Pages

March 31, 2015

Financial Analysis for Operations Management Decisions - Review Notes

Operations managers has to do engineering economic analysis and financial analysis of their project and expenditure proposals.

Chapter Outline of

Richard B. Chase, F. Robert Jacobs, Nicholas J. Aquilano, Operations Management for Competitive Advantage, 10/e, McGraw-Hill Higher Education, 2004


Concepts and Definitions

Fixed Costs
Variable Costs
Sunk Costs
Opportunity Costs
Avoidable Costs

Expected Value
Economic Life and Obsolescence

Depreciation
Straight-Line Method
Sum-of-the-Years' Digits (SYD) Method
Declining-Balance Method
Double-Declining Balance-Method
Depreciation-By-Use Method

Activity-Based Costing
The Effects of Taxes

Choosing Among Investment Proposals

Determining the Cost of Capital

Interest Rate Effects
Compound Value of a Single Account
Compound Value of An Annuity
Present Value of A Future Single Payment
Present Value of An Annuity
Discounted Cash Flow

Methods of Ranking Investments

Net Present Value
Payback
Internal Rate of Return

Ranking Investments with Uneven Live

Relevant Costs for Decision Making

Financial Analysis for Operations Management Decisions - Summary for Revision


Financial analysis tools and concepts are important for OM.

These tools include the types of costs, activity-based costing, risk, and expected value, and depreciation for more periodic operating decisions. When the focus of OM decisions is capital investment, issues of cost-of-capital calculations and methods of ranking investment proposals are important.


Fixed costs are any expenses that remain constant regardless of the level of output of production.

Variable costs, conversely, vary directly with changes in output levels.

Sunk costs are past expenses or investments that have no salvage value and therefore should not be taken into account when considering investment alternatives.

Opportunity costs are the benefits lost that result from choosing one action over another action.

Avoidable costs are expenses not incurred if an investment is made but that must be incurred if the investment is not made. Avoidable costs becomes the cost savings, for the proposed projects and hence enter into financial or economic analysis as positive cash flows against the negative cash flows due to investment in the project.

Expected value is the sum of expected outcomes multiplied by the probability of their occurrence. Expected values result because there is risk inherent in any investment decision.


The life of a machine or other income-producing assets is estimated and for accounting purposes, the asset is depreciated over this period. Depreciation is a method for allocating costs of capital equipment. Methods of depreciation include the straight-line method, the sum-of-the-years' digits method, the declining-balance method, the double-declining -balance method, and the depreciation-by-use method.

Activity based costing is an important accounting concept for OM and it is the practice of allocating overhead to better reflect actual proportions of overhead consumed by the production activity. Causal factors or cost drivers are identified and are used as the basis for overhead allocation as direct labor is not the best basis for allocating all overheads.

When choosing among investment proposals, investments are generally ranked according to the return they yield in excess of their cost of capital. Investment decisions can include the purchase of new equipment or facilities, replacement of existing equipment or facilities, make-or-buy decisions, lease-or-buy decisions, temporary shutdowns or plant abandonment decisions, or the addition or elimination of a product or product line.

Other financial decisions include determine the cost of capital, tax issues, and interest rate effects on OM decisions. Ways to rank investments include the net present value method, payback period, and the internal rate of return.

Costs relevant to aggregate production planning include basic production costs to costs associated with changes in the production rate, inventory holding costs, and backordering costs.

Important Operations Decisions Requiring Financial Analysis


1. Purchase of new equipment or Facilities
2. Replacement of existing equipment or facilities
3. Make or buy decisions (components)
4. Lease or buy decisions (equipment)
5. Temporary shutdowns or total plant closure decisions
6. Addition or elimination of a product or product line


Richard B. Chase, F. Robert Jacobs, Nicholas J. Aquilano, Operations Management for Competitive Advantage, 10/e, McGraw-Hill Higher Education, 2004

Originally posted at
http://knol.google.com/k/narayana-rao/financial-analysis-for-operations/2utb2lsm2k7a/434

Full material from the book


Updated 27 March 2015, 9 Dec 2011

March 30, 2015

Operations Management Update 2014


MBA Core Management Knowledge - One Year Revision Schedule




March 2015

Construction Management in Transportation Projects
FTA Guide 2006
Federal Transit Administration
http://www.fta.dot.gov/documents/Construct_Proj_Mangmnt_CD.pdf


2014

December 2014

Learn from the Manufacturing Leaders of the Week - Industry Week Articles
http://www.industryweek.com/leadership/manufacturing-leader-week


 SEP 2014 Harvard Business School  WORKING PAPERS
Chief Sustainability Officers: Who Are They and What Do They Do?
by Kathleen Miller and George Serafeim
http://hbswk.hbs.edu/item/7615.html



April 2014


Demystifying Technology Decisions
http://www.di.net/articles/demystifying-technology-decisions/


Europe's Solution Factories - How some manufacturing companies are successful in competing against low labor cost economy - but good quality competition. The strategies that they are using.

They use one or more of four distinct strategies:
They leverage data flows to integrate closely with their supply chain partners;
they optimize customer value across the whole chain, not just their part of it;
they cooperate with suppliers to rapidly improve their manufacturing processes; and
they harness their technical capabilities to offer a high degree of product customization for their customers. In short, they work with partners to manufacture solutions for other partners.

HBR article - April 2014
http://hbr.org/2014/04/europes-solution-factories/ar/1


January


36 Operational Excellence Stats Every Manufacturing Leader Must See
Posted by Mike Roberts on Mon, Jan 27, 2014
http://blog.lnsresearch.com/blog/bid/193248/36-Operational-Excellence-Stats-Every-Manufacturing-Leader-Must-See

Managing Operational Excellence
Quality Magazine Article
http://www.qualitymag.com/articles/91559-managing-operational-excellence



POMS 2014 Martin K. Starr Excellence in  Production andOperations Management Practice Award
Dr. Dean Bartles, Vice‐President, Advanced Programs and Strategic Growth, General  Dynamics  
Mr. Josue Gomes da Silva, CEO, Coteminas, Inc.              


Dr. Dean Bartles

Dr. Dean Bartles has been a manager with General Dynamics for twenty‐nine years and currently serves as Vice President, Advanced Programs and Strategic Growth, and General Manager of the Ordnance and Tactical   Systems Division—the largest strategic business unit in the firm.  He has previously served as Vice
President and Director of Business Development, Director of International Marketing and has been a Program Manager and Administrator.
In his career at General Dynamics, Dr. Bartles has excelled in operations management practice
through the introduction of many manufacturing innovations and improvements.  He first
managed modern co‐production facilities in Egypt and Turkey under US supervision.  He
successfully implemented lean manufacturing at three heavy manufacturing plants, greatly
increasing productivity.  His plants have received numerous awards for environmental and
manufacturing excellence, including a US Secretary of Defense Environmental Excellence Award
for Sustainability and several General Dynamics Manufacturing Excellence Awards.   He serves
as Chairman of the board for the National Center for Defense Manufacturing and Machining
and is an International Director of SME.  In 2014 he will join the Board of the National Center
for Manufacturing Science.


Dr. Bartles received his PhD in Technology Management from Indiana State University, a
Doctorate in Business Administration from Nova Southeastern University, Master’s degrees in
Business from Tampa College and Shippensburg University and a BS in Business Administration
from Shepherd University.




