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Actual for You - How do we Manage?
Re-Selling Products for Profit m Theory X to Theory Y. But now it appears
the pendulum is swinging back to Theory X. As mentioned in my "Bean counter"
article, mentoring and employee training programs (a cornerstone of Theory Y) is
being phased out as a means of cutting costs. Further, under the "Parenting
Management" scenario, younger employees need considerably more supervision
and direction, which lends itself to a Theory X philosophy.Some of the best home businesses currently available are those that allow you to purchase products for resale. Often times these businesses do not require you to even handle your own merchandise. The customer goes to a website you provide, makes a purchase, and then your sponsoring company ships the product to the consumer. In this instance, your only responsibility is marketing and promoting your website and its associated products.One thing you must be very careful of is that some companies have created a side-business selling their products primarily to individuals interested in resale. This essentially means that there are thousands of people selling the same products through the same means (internet auctions, online classified ads, etc.). Obviously, if there are thousands of people selling the exact same products with similar or identical prices, it's going to be very difficult for you to make a profit.My suggestion for anyone starting a new home business engaging in the reselling of products is to first find a niche market you are interested in. This could be any topic from sports to clothes. Personally, my first website was devoted to golf and its thousands of products. Once you have a niche market picked out you should make a list of all the associated products in that niche. For instance, using my first website as an example, I would list golf clubs, golf balls, tees, clothes, shoes, etc. This doesn't have to be an exhaustive list, just something to get your mind going.After you've selected a niche and made a list of appropriate topics it's time to begin researching the products that are available for you to resell. Use a search engine to fi Even Theory Z in Japan is showing signs of erosion. Although the Japanese economy ran well in the 1980's, it has slowed considerably over the last fifteen years, causing the Japanese to rethink how they compete and conduct business in a fast-paced world economy. Japanese managers realize they no longer have the luxury of waiting months to make a group decision and although they still wish to be loyal to the workforce, they realize certain sacrifices are inevitable. Further, thanks to Hollywood and the Internet, younger Japanese workers no longer share the same values as their predecessors. Frankly, they have picked up a lot of bad work habits from their Western counterparts. Concepts such as lifetime employment, corporate loyalty, and hard work is slowly evaporating from the Japanese business culture. BACK TO PERCEPTIONS How we elect to manage others or how we elect to be managed is based on our perceptions. For example, if we believe a person to be lazy, we will apply a Theory X style of management. But if we believe people are responsible, take initiative, and are successful, then Theories Y and Z are used. As I mentioned in "Parenting Management," a generation gap has emerged between management and the latest generation of workers. Management perceives today's young workers as immature, disorganized, undisciplined, and shirk responsibility. Whether this is true or not is immaterial. It is perceptions that count. Because of this, it should come as no small wonder that Theory X management practices are on the rise again. For those you Five Ways To Achieve A Higher Ranking Within Google "Management is more of a benevolent dictatorship as opposed to a democracy."
- Bryce's LawSearch engine optimization abbreviation of SEO. The main objective of implementing search engine optimization techniques is to make your website search engine friendly. To enhance the search engine ranking position (SERP); various affecting criteria are taken up in to mind. It makes your business profitable and enhances online activity of your business. It has been taken very seriously by web site owners. Accurate implemented optimization techniques can generate nice profits for any web site owner. so it is very important for any website owner to adopt SEO services for his business.ADZ Media have served many companies with several internet marketing needs. We have implemented SEO strategies from elementary level to enterprise level. At ADZ, we have implemented proven to rank our client's websites in major search engines and directories.Our Online Marketing Services 1. Search Engine Optimization Strategically improve your search engine placements. If you are looking for affordable Search Engine Ranking and Positioning service, you must checkout our Value for Money Search Engine Optimization Service Now!2. Search Engine & Directory Submission Search Engine Submission of your Web site by one of the SEO expert to ensure your site receives the highest ranking possible.3. Link Popularity We undertake custom Link Popularity Development program focusing on thematic link partnership development. Order your text link popularity program to boost your websites visibility NOW! 5. Online Public Relations, Blog, Article, RSS & PR Submission Public Relations is all about communicating your message to a target audience whether it is sales le I evidently hit