Principles of Management Revision/Review Articles - List
Managers of business firms or organizations in other walks of life are operating in pluralistic societies in which many groups represent various interests.
The Historical Function of Business
Economic Organization of the Society or Country
The typical organizational patterns include free enterprise, socialism, communism, and the welfare state.
The Business of Business
External Environment and Stakeholders
Capital
Labor
Price Levels
Government policies
Technology
The term technology refers to the sum total of the knowledge we have of ways to do things.
Customers
Society
Social attitudes, beliefs, and values
Business Ethics
Morals are customs with a high degree of social acceptance.
Business and professional codes
Purpose of declaring codes of conduct
Updated 24 January 2019, 29 Jan 2015, 12 December 2011
Part of
Koontz and O'Donnell - Principles of Management Book Chapter
Managers of business firms or organizations in other walks of life are operating in pluralistic societies in which many groups represent various interests.
Enterprises do not live unto themselves alone. They are interlocking institutions that man has found it beneficial to organize to serve his needs. The family came into existence, then tribe, government, army, education, religion etc. slowly came into existence. The proliferation of institutions and enterprises has proceeded down to our day, where they often exist in bewildering confusion.
No ideal situation exists. People or individuals vary from stupid to the genius, from the passive to the aggressive, from kind to the cruel, from the slothful to the energetic, from the cunning to the artless, from the humble to the proud. In an ideal society, the individuals would in concert determine when and which institutions and enterprises they would create to better serve themselves. But in practice many institutions and enterprises which have been created to serve them are the products of aggressive leaders-the few who care for many. They may not create always with care motive, they may do it for self-aggrandizement also.
The Historical Function of Business
Koontz and O'Donnell cite the explanation by economists. Economics conceives a business to be any activity that is concerned with the production (or purchase) for sale of scarce goods and services.The purpose of economic activity is always the same: it is to employ human and natural resources, and the man made capital equipment and components in the production of goods and services which the ultimate consumers want. Thus the purpose of business is to satisfy the economic wants of people, and since resources are scarce, their efficient use is a moral requirement.
Economic Organization of the Society or Country
The typical organizational patterns include free enterprise, socialism, communism, and the welfare state.
The Business of Business
There is no doubt whatever that the function of business is to make economic goods and services available for consumption. But it is not enough to produce economic goods; the first duty of business is to produce them efficiently.
Efficiency in resource employment is undoubtedly best achieved through free enterprise. It is the business of state to make sure through legislation and regulation that the private economy does not fail in its function to efficiently utilize resources to maximize the satisfaction of consumer wants for economic goods and services. The states are not able to do it by means of a monolithic bureaucracy as per the available experience.
External Environment and Stakeholders
Capital
Labor
Price Levels
Government policies
Technology
The term technology refers to the sum total of the knowledge we have of ways to do things.
Customers
Society
Social attitudes, beliefs, and values
Business Ethics
The practice of ethics is one of the social responsibilities of business. Unethical conduct is highly publicized whenever it is found, but most of the "sharp practices" remain hidden within the organizations or their networks.
Business and professional codes
Koontz and O'Donnell note that widespread tendency of business groups and professional people to adopt codes of conduct has scope to further ethical practices and development of science of ethics. Examples of codes of conduct include those of medical, legal and accounting professions.
Purpose of declaring codes of conduct
The usual reasons are two. In the first place, it is considered that the publication of a code of ethics will improve the confidence of the customer, client, patient, or voter in the quality of service he may expect. A second reason is to assure standard practices in the relationships between members themselves. McGuire pointed out two additional reasons. They can be used as a crutch by the weak to refuse to do unethical acts. They also help in detection of unethical behavior in competitors and employees.
Businessmen have an obligation to all others in society to use scarce resources efficiently and, in so doing, to make certain that every decision stands firmly upon the applicable moral customs and any generally accepted ethical principles.
p. 742
The goal of all managers in all enterprises must be the effective accomplishment of purpose (whatever it is) with the most efficient utilization of resources-human and material-at their disposal.
The purpose of business is to satisfy the economic wants of people, and, since resources are scarce, their efficient use is a moral requirement.
p. 744
It is not enough to produce economic goods; the first duty of business is to produce them efficiently.
Since businessmen obtain control scarce resources by the purchase or lease of land and capital and hire human services, they have a moral responsibility for using them efficiently in the production
It is the business of the state to make sure through legislation and regulation that the private economy does not fail in its function to efficiently utilize resources to maximize the satisfaction of consumer wants for economic goods and services.
Sentences from Harold Koontz and Cyril O'Donnell, Principles of Management, Fourth Edition, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1968, on Efficiency.
p. 742
The goal of all managers in all enterprises must be the effective accomplishment of purpose (whatever it is) with the most efficient utilization of resources-human and material-at their disposal.
The purpose of business is to satisfy the economic wants of people, and, since resources are scarce, their efficient use is a moral requirement.
p. 744
It is not enough to produce economic goods; the first duty of business is to produce them efficiently.
Since businessmen obtain control scarce resources by the purchase or lease of land and capital and hire human services, they have a moral responsibility for using them efficiently in the production
It is the business of the state to make sure through legislation and regulation that the private economy does not fail in its function to efficiently utilize resources to maximize the satisfaction of consumer wants for economic goods and services.
Updated 24 January 2019, 29 Jan 2015, 12 December 2011
Part of