Josue Gomes da Silva

Mr. JosueGomes da Silva isthe Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Coteminas, a global bed and bath
home fashion products company based in Brazil, with manufacturing facilities in several countries in the
Americas. He joined the company in 1989 as Chief  Financial Officer and became CEO in 1993. As CEO, he developed international operations with rapidly increasing exports and, subsequently, with the
acquisition of Springs, Inc. in the U.S., was able to combine low cost, efficient South American
manufacturing facilities with brands and a distribution platform in the U.S. and Canada.
Coteminas developed a vertically integrated operation including cotton production, ginning,
spinning, weaving, dyeing, printing and finishing of textiles.  With faster operations the firm was
able to move closer to the end user and serve more than 5,000 retail customers.  Beginning in
2009, Coteminas introduced 50 retail outlets, and today has about 250 stores. Under Josue’s
leadership, Coteminas diversified and increased production capacity by incorporating 17 new
plants into the group, acquiring some plants through mergers and acquisitions and others as
greenfield facilities.  A global sourcing platform was created through the establishment of
strategic alliances with suppliers in Pakistan, India, and China.  Today Coteminas operates a
completely integrated, dynamic global supply chain in textiles from cotton all the way to the
final consumer.

Mr. Gomes da Silva is founder and Chairman of the Board of Cantagalo General Grains S.A., a
company with integrated operations including the production, commercialization, and distribution of grains. Josue is a Board member of Embraer. He also is President of the  International  Textile Manufacturers Federation– ITMF, and is Chairman of  the  Brazil Chapter of  the  Brazil‐United States CEOs Forum‐ICESP.

Mr. Gomes da Silva has a graduate degree in civil engineering from the Federal University of
Minas Gerais (1986) and a law degree from Faculdade Milton Campos (Belo Horizonte, MG‐
1987). In 1989, he received a Master’s of Business Administration from Vanderbilt, and was
awarded Vanderbilt’s Founder’s Medal for First Honors in recognition of his academic
achievement. He has received numerous tributes for his operations and entrepreneurial
activities, including the Medalha da Ordem do Merito Industrial – CNI.
http://www.pomsmeetings.org/ConfEvents/051/29.01_Write%20up%20MKS%20Winners%202014%20Final.pdf



Basic Articles on Operations Management

Chapter Summaries of Chase - Aquilano Book




March 27, 2015

The IBM® Cognos® 8 Business Intelligence Solution for Operations Excellence



The IBM® Cognos® 8 Business Intelligence solution can make your entire supply chain, all your operations and your entire enterprise intelligent — by delivering the global visibility that is the key to your success in your business endeavor.

IBM Cognos 8 BI can track a number of key metrics that are the critical factors in the success of your Operations, for example:

Increased throughput.
Reduced manufacturing costs.
Shortened lead times.
Reduced backlog.
Improved quality performance.
Reduced reject rate.
Reduced scrap levels.
Reduced line downtime.


Linking strategic metrics developed by executives down to operational metrics on the plant floor


Most Operations personnel working in a large plant may have little idea of the official corporate strategy, or how they can best contribute to that strategy. Similarly, visibility of operational performance between the corporate and business levels is often very poor.


A scorecarding system, which may be based on the Balanced Scorecard approach or on the SCOR (Supply Chain Operations Reference) model created by the Supply Chain Council, can be very effective in making performance visible, thereby forcing an emphasis on visibility of performance targets and actual performance and encouraging an environment of increased accountability.

Manufacturers that have undertaken the  task of defining their KPIs are well positioned to adopt scorecarding technology. They will be very useful if these have been defined across multiple plants within a business unit. These KPIs should be hierarchically defined, so that business users can “drill down” into areas of poor performance to understand root causes. Web-based scorecards and dashboards
ensure maximum visibility, access and use.

Linking strategic metrics developed by executives down to operational metrics on the plant floor drives business and operational alignment, and the result is operational excellence.


Procurement Excellence

 The purchasing organization and your suppliers’ performance are quantified and tracked with KPIs
that measure quality and cost (including comparisons to alternate sources), delivery and order or requisition placement.

Supplier scorecards enable continuous, timely measurement against consistent standards for all suppliers.
With consolidated procurement information, you are better able to leverage your company’s purchasing power. You can identify suppliers that offer the same materials or services, and rapidly evaluate their offerings against the same standards.

With the ability to monitor all your suppliers, you can leverage your knowledge to improve supplier responsiveness and the efficiency of your supply chain, and you can gather data that will help you make the most profitable decisions when negotiating future procurement contracts. In addition, you can share information, such as supplier performance data, with suppliers via an extranet, so they know when corrective action is required or when standards have not been met.

Also, having aggregate information on demand, including inventory, supply, supplier performance, etc., allows for quicker and better purchasing decisions leading to a more proactive purchasing organization. With better information in hand, you can consolidate and optimize your suppliers and leverage your buying power, which means a potential for better terms and lower supply costs.

Production Excellence

IBM Cognos BI software offers visibility across all plants, lines and shifts, allowing you to monitor performance trends and to identify, isolate and analyze the source and impact of problems, whether product defects or production anomalies. With the ability to make accurate comparisons, for example, between facilities and shifts, you can discover lags and other problems that had previously gone unnoticed. You
can also identify trends in quality, efficiency or throughput, and make proactive decisions based on this insight.

Similarly, the solution makes available allows you to analyze the cost of failures: scrapped production, customer returns and other quality-related problems; downtime; as well as costs for specific
overhead items such as re-engineering and equipment upgrades.

This intelligence can be used to help capitalize on success, to analyze savings created by new efficiencies or to help understand how to repeat an event that improved quality or throughput. It also offers the benefit of being able to share production performance information with staff, including comparisons across
locations, over time, measurement against production standards, etc.


Inventory Management Excellence

The solution opens visibility into the entire inventory: the levels and locations of all assets at any point in time, their worth, their depletion rates, their use; who supplied them, who uses them; what is spoiled, obsolete or surplus; what alternative items are available. With inventory accurately quantified and tracked
across the company and its partners, and with changes measured against common standards, such as minimum or age thresholds, you will know at all times what you have, where it is and how long it will last.


From start to finish, from negotiations with suppliers through customer delivery, IBM Cognos software offers full visibility into processes and events, transparency of information and coherent standards made available across your organization.


Reference - The content is from IBM White Paper on Operational Excellence
http://www-07.ibm.com/sg/manufacturing/pdf/manufacturing/wp_operational.pdf

March 26, 2015

Just-in-Time and Lean Systems - Review Notes of Chase et al. Book Chapter

Just-in-time or JIT is an integrated set of activities designed to achieve high-volume production using minimal inventories of raw materials, work in process, and finished goods. Parts arrive at the next workstation "just in time" and are completed and move through the operation quickly. Nothing is produced until it is needed later in the assembly line. The consumer expresses a need for a product, and "pulls" demand through the production system.

In Japan, JIT has been used to isolate the elements of waste in an organization. The Japanese practice a great respect for people and depend on the personnel to identify and eliminate sources of waste, excess, and inefficiency. The basic elements of JIT are a focused factory with networks following the strategy of reducing waste, the use of group technology or teams for problem-solving, quality at the source so no time and energy and materials are wasted on less than perfect quality products, uniform plant loading, Kanban production control systems, and empowerment of workforce.

While North American systems have modified JIT, the techniques can be used in layouts and design flows as well as in job shops. JIT has also merged in theory and practice with TQC, or building quality into the process. JIT works at its best when only good-quality products are pulled through the system and no "just-in-case" extra inventory is needed.