a nerve in a few of my recent bulletins, specifically: #46 - The Death of Management - October 17, 2005 http://www.phmainstreet.com/mba/ss051017.pdf #47 - Parenting Management - October 24, 2005 http://www.phmainstreet.com/mba/ss051024.pdf #48 - The First Thing We Do, Let's Kill all the Bean Counters - October 31, 2005 http://www.phmainstreet.com/mba/ss051031.pdf I want to thank those of you who inundated my e-mail queue and responded to my blog with your comments and observations regarding these articles. From your remarks, it sounds like there is little management being applied in the area of Information Technology or in the corporate world in general. I jokingly refer to the absence of management in the workplace as Theory Zero (0), but perhaps it is time to revisit the three accepted theories of management and see what is actually being used. THE THREE THEORIES OF MANAGEMENT Before we begin, let us not forget that all of our actions are based on human perceptions, whether they be real of fallacious. Consequently, the three theories of management are based on perceptions, e.g., how we perceive the character of our workers. If we believe people will act or react to certain situations in a specific way, we will use this in our management philosophy, be it brute force, carrot-and-stick, or permitting freewill. From this basis, let's consider how the three theories apply: THEORY X ("Dictatorial Management") - This is derived from "Scientific Management," a concept best illustrated by the time-and-motion studies of a late nineteenth century industrial engineer named Frederick W. Taylor. Taylor observed the workers under his supervision at the Midvale Steel Company in Philadelphia brought their own shovels to work regardless of what size coal lumps they would have to shovel. He suggested to management that the company furnish shovels corresponding to the size and weight of the individual load, thus increasing the total amount of coal each worker could shovel in a day. Efficiency and production, the Theory X cornerstone, led to the assembly line and industrial production. The philosophy of Theory X management style is based on the view of human nature as: 1. People have a natural aversion to work. 2. People need to be coerced, controlled, and threatened with punishment to get them to put forth adequate effort toward the achievement of company goals. 3. The average person prefers to be directed, wishes to avoid responsibility, has little ambition, and wants security most. Theorists now ask how much of this behavior described is inherent human nature and how much is behavior learned from bosses who manage with those assumptions. Perhaps the assumptions become self-validating: workers who are always treated by an authoritarian management as though they were lazy, tend to behave that way. THEORY Y ("Participatory Management") - Most observers agree that the Theory Y management philosophy was derived from a series of experiments in the 1930's at the Western Electronic Hawthorne Works in Chicago. Employees had been divided into two groups: a "test" group that worked under changing lighting conditions and a "control" group that worked under constant lighting. When the test group's light conditions improved, their productivity increased, as expected. But what mystified researchers was a similar jump in productivity when illumination worsened. To compound the mystery, the control group's output rose when the test group's did. It was concluded that both groups felt management was giving them special attention and so responded with improved performance. This discovery of human relations management was called Theory Y. Theory Y's assumptions represent a much more positive assessment of human behavior and gave rise to the thousands of mentoring and management training programs in the 1960's and 70's, the purposes of which were to help managers change their assumptions of human nature from a Theory X to a Theory Y outlook. The basic premises of Theory Y include: 1. The expenditure of physical and mental effort in work is as natural as play or rest. 2. External control and threat of punishment are not the only means for bringing about effort toward corporate goals. People will exercise self-direction and self-control to achieve goals they find important. 3. Commitment to objectives is in proportion to the rewards associated with their achievement. 4. The average human being learns under proper conditions not only to accept but to seek responsibility. 5. The capacity to exercise a relatively high degree of imagination, ingenuity, and creativity in solving work problems is widely, not narrowly, present in the population. 6. Under the conditions of modern industrial life, the brain power of the average human is only partially utilized. THEORY Z ("Group Involvement") - Theory Z was introduced in 1981 by UCLA Professor Dr. William Ouchi in his book of the same name. It is based on Ouchi's observations of Japanese management practices of the time. Basically, Theory Z promotes employee participation in decision-making, thereby increasing their motivation and productivity. This management style emphasizes long range planning, consensus decision making, and neutral worker-employee loyalty. Ouchi concludes that Japanese managers got more out of their employees than U.S. managers because the whole structure of Japanese society encourages mutual trust and cooperation. This management philosophy is based on the following assumptions: 1. Long term, even life time, employment is expected by both managers and employees. 