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Management Development

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Title: Management Development


1
Lecture 5
  • Management Development

2
Lecture Outline
  • Definition of management development
  • Importance of management development
  • Historical overview of management development
  • Current issues in management development
  • Management competencies
  • Karpin report 1995 - recommendations for best
    practice management
  • Joss 2001 Post Karpin report

3
Definition of management development
  • The total, continuous improvement process
    through which managers develop their competence
    for successful personal and enterprise
    performance. This includes learning through a
    variety of formal and informal, structured and
    unstructured experiences including from the work
    role and from work relationships from self
    development from formal training and from
    tertiary and higher education programs Karpin
    Report 1995.

4
The growing importance of management development
  • There are a significant number of managers in
    Australia - approximately 800 000.
  • Management becoming an internationalised
    occupation.
  • Australian managers education and training
    profiles do not match the European, American and
    Japanese managers.
  • The performance of Australian managers has also
    been criticised - short-term/ profit orientated
    as compared with the strategic/ long-term
    orientated Japanese and German management.
  • Questioning the success of conventional
    approaches to management development.

5
Historical overview of management development in
Australia
  • Barry (1996) has suggested that management
    development activities in Australia can be
    analysed with three phases
  • The first phase (up to 1965)
  • The second phase (1965-95)
  • The current scene

6
The first phase
  • Post WWI growing recognition by some employers
    that university education might be superior to
    OJT in a specialised field - due to economic
    pressures such as problems of currency and trade
    protection.
  • The majority of management development took place
    outside universities - (ie.) technical colleges.
  • During WWII - est. Australian Institute of
    Management 1941 Melbourne Technical College est.
    1938 introduced Certificate in Foremanship 1948
    this became known as a Diploma in Management.
  • 1950s/early1960s increase pace of developments
    - Australian Administrative Staff College
    (Monash-Mount Eliza Graduate school of
    Business) MBA est. University of Melbourne in
    1962.

7
The second phase (1965-95)
  • Increasingly understood that economic growth
    depended to a large extent on a well-educated and
    trained workforce.
  • Realisation of the important role of
    higher-education .
  • Federal government has set up three committees of
    inquiry to investigate management development -
    1969 chaired by Cyert 1980 chaired by Ralph and
    Karpin 1992.
  • Karpin report - importance of management in
    sustaining growth, increased employment
    opportunities, improving productivity and
    increased international competitiveness.

8
Karpin Report
  • Best Australian managers were equal or better
    than those in the rest of the world.
  • Although the functional skills of Australian
    managers in large organisations were well
    developed, the majority of Australias managers
    did not have either education or skill levels of
    their international counterparts.
  • Significant gap areas - soft skills strategic
    skills management development and team-working.
  • Over all industries - management spent 7 days per
    year (3) of their time on training and
    development activities - Motorola 20 days of
    training per year.

9
Karpin report
  • Australian management education institutions
    compared favourable with overseas.
  • The Karpin report contained 28 recommendations to
    the government - movement from an employee
    culture to an employer culture greater role for
    women in management managing diversity
    professional accreditation of business schools
    and establishment of applied research program to
    be run jointly with industry national training
    program for front-line managers and an industry
    based program to enable Australian managers to
    participate in study tours.

10
The current scene
  • The demise of the traditional career
  • Credentialism becomes an aid to mobility
  • The growth in management education - short
    courses new credential ladders - graduate
    diploma, then to a MBA and in some cases DBA.

11
Issues in management development
  • Something to Think about? Controversial?The link
    between knowledge and managerial performance may
    be tenuous - the correlation between academic
    attainment and career success is small. Cox and
    Cooper (1988) suggest that there is no evidence
    that academic learning changes behaviour or
    develops practical skills such as those required
    by management.
  • The major contribution of universities -
    facilitation of independent thought, curiosity,
    ability to think logically, and the ability to
    learn and disseminate information.

12
Developing mgt competencies
  • In an attempt to make the mechanics of
    management development more relevant to the
    actual practice of management, competency based
    approaches have become increasingly popular.
  • The competency framework has been widely adopted
    without a clear definition of what constitutes a
    competency (Antonacopoulou and FitzGerlad 1994).
  • Competency consists of the virtues unique to each
    individual which are expressed in the process of
    interacting with others in a given context.
  • This definition does not limit competency to
    specific knowledge and skills, instead it
    embraces attitudes, perceptions and emphasises
    that competence is defined and redefined as
    personal and situational.

13
Definitions of competence
  • The ability to perform effectively in a given
    context, the capacity to transfer knowledge and
    skills to new tasks and situations and the
    inclination or motivation to energise these
    abilities and capacities (Hunt and Wallace 1997).
  • According to Hearn, Close, Smith and Southey
    (1996) the competence of professionals derives
    from possessing a set of relevant attributes such
    as knowledge, abilities, skills and attitudes.