JIT requires a stable schedule over a lengthy time horizon. Along, with customers and employees, who are key components of the JIT system, vendors are also important to the process.

JIT is also applicable to service industries. Successful service applications include organizing problem-solving groups, upgrading housekeeping and quality, clarifying process flows, eliminating unnecessary activities, and developing supplier networks among others.


JIT is a powerful tool for reducing inventory and improving production and service operations. Management support, commitment, and training to continuing JIT progress are essential to success.

Industrial engineering and JIT

I define industrial engineering as human effort engineering and systems efficiency engineering. Functional design of a system is not the core focus of industrial engineers. There are various disciplines of engineering for functional design. Each of the designs created by functional engineers can be evaluated by industrial engineers for efficiency audit and improvement. JIT may have started as an efficiency improvement initiative. But now JIT could have become a functional discipline. Industrial engineers still have the role to audit efficiency of JIT systems and improve their efficiency further with the tools of efficiency currently in their tool box and tools which may come out subsequently.

Chapter Topics


Lean Logic


Lean production is an integrated set of activities designed to achieve production using minimal invetories of raw materials, work-in-progress, and finished goods. Parts arrive at the next workstation "just in time" and are completed and move through the process quickly. Lean is also based on the logic that nothing will be produced until it is needed.


The Toyota Production System


Toyota production system was created as the chief of Toyota told his team, we have to become price competitive to survive American imports. Hence we have to become lower cost and more productivity company.

Elimination of waste, improvement of efficiency, an industrial engineering slogan became the theme of Toyota Managers. Taichi Ohno, a production manager is credited for the development of TPS. Along with the elimination of waste, respect for people is also highlighted in Toyota culture. People are given importance in the system and they are asked to learn new skills and focus on productivity and continuously improve productivity.

The book gives a Toyota President, Fujio Cho's statement. "We must use the minimum amount of equipment, materials, parts, and workers (working time) which are absolutely essential to production." So the emphasis on finding optimal or ideal requirement of resources and controlling the process in such a way that production is achieved with those optimal resources.  But waste occurs in production processes and more resources are consumed by production systems. Seven types of wastes were described in TPS which have to measured and eliminated. 1. Waste from overproduction  2. Waiting time 3. Unnecessary transportation  4. Inventory  5. Unnecessary processing  6. Unnecessary human motionand 7. Defects and reworking.

MIT Team who studied TPS and developed theory of lean systems, recommended value stream mapping as the major visual tool to identify waiting time and inventory. It provided a box structure to various show waste at various work centers and operations in a process.

Lean Implementation Requirements


Design principles that guide the design of lean supply chains (Production facility and supply and distribution networks)

Focused factory networks
Group technology
Quality at the source
JIT Production
Uniform plant loading
Kanban production control systems
Minimized Setup times
Respect for people

Lean layouts and design flows
Preventive maintenance
Six sigma quality
A stable schedule
Working with suppliers as partners on a long term contracts

Lean Services


The concepts of efficiency implemented very successful in production systems are being extended to services systems.

Suggestions given are:

Organize problem solving groups.
Upgrade housekeeping
Upgrade quality
Clarify process flows
Revise equipment and process technologies
Level the facility load
Eliminate unnecessary activities
Reorganize physical configuration
Introduce demand pull scheduling
Develop supplier networks


Chapter Outline of  Richard B. Chase 12/e

Richard B. Chase. F. Robert Jacobs, Nicholas J. Aquilano, Operations and Supply Chain Management 12/e, McGraw-Hill Higher Education, 2010


Lean Six Sigma at Solectron
Lean Logic
The Toyota Production System
Lean Implementation Requirements
Lean Services



Chapter Outline of Richard B. Chase  10/e


Richard B. Chase, F. Robert Jacobs, Nicholas J. Aquilano, Operations Management for Competitive Advantage, 10/e, McGraw-Hill Higher Education, 2004



JIT Logic
The Toyota Production System
Elimination of Waste
Respect for People
North American Modifications of JIT
JIT Implementation Requirements
JIT Layouts and Design Flows
JIT Applications for Line Flows
JIT Applications for Job Shops
TQC (Total Quality Control)
A Stable Schedule
Work with Suppliers
JIT in Services

Case: Toyota, Ford, GM, and Volkswagen - Some Differing Opinions about Working with Suppliers
Case: Quality Parts Company


References



Richard B. Chase, F. Robert Jacobs, Nicholas J. Aquilano, Operations Management for Competitive Advantage, 10/e, McGraw-Hill Higher Education, 2004

http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072506369/student_view0/chapter11/

Originally posted in

http://knol.google.com/k/narayana-rao/just-in-time-and-lean-systems/2utb2lsm2k7a/ 448



Updated  26 March 2015, 10 Dec 2011

Enterprise Resource Planning: Fundamentals of Design and Implementation - K. Ganesh et al. Book Information



Enterprise Resource Planning: Fundamentals of Design and Implementation (Google eBook)

Front Cover
K. Ganesh, Sanjay Mohapatra, S. P. Anbuudayasankar, P. Sivakumar
Springer, 2014 - 170 pages
0 Reviews

This book introduces the fundamental principles of understanding business requirements to apply enterprise resource planning (ERP) in order to meet business needs. The book also helps readers understand the usage of ERP for monitoring and controlling business processes, while providing practical oriented solutions to the design and implementation of ERP. Using the provided framework, a business can decide to provide more value at lower cost which increases its competitive advantage. This should be an ideal reference for executives, researchers and consultants in project management of ERP. ERP can be considered to be an integrated package of business process. The scope of ERP determines the extent of automation of business process. For example if ERP covers Human Resource (HR) and finance business processes only, then business process related HR and finance are automated. Typically business process that are automated in HR and finance employee entry and exist process, allocation of employee ID, payroll, processing , income tax planning and actual deduction etc. There is seamless flow of employee data and information is available at an effectively faster rate to take appropriate decision. As custom demand increases, there is a need to meet the changing scenario with speed and efficiency. While there is a need to increase productivity, there is also a need to reduce cost of operation. The repetitive business processes can be handled effectively by automating them and freeing human resources for meeting other uncertainties. These automations not only should be done for each department, but also should cut across different departments. Thus there is a need for automating business processes at enterprise level. This enterprise level automation started with MRP, then MRP II, ERP and then finally open source ERP have taken centre stage. Out of the standard products available in the market, an organization can chose an ERP product for implementation, depending on the features available and the total cost of ownership (TCO). This comparison helps an organization to choose the product that best suits the needs for the organization. Enterprise Resource Planning: Fundamentals of Design and Implementation highlights these concepts while discusses different good practices to design and implement ERP.

https://books.google.co.in/books?id=ttEpBAAAQBAJ

March 18, 2015

Learning Curves - Review Notes

Learning curves are important in a variety of business applications, especially manufacturing. The learning curve theory is a relationship between unit production time and the cumulative number of units produced. As individuals or organizations collectively repeat a particular process, they gain skill or efficiency from their experience and production time improvements result.

The learning curve theory is based on three assumptions: (1) the amount of time required to complete a given task or unit of a product will be less each time the task is undertaken, (2) the unit time will decrease at a decreasing rate, and (3) the reduction in time will follow a predictable pattern. This is often referred to as "practice makes perfect."