2. Employees need freedom and opportunity to "grow." 3. Decisions should be group decisions involving workers and managers. 4. Subordinates are whole people at work (in contrast to being thought of as titles or units of production). 5. Management has a broad concern for subordinate welfare. 6. Open communication, both vertically and horizontally, is the norm. 7. There is complete trust among groups and individuals because they all have the same goals - the good of the organization. 8. Cooperation, not competition, is the basis for relationships within the company. We have been conducting business in Japan since 1976 and have personally seen Theory Z in action. For example, when we sold our "PRIDE" Methodologies in Japan, we would have to make several sales presentations to a single company in order for all of the affected parties to reach a consensus as to whether this was the correct course of action for the company to pursue. After several months of deliberations, we would finally get a contract. Contrast this to American companies where we would make a single sales presentation to top management and close on the sale within a few days or weeks. However, to the credit of the Japanese, because everyone approved of the purchase, they all made an effort to successfully install and use it; if they failed, they would "lose face." Western managers, on the other hand, would shove the product down people's throats (a la Theory X), thereby the methodologies were viewed as the will of a single person and not the company overall. Consequently, when the manager left the company, "PRIDE" followed shortly behind. WHICH IS BETTER? Most managers favor Theory X, others Theory Y. A few are likely to become Theory Z managers. Most, however, use some combination of the three. There is no "right" style of management because the appropriate style depends on the kind of people you employ and the kind of business you run. But what is the current trend? During the second half of the 20th century there was a definite movement from Theory X to Theory Y. But now it appears the pendulum is swinging back to Theory X. As mentioned in my "Bean counter" article, mentoring and employee training programs (a cornerstone of Theory Y) is being phased out as a means of cutting costs. Further, under the "Parenting Management" scenario, younger employees need considerably more supervision and direction, which lends itself to a Theory X philosophy. Even Theory Z in Japan is showing signs of erosion. Although the Japanese economy ran well in the 1980's, it has slowed considerably over the last fifteen years, causing the Japanese to rethink how they compete and conduct business in a fast-paced world economy. Japanese managers realize they no longer have the luxury of waiting months to make a group decision and although they still wish to be loyal to the workforce, they realize certain sacrifices are inevitable. Further, thanks to Hollywood and the Internet, younger Japanese workers no longer share the same values as their predecessors. Frankly, they have picked up a lot of bad work habits from their Western counterparts. Concepts such as lifetime employment, corporate loyalty, and hard work is slowly evaporating from the Japanese business culture. BACK TO PERCEPTIONS How we elect to manage others or how we elect to be managed is based on our perceptions. For example, if we believe a person to be lazy, we will apply a Theory X style of management. But if we believe people are responsible, take initiative, and are successful, then Theories Y and Z are used. As I mentioned in "Parenting Management," a generation gap has emerged between management and the latest generation of workers. Management perceives today's young workers as immature, disorganized, undisciplined, and shirk responsibility. Whether this is true or not is immaterial. It is perceptions that count. Because of this, it should come as no small wonder that Theory X management practices are on the rise again. For those youn Customer Service Is About Establishing And Building Relationships. to
management that the company furnish shovels corresponding to the size
and weight of the individual load, thus increasing the total amount
of coal each worker could shovel in a day. Efficiency and production,
the Theory X cornerstone, led to the assembly line and industrial production.Any type of relationship can be fragile. Your new business can only succeed if those relationships are guarded, protected and nurtured. You do that by treating your clients as if they were cherished friends. When you call a friend you probably expect a call back within a reasonable time. Your client also expects that call within a reasonable time too. If you e-mail a question to your friend or family member don’t you expect an answer as soon as they can? Of course you do. Try to answer your e-mail within twenty four hours and sooner rather than later if you can. If you can’t do it yourself get a staff member to do it. Isn’t it true that you would prefer a personal response rather than a canned response like “thanks for contacting us?” Treat your clients as you would like to be treated. It’s common sense.When you have good news don’t you rush to call your friend and also like to be updated with your friend’s good news? I’m sure the answer is yes. So if you have good news let your clients know. They really want to hear about your new baby, moved into a new house, new puppy and all your other good news. People enjoy good news about people that they like.When you get on the phone and ask a question concerning your friend isn’t it true that you would expect him or her to answer without attitude, with respect, and a gentle manner. If you got rude answers from your friend I’m sure that you would be hurt, upset and disappointed and even angry with him or her. So assume that your client expects the same courtesy that you would give and expect from your friend.Other elements of good customer service are the many moments that you have to compromise in ord The philosophy of Theory X management style is based on the view of human nature as: 1. People have a natural aversion to work. 2. People need to be coerced, controlled, and threatened with punishment to get them to put forth adequate effort toward the achievement of company goals. 