14
Management and competence
  • To examine management competence it is important
    to understand the concept of management.
  • Functional-prescriptive approach (ie.) Fulop
    (1992) - planning, organising, leading and
    controlling.
  • Observational-descriptive - observe those who are
    termed management practitioners (ie.) Mintzberg
    (1975).
  • Third approach is to focus upon the range of
    specific skills that managers might be said to
    require - focus on managerial effectiveness
    holistic focus on management.

15
Process of generating competencies
  • Managerial competencies can be derived from
    knowledge of management practice - these relate
    to managerial effectiveness.
  • Second step clarifying the uncertainties
    surrounding the competency approach to management
    is to develop a wide-ranging and comprehensive
    list of management skills, behaviours and
    attributes which could then be evaluated against
    the organisation and managerial levels.
  • Third step is to derive meaningful clusters from
    the list in order to provide a competency
    framework for assessment and development.

16
The importance of competence
  • Long term challenge of building a skilled
    workforce
  • The need to establish a clear link between
    training and job performance - competency is seen
    as a way of focusing and controlling the costs of
    training and contributing towards organisational
    goals.
  • Evaluation and performance
  • Establishing of a common language between
    organisational expectations and individuals
    needs.
  • Competency based models are used as the basis for
    developing a syllabus for specific management
    development initiatives.
  • Organisations have an idea about the right
    qualities managers should possess.

17
Different conceptualisations of competency
  • Universalism - standardisation of managerial
    roles
  • Individual and context - the importance of social
    and group interaction
  • Competency synonymous with performance
  • Competency as defined by current activity

18
Cross-cultural management competencies
  • Fish and Wood (1997)
  • Transformational management skills - shifting
    from ethnocentric approach to geocentric approach
    to management.
  • Interactional management skills - understanding
    of comparative HRM practices such as leadership
    style,staffing etc.
  • Transactional management communication skills -
    advancing the presence of the business enterprise
    in foreign business locations.
  • Foreign language skills

19
Key themes concerning competence
  • Issue of communication - the link between defined
    competencies and effective performance has to be
    established.
  • The need to balance between fixed elements while
    at the same time allowing room for continuous
    improvement.
  • Inadequacy in the concept of competency -
    competency developing the whole person - ultimate
    stage of completeness.
  • The role of management development and learning
    organisations.

20
Recommendations to achieve best practice
management development
  • Achieving best practice management development
    has two broad elements
  • Setting out broad areas of leadership and
    management competence which need to be improved
    in Australia.
  • The need for the management development agenda to
    be driven by enterprises themselves.

21
Competencies that need to be improved
  • Two types of competencies required for a job -
    knowledge and skill specific to the job (industry
    and specific competencies) general abilities and
    characteristics (general competencies).
  • The Task Force identified a number of broad areas
    where generic and specific skills need improving
    -
  • People skills leadership skills strategic
    skills international orientation
    entrepreneurship inner values and accepting
    responsibility network building skills and
    managing diversity.

22
The need to reframe our view of how managers learn
  • Most commonly held assumption made about
    management learning is that it is derived from
    formal instruction.
  • The Task Force suggests that management should
    have a wider view of how managers learn -
    learning from experience - as management spend
    98 of their time at the workplace most learning
    would occur on the job.
  • Four sources of learning - work role work
    relationships formal training and formal
    education.
  • The need for continuous improvement - learning
    from all sources.

23
Responsibility for management development
  • Individual managers must take responsibility for
    their own learning.
  • Gunzburg (1994) effective learners
  • Continual search for diversity and risk
  • Strong desire to learn on a continual basis
  • Taking personal responsibility for learning
  • Awareness of learning strengths/weaknesses
  • Effective use of modelling - observational
    learning
  • Effective use of feedback
  • Willingness/capacity to challenge personal
    paradigms

24
Best practice management development
  • Key element one an enterprise strategic plan
    drives the management development agenda
  • Key element two a management development
    strategy that provides a framework for all
    management development activities for up to five
    years
  • Key element three a management development model
    that emphasises learning from a rich variety of
    sources
  • Key element four management development linked
    to the entire management system

25
Best practice management development
  • Key element five responsibilities for management
    development shared between managers and their
    enterprise - the role of coaching.
  • Key element six management competencies that are
    identified for all management levels - changes in
    behaviour to meet emerging business innovation.
  • Key element seven priorities for management
    development that are agreed by the stakeholders.
  • Key element eight work experience is recognised
    as a primary developmental opportunity - study
    tours.

26
Best practice management development
  • Key element nine - an enterprise culture that
    encourages all managers to learn and pursue
    personal continuous improvement.
  • Key element ten - management training and
    development programs that improve management
    performance.

27
Post Karpin Report
  • Joss 2001 Australian Journal of Management
  • Where is Australia today in terms of management
    capability?
  • Trailing behind the US in terms of management
    expertise because American companies confronted
    market deregulation, global competition and
    shareholder demands for performance about 10 to
    15 years earlier than did most Australian
    companies.
  • The best way forward?
  • The right market conditions for management
    development.
  • Sound management education programs.
  • Strong understanding and support for the
    management role and capability.
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