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Unit 1: Introduction to Management
1.8 Who is a Manager? Notes
A Manager is the person responsible for planning and directing the work of a group of
individuals, monitoring their work, and taking corrective action when necessary. For many
people, this is their first step into a management career.
Managers may direct workers directly or they may direct several supervisors who direct the
workers. They are the individuals charged with examining the workflow, coordinating efforts,
meeting goals and providing leadership. Thus a manager must be familiar with the work of all
the groups he/she supervises, but need not be the best in any or all of the areas. It is more
important for a manager to know how to manage the workers than to know how to do their
work well.
A manager’s title reflects what he/she is responsible for.
Example: 1. An Accounting Manager supervises the Accounting function.
2. The Production Manager developed a staffing plan for the factory.
3. The Manager of Design Engineering supervises engineers and
support staff engaged in design of a product or service.
1.9 Roles of a Manager
To achieve results, they shift gears and restructure and reorganise things continually. The diverse
roles played by managers in discharging their duties have been summarised by Henry Mintzberg
in the late 1960s, under three broad headings: interpersonal roles, informational roles and
decisional roles. Let us understand them one by one.
1. Interpersonal roles: Three interpersonal roles help the manager keep the organisation
running smoothly. Managers play the figurehead role when they perform duties that are
ceremonial and symbolic in nature. These include greeting the visitors, attending social
functions involving their subordinates (like weddings, funerals), handing out merit
certificates to workers showing promise etc. The leadership role includes hiring, training,
motivating and disciplining employees. Managers play the liaison role when they serve
as a connecting link between their organisation and others or between their units and
other organisational units. Mintzberg described this activity as contacting outsiders who
provide the manager with information. Such activities like acknowledgements of mail,
external board work, etc., are included in this category.
2. Informational roles: Mintzberg mentioned that receiving and communicating information
are perhaps the most important aspects of a manager’s job. In order to make the right
decisions, managers need information from various sources. Typically, this activity is
done through reading magazines and talking with others to learn about changes in the
customers’ tastes, competitors’ moves and the like. Mintzberg called this the monitor role.
In the disseminator role, the manager distributes important information to subordinates
that would otherwise be inaccessible to them. Managers also perform the spokesperson
role when they represent the organisation to outsiders.
3. Decisional roles: There are four decision roles that the manager adopts. In the role of
entrepreneur, the manager tries to improve the unit. He initiates planned changes to
adapt to environmental challenges. As disturbance handlers, managers respond to
situations that are beyond their control such as strikes, shortages of materials, complaints,
grievances, etc. In the role of a resource allocator, managers are responsible for allocating
human, physical and monetary resources. As negotiators, managers not only mediate in
internal conflicts but also carry out negotiations with other units to gain advantages for
their own unit.
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