3. The average person prefers to be directed, wishes to avoid responsibility, has little ambition, and wants security most. Theorists now ask how much of this behavior described is inherent human nature and how much is behavior learned from bosses who manage with those assumptions. Perhaps the assumptions become self-validating: workers who are always treated by an authoritarian management as though they were lazy, tend to behave that way. THEORY Y ("Participatory Management") - Most observers agree that the Theory Y management philosophy was derived from a series of experiments in the 1930's at the Western Electronic Hawthorne Works in Chicago. Employees had been divided into two groups: a "test" group that worked under changing lighting conditions and a "control" group that worked under constant lighting. When the test group's light conditions improved, their productivity increased, as expected. But what mystified researchers was a similar jump in productivity when illumination worsened. To compound the mystery, the control group's output rose when the test group's did. It was concluded that both groups felt management was giving them special attention and so responded with improved performance. This discovery of human relations management was called Theory Y. Theory Y's assumptions represent a much more positive assessment of human behavior and gave rise to the thousands of mentoring and management training programs in the 1960's and 70's, the purposes of which were to help managers change their assumptions of human nature from a Theory X to a Theory Y outlook. The basic premises of Theory Y include: 1. The expenditure of physical and mental effort in work is as natural as play or rest. 2. External control and threat of punishment are not the only means for bringing about effort toward corporate goals. People will exercise self-direction and self-control to achieve goals they find important. 3. Commitment to objectives is in proportion to the rewards associated with their achievement. 4. The average human being learns under proper conditions not only to accept but to seek responsibility. 5. The capacity to exercise a relatively high degree of imagination, ingenuity, and creativity in solving work problems is widely, not narrowly, present in the population. 6. Under the conditions of modern industrial life, the brain power of the average human is only partially utilized. THEORY Z ("Group Involvement") - Theory Z was introduced in 1981 by UCLA Professor Dr. William Ouchi in his book of the same name. It is based on Ouchi's observations of Japanese management practices of the time. Basically, Theory Z promotes employee participation in decision-making, thereby increasing their motivation and productivity. This management style emphasizes long range planning, consensus decision making, and neutral worker-employee loyalty. Ouchi concludes that Japanese managers got more out of their employees than U.S. managers because the whole structure of Japanese society encourages mutual trust and cooperation. This management philosophy is based on the following assumptions: 1. Long term, even life time, employment is expected by both managers and employees. 2. Employees need freedom and opportunity to "grow." 3. Decisions should be group decisions involving workers and managers. 4. Subordinates are whole people at work (in contrast to being thought of as titles or units of production). 5. Management has a broad concern for subordinate welfare. 6. Open communication, both vertically and horizontally, is the norm. 7. There is complete trust among groups and individuals because they all have the same goals - the good of the organization. 8. Cooperation, not competition, is the basis for relationships within the company. We have been conducting business in Japan since 1976 and have personally seen Theory Z in action. For example, when we sold our "PRIDE" Methodologies in Japan, we would have to make several sales presentations to a single company in order for all of the affected parties to reach a consensus as to whether this was the correct course of action for the company to pursue. After several months of deliberations, we would finally get a contract. Contrast this to American companies where we would make a single sales presentation to top management and close on the sale within a few days or weeks. However, to the credit of the Japanese, because everyone approved of the purchase, they all made an effort to successfully install and use it; if they failed, they would "lose face." Western managers, on the other hand, would shove the product down people's throats (a la Theory X), thereby the methodologies were viewed as the will of a single person and not the company overall. Consequently, when the manager left the company, "PRIDE" followed shortly