of her custom glue.
    Unfortunately she was a small customer and she
    frequently had to wait days for a delivery
    from Process Chemicals (PC). This hurt her fast
    turnaround for her customers.

11
Managers Must Do Their Homework
  • In her research she found a small company Dill
    Chemicals that had some new equipment that could
    be used to produce relatively small quantities of
    materials. She then undertook an extensive
    investigation to find who sold and serviced the
    equipment. 15 calls later she decided that Dill
    was a good company. She flies to Chicago to
    interview the company and after further analysis
    finds that for an investment of 450,000 she
    would have a ROI close to 20.

12
Managers Must Do Their Homework (Cont.)
  • Kay has a preliminary discussion with her boss
    Mike Graflin. She made a presentation and he said
    he would think about it. He also suggested she
    contact Jim Travis an engineer in the corporate
    staff technology group before going any further
    with Dill.

13
Developing Relationships
  • She received a slot with Jim Travis to present
    her ideas to the committee and then realized she
    needed to talk to marketing, to prepare a
    detailed report. In addition she needed to talk
    to an old friend in the finance group since she
    had never gone through the process of all the
    paperwork required for the purchase of equipment.

14
Developing Relationships (Cont.)
  • She books a flight to see Travis and prepared a
    compact summary version of her proposal. He
    thought she had done a good job on her research
    with Dill but felt it would be wasteful to use
    the equipment for more than mundane solvents.
  • Kay agrees to start out for the first 6 months
    splitting the sourcing but felt the trial might
    prove that she could get rid of the PC connection.

15
Change Process Takes Time
  • He also suggested that she see Phyllis Cyzak
    because she was an expert on maintenance and that
    she was to send Travis a copy of her response.
  • Kay returns to talk to her contact in finance,
    who says go back to the drawing board to sure
    that you can justify and increase ROI to 25.

16
Change Process Takes Time (Cont.)
  • She makes her contact with marketing, talks with
    Chris Doppi of PC who is angry and invites him to
    lunch. He is not cooperative but Kay realized
    that by this time she has her boss on her side.
    Just as she is making progress she finds out that
    Chris Doppi of PC is spreading rumors suggesting
    that Dill Co. is having problems.

17
Managers Need Team Support
  • Kay immediately puts together a task force. This
    works because they develop a loyalty to Kay and
    even bring in new equipment on a weekend to make
    the deal happen. Kay finally gets the equipment
    and problems emerge. Then employees begin to get
    headaches from fumes coming from the Dill
    equipment. Once again, Kay must find a solution
    to another problem. How does this case end?

18
What Can Be Learned From This Case?
  • Many decisions require managers to spend effort
    skill, and persistence in working the
    organization to introduce change.
  • Small technical details often make a critical
    difference and there are many compromises. Change
    opens a Pandoras box of problems, many trivial
    but each threatening performance.
  • One has to wonder how many managers would go
    thorough all the trials and details, and meetings
    and spend the energy in the full measure of this
    case by Kay?

19
Working Managers
  • The important lesson is that Working Managers
    dont seek to insert ready-made, consultant
    solutions. They recognize that in order to work
    well, any fix must be fully integrated into the
    routines of the organization.

20
General Managers vs Functional Managers Is The
Leadership Different?
  • General Managers have to develop those leadership
    skills associated with balancing and trading off
    or optimizing the contribution of each of the key
    functions necessary for completed work.
  • Although functional managers usually arent
    profit centers they are more likely cost centers.
    They obviously dont control a wide range of
    other functions, and their challenges can be
    quite similar to general managers.

21
General Managers vs Functional Managers Is The
Leadership Different?
  • It is often asserted that functional managers
    cannot be real leaders because they dont have
    profit performance measures.
  • There are however many measures for functional
    managers to use including service, quality, cost
    savings, innovativeness. These all can be
    measured and their contributions can be as
    important as profit.

22
Do Self-Managing Groups Need Managing?
  • In self-managing groups the group itself can
    handle materials requisitions, negotiations with
    human resources, quality control department and
    even selection of new employees. But this does
    not eliminate their need for management and a
    manager with leadership skills.
  • Managers have a role in working with autonomous
    groups. The manager has critical
    role in negotiating with external
    groups whose routines contradict or
    interfere with the work of
    the autonomous units.

23
Do Self-Managing Groups Need Managing? (Cont.)
  • The greater the self-managing capability of the
    work group, the more the managers focus shifts
    to developing a strategy for the future,
    negotiating for new resources and new technology
    and getting final approval from higher management.

24
Managers asWorking Leaders
  • In summary, management in modern
    change-oriented and competition-pressured
    organizations requires leadership skills to
    routinize, to adapt, and to introduce change. And
    both functional managers and managers of
    autonomous groups can't get an exemption.
  • Management and Leadership are synonymous in the
    contemporary world.
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