If production has been in progress for some time, the learning percentage can be obtained from production records. The longer the production history, the more accurate the estimate will be. For new production projects, it is more a function of guesswork and expert opinion to estimate a learning curve percentage.

A firm's learning rate may differ from that of the industry due to differences in operating characteristics or even procedural differences. Often the rates will vary whether the industry rate is based on a single product or an entire product line. The manner in which the data were aggregated will cause rates to vary. Learning curves and organizational knowledge can depreciate if key individuals leave the organization or if technologies become inaccessible or difficult to use. Learning curves provide an excellent means to examine performance.

Learning curve theory was generalized into experience effect and it was made applicable to costs. The cumulative volume and average cost of production have an inverse relationship. As cumulative volume doubles average cost goes down by a certain percentage. For example, 90% learning curve implies, if the cumulative volume doubles, the average cost will come to 90% of the earlier average cost, This means, the firm selling more volume will be able to produce the incremental units at a lower cost, when the law is in operation and can sell at a lower price, thus enlarging the market demand for its products. Customers may shift their demand to that company and wait buying from it at lower price. Thus experience effect becomes a competitive strategy issue.

Application of Learning Curves
Learning Curve Defined
Individual Learning Defined
Organizational Learning Defined

Plotting Learning Curves
Logarithmic Analysis
Learning Curve Tables
Estimating the Learning Percentage
How Long Does Learning Go On?

General Guidelines for Learning
Individual Learning
Organizational Learning

Learning Curves Applied to Heart Transplant Mortality

Full note of the book


Summaries of all Chapters of Operation Management

March 15, 2015

Strategic Management: An Integrated Approach by Charles Hill, Gareth Jones - Book Information

MBA Core Management Knowledge - One Year Revision Schedule

Strategic Management: An Integrated Approach
10th  Edition
Charles Hill, Gareth Jones
Cengage Learning, Feb 21, 2012 - 960 pages


This leading strategy text presents the complexities of strategic management through up-to-date scholarship and hands-on applications. Highly respected authors Charles Hill and Gareth Jones integrate cutting-edge research on topics including corporate performance, governance, strategic leadership, technology, and business ethics through both theory and case studies.

Based on real-world practices and current thinking in the field, the tenth edition of STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT features an increased emphasis on the changing global economy and its role in strategic management. The high-quality case study program contains 31 cases covering small, medium, and large companies of varying backgrounds. All cases are available in the main student text or the core case text.
https://books.google.co.in/books?id=Xax9awcoiDsC



Table of Contents





Part 1: INTRODUCTION TO STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT.


1. Strategic Leadership: Managing the Strategy-Making Process for Competitive Advantage.
2. External Analysis: The Identification of Opportunities and Threats.

Part 2: THE NATURE OF COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE.


3. Internal Analysis: Distinctive Competencies, Competitive Advantage, and Profitability.
4. Building Competitive Advantage Through Functional-Level Strategy.

Part 3: STRATEGIES.


5. Building Competitive Advantage Through Business-Level Strategy.
6. Business-Level Strategy and the Industry Environment.
7. Strategy and Technology.
8. Strategy in the Global Environment.
9. Corporate-Level Strategy: Horizontal Integration, Vertical Integration, and Strategic Outsourcing.
10. Corporate-Level Strategy: Formulating and Implementing Related and Unrelated Diversification.

Part 4: IMPLEMENTING STRATEGY.

11. Corporate Performance, Governance, and Business Ethics.

12. Implementing Strategy in Companies that Compete in a Single Industry.
13. Implementing Strategy in Companies that Compete Across Industries and Countries.


CASES 


.
BUSINESS-LEVEL STRATEGY.
Best Buy: Sustainable Customer Centricity Model. Whole Food Markets in 2010:

How to Grow in an Increasingly Competitive Market. Herman Miller: A Case of Reinvention and Renewal.

Wells Fargo: The Future of a Community Bank. Staples in 2011.

The Apollo Group (The University of Phoenix) in 2011.

The Evolution of the Small Package Express Delivery Industry, 1973-2010.

Airborne Express: The Underdog.

Google in 2011.

HCSS: Employee Ownership and the Entrepreneurial Spirit.

KCI Technologies: Engineering the Future, One Employee at a Time.

W.L. Gore: Developing Teams to Meet 21st Century Challenges.

Home Video Game Industry, 1968-2011.

Tom Tom: New Competition Everywhere.

Alarm Ringing: Nokia in 2010.

AB Electrolux: Challenging Times In the Appliance Industry.

American Airlines Since Deregulation.

How SAP's Business Model and Strategies made it the Global Business Software Leader--Part I.
 Blockbuster, Netflix, and the Entertainment Retail Industry in 2011.

CORPORATE LEVEL STRATEGY CASES.


SAP and the Global Business Software Industry in 2011--Part 2.

How Amazon.com Became the Leading Online Retailer in 2011.

eBay and the Online Auction and Retail Sales Industry in 2011.

Is Yahoo's Business Model Working in 2011?

Viacom is Successful in 2011.

GE: Ecomagination--Driving Sustainable Growth for GE.

Cemex's Acquisition Strategy.

3M: The Second Century.

Kodak in 2011.

Boeing Commercial Aerospace in 2011.


STRATEGY AND ETHICS.

Merck, the FDA and the Vioxx Recall.

Nike: Sweatshops and Business Ethics.

March 11, 2015

Planning - Principle of competitive strategies



In a competitive arena, it is important to choose plans in the light of what competitor will or will not do and navigate based on what competitors are doing or not doing.

Planning - The Principle of navigational change




Manager needs to periodically check events of the plan and redraw plans to maintain the move toward a desired goal.

Planning - The Flexibility Principle



Building flexibility in planning is beneficial, but cost of building flexibility needs to be evaluated against the benefits.

The Commitment Principle



Planning can cover a period over which commitment of resources can be clearly visualized.



14 Edition

Logical planning should cover a period of time in the future necessary to foresee as well as possible, through a series of actions, the fulfillment of commitments involved in a decision made today.

Principle of the limiting factor



Consider limiting factor in generating alternatives and selection from alternatives.

Planning - Principle of alternatives



Select the plan which is the most effective and the most efficient to the attainment of a desired goal.

This principles was not given in the 14 edition.

Planning - Principle of timing



If plans are structured to provide a network of derivatives plans in sequence, there will be more effectiveness in attainment of enterprise objectives.

This principles in not included in the 14th edition.

Planning - Principle of planning premises




If more people in an organization use common and consistent planning premises, the enterprise planning will be more coordinated.



Development of planing premises requires market research, forecasting, and environmental scanning.

Planning - Principle of primacy of planning



Planning is the primary prerequisite for all other functions of management. Every action of the manager follows a planning step.

!4 Edition
Planning logically precedes all other managerial functions.

Planning - Principles of Objectives



If objectives are to be meaningful to people, they must be clear, attainable, and verfiable

(The principles I saw first n 14th Edition of Weihirch, Cannice and Koontz)

Planning - Principle of contribution to objectives




Every plan has to contribute positively toward the accomplishment of enterprise objectives.

Every proposed action has to be evaluated to determine its contribution to the accomplishment of enterprise objectives.

Engineering economic analysis in case of engineering actions.