behind. WHICH IS BETTER? Most managers favor Theory X, others Theory Y. A few are likely to become Theory Z managers. Most, however, use some combination of the three. There is no "right" style of management because the appropriate style depends on the kind of people you employ and the kind of business you run. But what is the current trend? During the second half of the 20th century there was a definite movement from Theory X to Theory Y. But now it appears the pendulum is swinging back to Theory X. As mentioned in my "Bean counter" article, mentoring and employee training programs (a cornerstone of Theory Y) is being phased out as a means of cutting costs. Further, under the "Parenting Management" scenario, younger employees need considerably more supervision and direction, which lends itself to a Theory X philosophy. Even Theory Z in Japan is showing signs of erosion. Although the Japanese economy ran well in the 1980's, it has slowed considerably over the last fifteen years, causing the Japanese to rethink how they compete and conduct business in a fast-paced world economy. Japanese managers realize they no longer have the luxury of waiting months to make a group decision and although they still wish to be loyal to the workforce, they realize certain sacrifices are inevitable. Further, thanks to Hollywood and the Internet, younger Japanese workers no longer share the same values as their predecessors. Frankly, they have picked up a lot of bad work habits from their Western counterparts. Concepts such as lifetime employment, corporate loyalty, and hard work is slowly evaporating from the Japanese business culture. BACK TO PERCEPTIONS How we elect to manage others or how we elect to be managed is based on our perceptions. For example, if we believe a person to be lazy, we will apply a Theory X style of management. But if we believe people are responsible, take initiative, and are successful, then Theories Y and Z are used. As I mentioned in "Parenting Management," a generation gap has emerged between management and the latest generation of workers. Management perceives today's young workers as immature, disorganized, undisciplined, and shirk responsibility. Whether this is true or not is immaterial. It is perceptions that count. Because of this, it should come as no small wonder that Theory X management practices are on the rise again. For those you The Difference Between Customer Service and Customer Satisfaction t of human behavior and gave rise to the thousands
of mentoring and management training programs in the 1960's and
70's, the purposes of which were to help managers change their
assumptions of human nature from a Theory X to a Theory Y
outlook. The basic premises of Theory Y include:We all love to be welcomed warmly, attentively waited on with polite and enthusiastic anticipation of and fulfillment of our needs by a professional looking worker with a subservient attitude. This is customer service.Customer Service can be a great attractor for a customer to return to buy that product or service again, but it is not the only factor. What if you are in a restaurant and the service is great, but the food is bad? What if the environment is not clean or attractive? What if you can’t find a place to park or have to wait in line?These and a host of other satisfaction factors will ultimately influence your decision to return to that establishment or recommend it to others. The combination of all these factors in the mind of the customer is what is meant by customer satisfaction.In his recent book, “What Customers Want!”, Bart Allen Berry presents the results of years of customer satisfaction research, and reveals the ten domains of satisfaction customers are influenced by in any product or service delivery. Berry’s research finds that customers change their selection, return and recommend behavior based upon their overall satisfaction experience.If we rate the overall customer satisfaction experience on a scale of 1 to 10, (one being the lowest or worst and 10 being the absolute best) what we find is that customer behavior falls into three distinct categories. The lowest category, or what is termed the ‘Zone of Dissatisfaction’ ranges from a 4.1 down to a 1.0.The Zone of Dissatisfaction is characterized by customers who not only don’t return to buy again, but who spread negative word of mouth, complain vigorously or take punitive a 1. The expenditure of physical and mental effort in work is as natural as play or rest. 2. External control and threat of punishment are not the only means for bringing about effort toward corporate goals. People will exercise self-direction and self-control to achieve goals they find important. 3. Commitment to objectives is in proportion to the rewards associated with their achievement. 4. The average human being learns under proper conditions not only to accept but to seek responsibility. 5. The capacity to exercise a relatively high degree of imagination, ingenuity, and creativity in solving work problems is widely, not narrowly, present in the population. 6. Under the conditions of modern industrial life, the brain power of the average human is only partially utilized. THEORY Z ("Group Involvement") - Theory Z was introduced in 1981 by UCLA Professor Dr. William Ouchi in his book of the same name. It is based on Ouchi's observations of Japanese management practices of the time. Basically, Theory Z promotes employee participation in decision-making, thereby increasing their motivation and productivity. This management style emphasizes long range planning, consensus decision making, and neutral worker-employee loyalty. Ouchi concludes that Japanese managers got more out of their employees than U.S. managers because the whole structure of Japanese society encourages mutual trust and cooperation. This management philosophy is based on the following assumptions: 1. Long term, even life time, employment is expected by both managers and employees. 