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Unit 1: Introduction to Management




               Technical skill is the most important at the lower levels of management; it becomes less  Notes
               important as we move up the chain of a command.


                 Example: A production supervisor in a manufacturing plant, for example, is likely to
          need more technical skill than the company president, because he or she will have to deal with
          the day-to-day manufacturing problems that arise.
               On the other hand, the importance of conceptual skill increases as we rise in the ranks of
               management. The higher the manager is in  the hierarchy, the more he or  she will be
               involved in the broad, long-term decisions that affect large parts of the organisation. For
               top management  which is  charged with  the  responsibility  for overall  performance,
               conceptual skill is probably the most important skill of all. Human skill is very important
               at every level of the organisation. One reason this is so is because to get the work done
               through others; high technical or conceptual skills are not very valuable if they cannot be
               used to inspire and influence other organisation members.
               Supporting Katz’s contention that specific skills are more important at some levels than at
               others is a study of managerial roles and behaviour by Jerdee and Caroll. More than four
               hundred managers  from all levels of  management and  a variety of types and sizes  of
               business are asked to estimate how much time they spent on eight management tasks:
               planning, investigating, coordinating, evaluating, supervising, staffing, negotiating and
               representing.  Lower and  middle-level managers  replied that  supervising was  their
               dominant activity, while top managers claimed to spend proportionately more time on
               planning.

          4.   Design skill: Koontz and Weihrich added one more skill to the above list. Design skill is the
               ability to solve problems in ways that will help the organisation. At higher levels, managers
               should be able to do more than see a problem, to design a workable solution to a problem
               in the light of realities they face. If managers merely see a problem and become problem
               watchers they will fail.
          5.   Institution building skills: According to Prof. Pareek (1981), top level executives perform
               eight key roles while building institutions of lasting value, as indicated below:

               (a)  Identity  creating  role:  Top  level  executives  must  create  an  identity  for  their
                    organisations  in  the market  place.  Such  an  impact  can be  created  by  serving
                    employees  through excellent welfare measures,  developing enviable  marketing
                    skills or fostering technological innovations. In short, they must ‘carve out a niche’
                    for themselves in the market place.
               (b)  Enabling role: Top level  executives  must develop their resources (men, materials,
                    equipment and other facilities)  in the  service of  an organisation.  A good  work
                    atmosphere must be created where employees would feel  like contributing  their
                    best to the organisation.

               (c)  Synergising role: Synergy means that the whole is greater than the sum of the parts.
                    In organisational terms, synergy means that as separate departments within an
                    organisation cooperate and interact, they become more productive than if each had
                    acted in isolation.


                 Example: It is more efficient  for each  department  in a small firm to deal with  one
          financing department than for each department to have a separate financing department of its
          own. Top executives must try to combine their human as well as non-human resources in such
          a way that the goals of the organisation are met in an effective and efficient manner.




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