March 8, 2015

Management - 14th Edition by Koontz, Weihrich, Cannice - Chapter-wise Presentation Slides

Management Principles and Practice - Methods and Tools


Koontz and O’Donnell - First Edition

Weihrich, Cannice and Koontz - 14th Edition, 2013

Available:  MBA management theory revision notes by Narayana rao K.V.S.S. , Professor, NITIE

Visit      http://nraomtr.blogspot.com 

All Core Management Subjects - One Year Revision Plan

http://nraomtr.blogspot.com/2015/01/mba-core-management-knowledge-one-year.html


Chapter 1


Management - Definition


It is a process of designing and maintaining environment in which individuals, working together in groups, efficiently accomplish selected aims.
Effectiveness: Accomplishment of selected aims.
Efficiency: Accomplishment of aims with the least amount of resources.

Management is the process of designing and maintaining the environment.
Environment – External and Internal
External – Society, Government, Physical environment, Customers, Suppliers
Internal – Selected objectives, goals, mission, technology, equipment, tools, materials, accepted orders, staff, training, reward systems, recognition and discipline systems, communication systems

The functions of managers
Planning,
Organizing,
Staffing,
Leading and
Controlling

Planning
Planning involves selecting missions and objectives as well as the actions to achieve them.
Planning involves decision making.
The decisions require commitment of resources – human and material.

Organizing
Planning identifies and prescribes actions to achieve the objectives of the organization.
These actions have to be split into tasks that can be accomplished by equipment and man combinations.
The men have to be grouped and managers have to be assigned to groups to help the operators with daily plans, training, material flow, coordination with other groups etc.

Staffing
Staffing involves filling, and keeping filled, the positions in the organization.
This is done by identifying workforce requirements, inventorying the people available, and recruiting, selecting, placing, promoting, appraising, planning the careers of, compensating, and training or otherwise developing recruits and job holders.

leading
Leading is influencing people so that they will contribute to organizational and group goals.
Leadership is interpersonal aspect of managing.
Leader needs followers.
People tend to follow those who offer means of satisfying their own needs, wishes and desires.
Leading involves concepts and processes of motivation, leadership styles, and communication.

Controlling
Controlling is observing and correcting actions to make sure that they follow designed processes and measuring and correcting individual and organizational performance to ensure that events conform to plans.


Managerial functions at different organizational levels
All Managers carry out all managerial functions.
Top level managers spend more time on planning and organizing and direct and control middle mangers.
Middle managers take more active role in staffing and direct and control supervisors or first level managers.
First level managers spend more time in directing and controlling the activities of front line employees who actually produce products or services.

Managerial skills
Conceptual skills (Business Model – Market, Technology and Financial Returns)
Human skills
Technical skills
Problem solving skills (Solving challenges that appear periodically by analyzing the problem and synthesizing the solution. The solution is to be tested and validated).

Management Methods

Management Methods – Management Process

Planning

Organizing

Staffing

Leading

Controlling

Management Methods – business functions
Strategic Management
Marketing Management
Operations Management
Supply Chain Management
Human Resource Management
Financial Management
Information Systems Management


Chapter 4 essentials of planning and managing by objectives
Missions or Objectives – Objectives or Goals
Strategies – Policies – Procedures – Program
Budget -

Steps in Planning
Management planning tool – management by objectives (mbo)
Objectives
The Nature of Objectives
Hierarchy of Objectives
Multiplicity of Objectives
How to Set Objectives
Quantitative and Qualitative Objectives
Guidelines for Setting Objectives
Evolving Concepts in MBO
Benefits and weaknesses of mbo
Case – Developing Verifiable Case


5. Strategies, policies and planning premises
Developing Strategies
Developing Policies
Role of Planning Premises to Guide Planning
The strategic planning process
Inputs to the organization
Industry Analysis
Enterprise Profile
Orientation, Values and Vision of Executives
Mission (Purpose), Major Objectives, and Strategic Intent
Present and Future External Environment
Internal Environment

Development of Alternative Strategies
Evaluation and Choice of Strategies
Consistency Testing and Contingency Planning
The  tows matrix: a modern tool for analysis of the situation

                                                          Strengths                   Weaknesses
External Opportunities       SO                    WO

External Threats                 ST                     WT
Tows matrix strategic alternatives
SO – Vigorously pursue the opportunity

WO – Take up measures to reduce weakness

ST – Challenge the threat

WT – Withdraw from the activity
Blue ocean strategy –pursuit of opportunities in uncontested market
The authors suggested a framework called strategic canvas.
The portfolio matrix: a tool for allocating resources
Major kinds of strategies and policies
Products or Services
Marketing

Hierarchy of Strategies
Corporate Level
Business Level
Functional Level
Porter Generic Competitive strategies
Cost leadership
Differentiation
Focus
Premising and forecasting

Marketing Research
Forecasting
Insights

Forecasting of Economic, Social, Political/Legal and Technological Environments

Forecasting with Delphi Technique


6. Decision making
Rationality in Decision Making
Limited, or”Bounded,” Rationality
Development of Alternatives and the Limiting Factor
Heuristics in Decision Making
Evaluation of Alternatives – Quantitative and Qualitative Factors
Marginal Analysis
Cost Effective Analysis

Three Alternatives Approaches for Decision Making: Experience, Experimentation, Research and Analysis using Mathematical and Simulation Models.
Programmed and Nonprogrammed Decisions
Decision Making under Risk and Uncertainty


Creativity – Making People Creative and Harnessing Their Creativity
Brain Storming – Creative Manager


Invention and innovation

Invention is a technical achievement.
Innovation is a business achievement.
Inventions are done by technical people
Innovations are done by business managers.
For Innovation managers have to understand the needs of the customers and then use existing technical alternatives to develop a new solution.
Managers can fund a research and development solution as a part of innovation project.


7. The Nature of organizing
Henri Fayol said organization involves decisions regarding material organization and human organization.
Management theory has not developed adequately in material organization.
Formal Organization
Informal Organization
Organizational Division – The Department
Organizational Levels arise due to Span of Management
Factors Determining an Effective Span

The Process of organizing


reengineering
There will be opportunities of reengineering during the life of an organization.
Reengineering emphasizes the deep understanding of the capabilities of a new technology and redesigning the processes of an organization to make the best use of the new technology.


Organization structure: departmentation
Departmentation by Business Functions or Enterprise Functions
Departmentation by Territory or Geography
Departmentation by Customer Group
Departmentation by Product
Matrix Organization
Strategic Business Units


The virtual organization
Group of people connected through information technology.
Independent firms of suppliers, customers can also form virtual network of organizations.

The technological possibilities are exciting, but how do we manage people we never see? This is a topic that needs development.


The boundaryless organization
Jack Welch, CEO of General Electric stated this idea.
He wanted GE to be boundaryless organization.
It is a global organization.
An idea can generate in any unit of GE.
It can be sold to the global market.


Procedure - departmentation
The aim: Achieving Objectives

Mixing Types of Departmentation: The first level of departmentation can be on one basis and sections within departments can be organized on a different basis.


9. Line/staff authority, empowerment, and decentraliztion
Authority and Power
Empowerment
Line/Staff Concepts and Functional Authority
Decentralization of Authority: Federal Government – Different powers by constitution.
Delegation of Authority – Organization by an individual manager


Chapter

10. Effective organization and organization culture


Avoid Mistakes in Organizing – Planning Stage
Planning for the ideal
Modification for the Human Factor
Avoid Inflexibility – Make it Flexible
Readjust as needed.


Making staff work effective


Make everybody understand authority relationships.
Make line listen to staff when specialist studies were done by staff and advice is given.
Keep staff informed of the developments in the organization.
Require Complete Staff Work: Staff must give a recommendation that is complete and implentable.
Making staff work acceptable and useful.