2. Employees need freedom and opportunity to "grow." 3. Decisions should be group decisions involving workers and managers. 4. Subordinates are whole people at work (in contrast to being thought of as titles or units of production). 5. Management has a broad concern for subordinate welfare. 6. Open communication, both vertically and horizontally, is the norm. 7. There is complete trust among groups and individuals because they all have the same goals - the good of the organization. 8. Cooperation, not competition, is the basis for relationships within the company. We have been conducting business in Japan since 1976 and have personally seen Theory Z in action. For example, when we sold our "PRIDE" Methodologies in Japan, we would have to make several sales presentations to a single company in order for all of the affected parties to reach a consensus as to whether this was the correct course of action for the company to pursue. After several months of deliberations, we would finally get a contract. Contrast this to American companies where we would make a single sales presentation to top management and close on the sale within a few days or weeks. However, to the credit of the Japanese, because everyone approved of the purchase, they all made an effort to successfully install and use it; if they failed, they would "lose face." Western managers, on the other hand, would shove the product down people's throats (a la Theory X), thereby the methodologies were viewed as the will of a single person and not the company overall. Consequently, when the manager left the company, "PRIDE" followed shortly behind. WHICH IS BETTER? Most managers favor Theory X, others Theory Y. A few are likely to become Theory Z managers. Most, however, use some combination of the three. There is no "right" style of management because the appropriate style depends on the kind of people you employ and the kind of business you run. But what is the current trend? During the second half of the 20th century there was a definite movement from Theory X to Theory Y. But now it appears the pendulum is swinging back to Theory X. As mentioned in my "Bean counter" article, mentoring and employee training programs (a cornerstone of Theory Y) is being phased out as a means of cutting costs. Further, under the "Parenting Management" scenario, younger employees need considerably more supervision and direction, which lends itself to a Theory X philosophy. Even Theory Z in Japan is showing signs of erosion. Although the Japanese economy ran well in the 1980's, it has slowed considerably over the last fifteen years, causing the Japanese to rethink how they compete and conduct business in a fast-paced world economy. Japanese managers realize they no longer have the luxury of waiting months to make a group decision and although they still wish to be loyal to the workforce, they realize certain sacrifices are inevitable. Further, thanks to Hollywood and the Internet, younger Japanese workers no longer share the same values as their predecessors. Frankly, they have picked up a lot of bad work habits from their Western counterparts. Concepts such as lifetime employment, corporate loyalty, and hard work is slowly evaporating from the Japanese business culture. BACK TO PERCEPTIONS How we elect to manage others or how we elect to be managed is based on our perceptions. For example, if we believe a person to be lazy, we will apply a Theory X style of management. But if we believe people are responsible, take initiative, and are successful, then Theories Y and Z are used. As I mentioned in "Parenting Management," a generation gap has emerged between management and the latest generation of workers. Management perceives today's young workers as immature, disorganized, undisciplined, and shirk responsibility. Whether this is true or not is immaterial. It is perceptions that count. Because of this, it should come as no small wonder that Theory X management practices are on the rise again. For those you Behavioral and Situational Job Interviews ions involving workers and managers.A behavioral interview is a style of interviewing wherein the job applicant is asked to give examples of situations he has personally been involved in where he demonstrated a particular trait or skill that the interviewer is interested in. A situational interview is a style wherein theoretical or hypothetical situations are given by the interviewer to assess the applicant's behavior in such a situation. The main difference between behavioral and situational interview is that behavioral interviews focus on past experiences and behavior of the applicant, while situational interviews concentrate on how the applicant will react when confronted with a given situation. These two styles of interviewing are often used in conjunction with each other.These styles of interviewing job applicants are tailored to specific competencies required for specific job positions, thus specific situations must also be given as examples by the applicant. Vagueness must be avoided. The examples may be ordinary events in his life and not necessarily from previous work experience. These styles can be used to interview both experienced applicants and recent graduates.For either style, the interviewer needs to identify the required competencies for the job he wants to fill. He must then examine actual situations related to the job where these competencies (or lack thereof) played a critical part in its success (or failure). A set of questions can be developed and framed in such a way that canned responses may be avoided. A rating scale is also prepared after the job is analyzed and the competencies are identified.For the interviewee, behavioral and situational interviews require hi 4. Subordinates are whole people at work (in contrast to being thought of as titles or units of production). 