Tools of organization


Organization Charts
Avoid conflict in organization through clarification of roles, authority and reporting relationships.
Position Descriptions
Ensure Understanding of the organization Design by teaching people – Explain to people the basis and expected benefits (sell the design).


Informal  organization

Recognize its inevitable formation.
Recognize its benefits to members.
Use it for organization benefit appropriately.
Promoting an appropriate organizational culture


Defining organization culture

Culture is the general pattern of behavior, shared beliefs and values explicitly declared and assumptions that are not stated but can be diagnosed which are shared in the members of an organization.
One can observe some common elements of behavior, common beliefs and values and even common assumptions.

The Influence of the leader on organization culture

What is Value?
It is a fairly permanent belief about what is appropriate and what is not that guides the actions and behavior of employees in performing processes to achieve the objectives of the organization.
The values of top managers are accepted by large number of people and are implemented.

Value driven corporate leaders serve as role models and transform their employees.
The ideal organization culture created by corporate leaders can result in managerial functions being carried out in quiet different ways.

Chapter

11. Human resource management and selection

Systems approach to HRM
Factors Affecting the Number and Kinds of Managers Required
The Management Inventory

Policies
Promotion from Within
The Policy of Open Competition

Staffing
Responsibility for Staffing

Selection
Matching Job requirements and Candidate Competence
Job design and job requirements

Skills and personal characteristics needed in managers

Analytical and problem solving abilities
Desire to manage
Communication skills and empathy
Integrity and Honesty
Integrity: The quality of being honest and firm in moral principles
Honesty: telling the truth, not breaking the law, and not deceiving others
Past performance as Manager


Selection process

Interviews
Tests
Assessment Centers

Orienting and Socializing New Employees


EIU Survey – Managing in 2020

Areas that have the greatest potential for improving productivity are:
Managing knowledge.
Providing services and support to customers.
Improving operations and production processes
Developing businesses and strategies
Managing marketing and sales activities
Managing human resources and training

12. Performance appraisal and career strategy


Choosing Appraisal Criteria
Performance in Accomplishing Goals
Performance as Managers

Three Kinds  of Review or Appraisal
1. Comprehensive 2. Progress or periodic 3. Continuous monitoring
Appraisal process and issues
Self appraisal versus Judging
Subjective versus Objective Evaluation
Assessing Past Performance
Assessing Future Oriented Development Activities
Strengths and Weaknesses of Appraisal against Verifiable Objectives


Formulating the career strategy

1. Preparation of a personal profile
2. Development of long-range personal and professional goals
3. Analysis of Environment: Threats and opportunities
4. Analysis of personal strengths and weaknesses
5. Development of strategic career alternatives
6. Consistency training and strategic choices

7. Development of Short-range career objectives and action plans
8. Development of contingency plans
9. Implementation of the career plan
10. Monitoring progress.
11. Write your own biography
13. Managing change through manager and organization development


Approaches to Manager Development for Current Job, Next Job and Future Needs of the Organization.

On the Job Training


Planned Progression
Job Rotation
Creation of “Assistant-to” Positions
Temporary Promotions
Committees and Junior Boards
Coaching


Internal and external manager training


Conference Programs
University Management Programs
In-House “Universities”
Readings, Television, Video Instruction, and Online Education
E-Training
Special Training Programs

Managing change


Techniques for initiating change
Resistance to change

Organizational conflict
Sources of conflict
Managing conflict

Organization development
The organization development process

Learning organization
A learning organization is one that can adapt to changes in the external environment through continuous through continuous renewal of its structure and practices.

Case: Jack Welch Leading organizational change at GE
Page 345

Chapter

18. The System and process of controlling

The Basic Control Process
Establishment of standards
Measurement of performance
Correction of deviations

Critical control points, standards, factors


Every objective and goal is a standard against which actual or expected performance has to be measured by an organization.
But these 8 categories of standards are important
Physical  2.  Cost  3. Capital  4. Revenue
5. Program 6. Intangible 7. Goals  8. Strategic plan

Benchmarking: it is finding best practices of other companies and using them as base for planning to do better.

Real time information and control


Real time information helps in quick control action and correction of deviation.
It helps to keep plans on track more closely.
New computer integrated information systems are providing real time information and thus helping real time control.


Preventive control or feedforward control
If expectation of results can be made, managers can judge whether current or proposed actions result in planned results.
If the expectation is not as per plans they can change actions to accomplish plans.

 Control of overall performance – profit center control

Profit and loss control
Return on Investment control
Management Audits


Requirements for effective control


Tailoring controls to plans and positions
Tailoring controls to individual managers
Designing controls to point up exceptions at critical points
Seeking objectives of controls
Ensuring flexibility of controls
Fitting the control system to the organizational culture
Achieving economy of controls
Establishing controls that lead to corrective actions


Case: Walmart in America and Around the Globe
Page 483

Chapter

19. Control techniques and information technology

The Budget as a Control Device
Zero base budgeting

Traditional Nonbudgetary Control Devices
Time-event network analysis
Gantt charts
Milestone budgeting
PERT

The balanced scorecard


Financial Performance
Customer Assets – Brand Value
Internal Processes – Are they improving providing more value to customers and becoming  more efficient?
Organizational Learning – Are you able to learn new things and innovate? – Serve customers through new products and processes

Information technology


Basic Data Capture and Storage
Information Indigestion and Intelligence Services
Managing by the Numbers
The Twitter Phenomena

Opportunities and challenges created by information technologies


Innovation through analytics
Speech recognition devices
Telecommuting
Computer Networks
The Internet
Intranet and Extranet
Groupware
Freeware
Information Security
The digital economy, e-commerce and M-commerce
The emerging digital economy
M-Commerce and Wireless Communications
Problems as Opportunities in Web Connections
Customer Relationship Management (CRM)

Chapter

20. Productivity, operations management and total quality management


Productivity Challenges
Measurement of Productivity of knowledge workers


Production and Operations management


Manufacturing and Service
The Operations Management System
Planning operations
Product decision
Product design
Production system design
Operating the system


Tools and Techniques for improving productivity



Inventory planning and control (Improving Inventory productivity – Japanese came with zero inventory system)
Just in Time Inventory System – MIT people named it lean system
Outsourcing
Operations research
Value engineering
Quality circles


Total quality management


Long term commitment to continuous improvement in quality.
Active participation of all members of the organization at all levels.
Ongoing data collection, evaluation, feedback and improvement programs
TQM benefits: greater customer satisfaction, fewer defects and less waste, increased total productivity, reduced costs and improved profitability.


Lean Manufacturing


MIT study of Automobile plants across the world showed that Japanese plants used.

Fewer workers, lower inventories, shorter development time, fewer suppliers, less production space.
Japanese also had much lower delivery time.

One MIT researcher called Japanese system as lean system as opposed to buffer stock system which is a  bulk system.
Lean system is brought into existence by Japanese managers by creative use of industrial engineering principles, practices and objective of decreasing resources use by identifying waste and eliminating waste.

Computer Aided Techniques to improve productivity

CAD/CAM
Computer aided Design
CNC
Computer Aided Process Planning
Computer Aided Production Planning
Automated Guided Vehicles
Automatic Storage and Retrieval Systems


Integration of the value chain with the managerial actions

March 3, 2015

Marketing Firepower Essential for Startups




Are you planning to start an enterprise.

Check whether you have The Marketing Firepower

Price discounts: Are you selling a comparable product at a lower price.

Cheaper goods: Are you offering economy goods with lesser number of features. The strategy will succeed when there is significant number of buyers in need of lower priced product.

Prestige goods: Are you launching a higher quality product with more features.

Product proliferation: Are you planning to offer a greater product variety.

Product innovation: Are you offering an improve product.

Service innovation: Improvement in service offered to the buyers.

Distribution innovation: a new distribution outlet that offers additional convenience to buyers.

Process innovations: Is your enterprise based on a process innovation that gives better quality or lower cost?

Advertising innovation: Do you have innovative communications strategy that reaches and motivates larger number of potential customers resulting in higher sales.

You have to develop the marketing fire power that allows you to succeed in the market. Enter the market with adequate marketing firepower to succeed.



Read more detailed article on marketing strategies of a challenger firm to gain market share.
http://nraomtr.blogspot.com/2011/12/marketing-strategies-for-challenger.html

Competencies of Middle Managers



South Africa Public Sector Information

Core Competencies Essential to First Line Managers



The core competencies listed below are regarded as essential to first line managers employed within
the SA Public Sector irrespective of job title, agency, organisation or location.


The core competencies are overarched by the requirement of all SA Public Sector employees
to behave ethically and comply with the South Australian Public Sector Code of Ethics.
Middle manager common competencies


Maintain and enhance  confidence in public service
Apply government systems
Manage compliance with  legislation in the public sector
Manage policy implementation
Manage resources
Manage quality client service
Influence workforce effectiveness
Establish and maintain strategic  networks
Manage personal work priorities  and professional development



Middle Manager Competencies for the SA Public Sector


Middle manager common competencies The common competencies are relevant to the
majority of middle managers in the SA Public Sector, but may not be essential in every case. For example, not all middle managers manage people. These competencies are important to middle managers who wish to improve their current performance or future career options.

Formulate business strategies
Undertake research and
 analysis
Recruit, select and induct staff
Facilitate people management
Manage budgets and  financial plans
Procure goods and services
Develop a business case
Manage risk
Manage innovation and  continuous improvement
Provide strategic direction

http://www.dpc.sa.gov.au/sites/default/files/pubimages/documents/compfrwork_Middle-Mngr.pdf

Rational Decision Maker
Business process designer
Business process improver
Team developer and manager
Coach, Performance manager and mentor
Change manager
Culture shaper
Cross functional facilitator

http://www.memrc.com/img/Our-Practice-Areas/Middle%20Management%20Program%20Brochure%202.pdf


Framework given as 18 activties


---------------------------------------------------------
1.Provide Leadership In The Workplace, Appropriate To The Level
Of Autonomy Accorded To Individuals/Teams.

1.1 Demonstrate High Standards Of Performance.

1.2 Contribute To The Organisation's Reputation.

1.3 Influence Individuals And Teams.

1.4 Make Decisions.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2.Manage Personal Work Priorities And Development.

2.1 Manage Self.

2.2 Negotiate, Plan And Organise Personal Work Priorities.

2.3 Develop And Maintain Personal Competence.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Lead And Participate In, And Facilitate Work Team/Group
Appropriate To The Level Of Autonomy In The Workplace

3.1 Plan The Establishment Of Work Team/Group.

3.2 Develop Team Commitment And Co‑Operation.

3.3 Participate In, And Facilitate Work Team/Group.

3.4 Manage And Facilitate Team Performance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Establish And Manage Positive Relationships With
Colleagues And Customers.

4.1 Convey And Receive Information And Ideas.

4.2 Develop Trust And Confidence.

4.3 Build And Maintain Networks And Relationships.

4.4 Negotiate Positive Outcomes To Rectify Difficulties.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
5.Value And Stimulate The Diversity Of People And The Environment.

5.1 Create An Environment Which Recognises; Diversity As An Asset.

5.2 Promote Action Which Harnesses The Diversity In The Work Team/Group.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
6. Contribute To The Development Of A Learning Environment.­

6.1 Contribute To Planning Learning Arrangements.

6.2 Implement Effective Learning.

6.3 Assess Workplace Competence.

6.4 Monitor And Review Learning Processes And Effectiveness.

6.5 Record And Report Achievement Of Competency.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
7.Manage Resources To Achieve Planned Outcomes.

7.1 Plan Resource Use.

7.2 Implement Plan For Use Of Resources.

7.3 Monitor Human Resource Performance.

7.4 Monitor Financial Performance.

7.5 Monitor Physical Resource Performance.

7.6 Review Resource Capability And Utilisation.

7.7 Record And Report Resource Usage.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
8. Manage Quality Customer Service.

8.1 Prepare Implementation Schedule.

8.2 Deliver Products And Services.

8.3 Establish Monitoring Systems And Processes.

8.4 Monitor Progress And Adjust Performance.

8.5 Record And Report Results.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
9. Implement And Monitor Quality And Continuous
Improvement Processes.

9.1 Implement Quality Improvement System.

9.2 Monitor Performance.

9.3 Consolidate Quality Improvements And Identify Opportunities
For Further Improvement.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
10. Facilitate And Capitalise On Change And Innovation In A
Technological Environment.

10.1 Develop Creative And Flexible Approaches And Solutions.

10.2 Manage Work Group/Team Response To Emerging Challenges And Opportunities.

10.3 Implement And Monitor Change.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
11. Develop And Maintain A Safe And Fair Work Environment.

11.1 Access And Share The Relevant Information.

11.2 Plan And Introduce Processes To Implement Workplace Requirements.

11.3 Monitor And Adjust Performance.

11.4 Investigate Non‑Conformance.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
12. Create And Encourage A Learning Environment.

12.1 Plan Learning Strategies.

12.2 Plan And Review Assessment Of Workplace Competence.

12.3 Evaluate The Effectiveness Of Learning.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
13. Plan And Develop Human, Physical And Financial Resource
Information For Decision Making.

13.1 Establish Human, Physical And Financial Information Requirements.

13.2 Collect, Analyse And Report Human, Physical And Financial Information.

13.3 Manage Information Systems.

13.4 Prepare Resource Proposals.

13.5 Monitor And Review The Management Of Information.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
14. ‑Develop Plans To Meet Customer And Organization Needs.

14.1 Contribute To A Shared Vision And Values.

14.2 Contribute To Strategic Planning.

14.3 Research Customer Needs.

14.4 Identify Opportunities For Product And Service Enhancement.

14.5 Prepare Business Plans/Budgets.

14.6 Communicate The Outcomes Of The Planning Process.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
15. Participate In Planning And Reviewing Quality And
Continuous Improvement Processes.

15.1 Contribute To Continuous Improvement Planning.

15.2 Review Results.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
16. Influence The Development And Direction Of The Organization.

16.1 Develop The Organisation's Mission And Values.

16.2 Establish Goals, Objectives And Strategies.

16.3 Achieve Stakeholder Ownership.

16.4 Develop Individual Managers And Management Teams.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
17. Influence And Monitor The Organization's Competitiveness.

17.1 Create Systems To Monitor Internal And External Environments.

17.2 Identify And Forecast Trends.

17.3 Identify Competitive Strengths And Weaknesses.

17.4 Improve Organizational Systems And Processes.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
18. Manage Financial Planning And Performance.