5. Management has a broad concern for subordinate welfare. 6. Open communication, both vertically and horizontally, is the norm. 7. There is complete trust among groups and individuals because they all have the same goals - the good of the organization. 8. Cooperation, not competition, is the basis for relationships within the company. We have been conducting business in Japan since 1976 and have personally seen Theory Z in action. For example, when we sold our "PRIDE" Methodologies in Japan, we would have to make several sales presentations to a single company in order for all of the affected parties to reach a consensus as to whether this was the correct course of action for the company to pursue. After several months of deliberations, we would finally get a contract. Contrast this to American companies where we would make a single sales presentation to top management and close on the sale within a few days or weeks. However, to the credit of the Japanese, because everyone approved of the purchase, they all made an effort to successfully install and use it; if they failed, they would "lose face." Western managers, on the other hand, would shove the product down people's throats (a la Theory X), thereby the methodologies were viewed as the will of a single person and not the company overall. Consequently, when the manager left the company, "PRIDE" followed shortly behind. WHICH IS BETTER? Most managers favor Theory X, others Theory Y. A few are likely to become Theory Z managers. Most, however, use some combination of the three. There is no "right" style of management because the appropriate style depends on the kind of people you employ and the kind of business you run. But what is the current trend? During the second half of the 20th century there was a definite movement from Theory X to Theory Y. But now it appears the pendulum is swinging back to Theory X. As mentioned in my "Bean counter" article, mentoring and employee training programs (a cornerstone of Theory Y) is being phased out as a means of cutting costs. Further, under the "Parenting Management" scenario, younger employees need considerably more supervision and direction, which lends itself to a Theory X philosophy. Even Theory Z in Japan is showing signs of erosion. Although the Japanese economy ran well in the 1980's, it has slowed considerably over the last fifteen years, causing the Japanese to rethink how they compete and conduct business in a fast-paced world economy. Japanese managers realize they no longer have the luxury of waiting months to make a group decision and although they still wish to be loyal to the workforce, they realize certain sacrifices are inevitable. Further, thanks to Hollywood and the Internet, younger Japanese workers no longer share the same values as their predecessors. Frankly, they have picked up a lot of bad work habits from their Western counterparts. Concepts such as lifetime employment, corporate loyalty, and hard work is slowly evaporating from the Japanese business culture. BACK TO PERCEPTIONS How we elect to manage others or how we elect to be managed is based on our perceptions. For example, if we believe a person to be lazy, we will apply a Theory X style of management. But if we believe people are responsible, take initiative, and are successful, then Theories Y and Z are used. As I mentioned in "Parenting Management," a generation gap has emerged between management and the latest generation of workers. Management perceives today's young workers as immature, disorganized, undisciplined, and shirk responsibility. Whether this is true or not is immaterial. It is perceptions that count. Because of this, it should come as no small wonder that Theory X management practices are on the rise again. For those you How To Give Exceptional Customer Service m Theory X to Theory Y. But now it appears
the pendulum is swinging back to Theory X. As mentioned in my "Bean counter"
article, mentoring and employee training programs (a cornerstone of Theory Y) is
being phased out as a means of cutting costs. Further, under the "Parenting
Management" scenario, younger employees need considerably more supervision