18.1 Interpret The Organisation's Financial Status.

18.2 Prepare And Negotiate Budgets.

18.3 Monitor And Control Financial Performance.

18.4 Record And Report Financial Performance.



What are the Middle Manager Core Competencies?

Government of NewBrunswick Canada Website
There are five Middle Manager Core Competencies including:



Developing Others

Developing Others involves a genuine intent and passion to foster the long-term learning or professional development of others. 

Effective Interactive Communication Skills
Effective Interactive Communication implies the ability to transmit and receive information clearly and communicate effectively to others by considering their points of view in order to respond appropriately. It includes using tact, diplomacy, respect, openness and honesty in all communications as well as the ability to convey ideas and information in a way that brings understanding to the
target audience.

Organizational Commitment
Organizational Commitment consists of showing a genuine desire to align one’s own behaviour with the values, needs, priorities and goals of the organization. It may appear as putting an organization's mission before one’s own preferences and forcefully defending its integrity.

Results Orientation
Results Orientation is a genuine drive, focus and dedication for working towards obtaining results.
It is about knowing what results are important and focusing efforts and/or resources to achieve them, in alignment with the objectives of the team, work unit, branch, department and/or organization. Goal attainment activities are accomplished with a deep understanding of and respect for the values of the Public Service, the people involved, and for using resources in an efficient, effective and ethical manner.

Team Leadership
Team Leadership is the ability to step in and take a role as leader of a team or other group. It implies a desire to lead others and to instil in others a passion for their work, the mission and values of the organization, and the importance for acting with integrity, respect, impartiality, service and competence.




Blaenau Gwent UK List of Manager Competencies



College Managers - First Line - Middle and Senior Managers
http://www.northamptoncollege.ac.uk/documents/managersandteamleaderscompetencies.pdf

Leading People 
Communicating the Vision 
Facilitating High Performance and Results 
Maximising Potential 
Communicating 
Making Informed Decisions 
Working Together 
Promoting a Citizen Centred Culture 
Working With Councillors 
Pushing the Boundaries 


Papers and Articles List


June Xuejun Qiao, Wei Wang, (2009) "Managerial competencies for middle managers: some empirical findings from China", Journal of European Industrial Training, Vol. 33 Iss: 1, pp.69 - 81

Design/methodology/approach
– First a questionnaire survey was distributed among MBA and EMBA students at a major university in China, and then two case studies were conducted to collect more in‐depth data.

Findings
– The findings of this study suggest that team building, communication, coordination, execution and continual learning are critical competencies for the success of middle managers in China. Implications for future research and practices are also discussed.

HBR Article - The skills leaders require at every levels

30 July 2014
Jack Zenger and Joseph Folkman

In descending order of importance

Inspires and motivates others
Displays high integrity and honesty
Solves problems and analyzes isssues
Drives for results
Communicates powerfully and prolifically
Collaborates and promotes teamwork
Builds relationships
Displays technical or professional expertise
Displays a strategic perspective
Develops others
Takes initiative
Innovates
Champions change
Connects the group to the outside world
Establishes stretch goals
Practices self-development

https://hbr.org/2014/07/the-skills-leaders-need-at-every-level/


Thesis

The Pennsylvania State University The Graduate School
Department of Learning and Performance Systems

MIDDLE MANAGER LEADERSHIP COMPETENCIES IN CHINA:
PERCEPTIONS OF MBA AND EMBA STUDENTS AT NANKAI UNVERSITY

A Thesis in Workforce Education and Development
by Wei Wang
2006 Available on web
Has full questionairre
https://etda.libraries.psu.edu/paper/7058/

Sharpen the Saw - The Mental Dimension - Stephen Covey's Explanation








Sharpen The Saw - The 7th Habit in Stephen Covey's 7 Habits of Highly Effective People



A saw is a tool that helps you to cut a wooden log.  You cannot break many big  wooden logs but you can cut any wooden log. The saw provides you mechanical advantage using which you can apply sufficient force to cut the wood. But the saw has to be sharp. If it is dull, you may find it difficult to cut some logs. You may cut some logs, but you will take a lot of time. So keeping the saw sharp or making the saw sharp is an important activity that one has to do to complete cutting a log effectively and efficiently.

Some people do not keep their saws sharp and they toil all the day and achieve little. If anybody asks them why they are not keeping the saw sharp, they say they don't have the time. It is difficult for you to accept that a workman does not keep his saw sharp. But do you as an MBA graduate, revise your textbooks regularly and keep your knowledge fresh in your brain or memory or mind. What is your answer? Yes or no. No is the answer given by many of the readers(March 2015). Stephen said the same, when he wrote his very famous book "The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People" in 1989. 26 years have passed, the book has become famous but still the world does not follow the principle advocated by one of the top 25 most influential persons of America as declared by Time Magazine. I started this blog in 2012 by transferring my world famous articles - summaries of chapters of famous management textbooks to support Stephen Covey's principle in the case of MBA knowledge and MBA graduates. As a person holding an MBA equivalent qualification, a doctoral degree in management program, and a faculty of MBA equivalent programs, I thought it is a useful and valuable contribution from me to the global community of learners and management practitioners. I am partially successful no doubt, as it is my most successful blog with global audience.  




An explanation of the principle
_______________

_______________
Don Lucia upload


A Poem on Sharpening the Saw and Seven Habits


I keep myself fit by exercising and  eating right
I improve my knowledge I read and write
I help my friends and feel delight
I wish in the world all enjoy without a fight

I live my life according to Covey's principles
I  remember them as important values
I try to understand what is said by others
Covey said that gives victories

Let me recount the effective seven
Be proactive, think of end and begin
Do first thing first and think win win
Understand first, synergize, and sharpen

Poem written by Narayana Rao K.V.S.S. on 1 March 2015


Sharpening the Saw - Is It Being Done by MBA Graduates?


If we apply what Covey has written to MBA graduates, we can say MBAs leave the college and do not do any more serious reading. MBAs engage in action and many times it may not be effective or efficient as proper knowledge is not applied to cut the wooden log type business problems. Many times they fail or they solve the problem inefficiently. This creates losses for the companies they work for. They don't analyze problems with right skills and they don't write about the issues in clear and concise language so that their subordinates understand and carry out activities using best methods.

Continuing self education, continually honing and expanding the mind is an important renewal activity that increases the production capability, strengthens existing capability and creates managerial slack. Your proactive thinking habit scans the environment and finds right learning opportunities. Sometimes systematic learning devices like textbooks help you in mental saw sharpening process.

I created an yearly revision schedule for MBA graduates to renew their management brain.

Liberal education provides the ability to examine one's life activities against larger questions and purposes of the life and society and that of creation. Covey recommends reading book every week and makes a strong statement. If you do not read you are equal to a person who cannot read.

Apart from reading, writing is an important mental renewal activity. Through written communication, managers can make things more clear so that subordinates understand the issues better.

Planning and organizing are mental activities and they need to begin with the end in mind. Here Covey reiterates the planning basis. One has to determine the objectives first and then start the planning process to achieve that end.

Covey recommends people to spend an hour at least in sharpening the saw in the four dimensions. He said, it will improve the effectiveness of everything done in all the hours during the remaining part of the day. Also, you will be able to face great challenges that appear in everybody's life at some point in time.

Are you convinced?

Start Your "Sharpening The Saw" Activity  Today.


Visit the MBA Knowledge Revision Schedule and Read the articles according to the schedule.





Covey's Legacy
http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2012-07-27/news/32889378_1_principles-laws-stephen-covey