and direction, which lends itself to a Theory X philosophy.Service is Adding People To The ProductMuch of the information in this article came from three video tapes on customer service: * In Search of Excellence * How To Give Exceptional Customer Service from Career Tracks* How To Deliver Superior Customer Service from Inc. Business Resources* Why is customer service so important? A study by U.S. News & World Report found the average American business loses 15% of its customer base each year. The Forum Corporation found: 68% of customers who stop buying from one business and go to another because of “poor or indifferent service”. 14% leave because of an unsatisfactorily resolved dispute or complaint. 9% leave because of price. 5% go elsewhere based on a recommendation. 3 % move away. 1 % die. So 82% leave because of service related issues. Customer Service begins at the top level of the company, and it doesn’t just happen. Here are three keys for exceptional customer service: 1. Make it clear that nothing less than exceptional customer service is acceptable. 2. Train for exceptional customer service. 3. Be sure your policies and procedures reinforce exceptional customer service. Make it Clear that Nothing Less than Exceptional Customer Service is AcceptableThis starts in the interview, before the person is even hired. Include questions in the interview that will lend insight into whether this person believes that good customer service is part of everyone’s job. Does she have a basic belief in helping others? You might say, “Tell me a time at your last job when you had to deal with an especially demanding customer. How did you handle the situatio Even Theory Z in Japan is showing signs of erosion. Although the Japanese economy ran well in the 1980's, it has slowed considerably over the last fifteen years, causing the Japanese to rethink how they compete and conduct business in a fast-paced world economy. Japanese managers realize they no longer have the luxury of waiting months to make a group decision and although they still wish to be loyal to the workforce, they realize certain sacrifices are inevitable. Further, thanks to Hollywood and the Internet, younger Japanese workers no longer share the same values as their predecessors. Frankly, they have picked up a lot of bad work habits from their Western counterparts. Concepts such as lifetime employment, corporate loyalty, and hard work is slowly evaporating from the Japanese business culture. BACK TO PERCEPTIONS How we elect to manage others or how we elect to be managed is based on our perceptions. For example, if we believe a person to be lazy, we will apply a Theory X style of management. But if we believe people are responsible, take initiative, and are successful, then Theories Y and Z are used. As I mentioned in "Parenting Management," a generation gap has emerged between management and the latest generation of workers. Management perceives today's young workers as immature, disorganized, undisciplined, and shirk responsibility. Whether this is true or not is immaterial. It is perceptions that count. Because of this, it should come as no small wonder that Theory X management practices are on the rise again. For those younger workers who are as frustrated with management as management is with you, the only advice I can offer is that you make a concerted effort to improve your interpersonal relations/communications skills. If you have garnered anything from this article, it is that appearances are extremely important. Your physical appearance, forms of speech and conduct all play a significant role in how you are perceived by management. Are you someone who is bright but doesn't know how to apply your skills, or do you have a proven track record for performance? In other words, it is time to grow up. As President Calvin Coolidge observed years ago: "Nothing in the world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more common than unsuccessful men with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent. The slogan 'Press On' has solved and always will solve the problems of the human race." CONCLUSION Management is more of a benevolent dictatorship as opposed to a democracy. It operates according to its own whims. If management wants to be tyrannical, it will. If it wants to allow group participation, it will. And if it elects to do nothing, it will. But understand this, management's style is based on what the manager believes is good for the company and how they perceive their workers. Sometimes the actions of management will seem strange and without justification. But there may be some very rational reasons for acting as such, perhaps for strategic or tactical purposes. There is little the worker can do in this regards aside from mutiny, which is rarely the proper decision. To overcome this problem, it behooves management to promote loyalty and faith in judgment. Management is about human relations, not numbers. If a manager stands by a worker in the face of adversity, in all likelihood he will be building a good employee for the company's future. In return, the employee should pledge allegiance to the manager. Years ago, I remember Les Matthies, the legendary "Dean of Systems," taught me that a man should always be loyal to his manager while he is in his employment. If the worker doesn't like the manager, he should either curb his tongue or get out. Only after the worker has left, should he talk trash about his manager and even then he should think twice about doing so. Bottom-line, the manager's style of management is based on his perceptions of his workers, right or wrong. If the worker believes he is not being treated fairly perhaps it is time to reexamine his relationship with the manager. And that reexamination begins at the mirror. Do you perform enough work to just get by or do you strive to achieve? Do you prefer to be told what to do or are you self-motivated? Do you dress appropriately? What about your form of speech and mannerisms? Habits? Remember, we as human-beings act on our perceptions. Want to know where you are going in the company? Ask yourself, "How am I perceived?" For additional information on Theories X, Y, and Z, see:
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