Yesterday, in MGMT 101 - organisationa and management, I was laying out some of the territory that the class (and I, I suppose) will be covering in the coming weeks. For whatever reason1, much of the course is structured around PLOC2; planning, leading, organising, and controlling. As I pointed out in class, this isn't an accurate description of what managers do. I mentioned that since the 1970s we (academics) have had a much richer view of the work of managers. In fact, I was alluding to the early (earliest) work of Henry Mintzberg3.
Anyway,as I was reading today, I came across a nice introductionary article to Henry Mintzberg. It's well worth reading by stage I students, and is called:
de Holan, P. M., & Mintzberg, H. (2004). Mangement as life's essence: 30 years of The nature of managerial work. Strategic Organization, 2(2), 205-212.
Additional, the article shows the serendipitous way in which new management ideas are 'discovered' and how they rise to prominance. There is a link here for later - in future we'll talk about In search of excellence, by Peters & Waterman. At that time, remember to ask why the book was so sucessful.
Henry also makes a point of saying how hard it is to teach management to those people who aren't managers - he is so right. Until you've been there it doesn't make much sense. Management is a practice (in Turner's sense) more than it is a science (or even an art), and so there is a significant element of management that is tacit (as there is in most parts of social life).
1 Well, a good part has to do with the requirement that ICANZ put on institutions about the content that wanabe accountants have to be exposed to.
3 Which of course is based around Henri Fayol's ideas of planning, organising, commanding, co-ordinating, and controlling -- the commanding was reinvented as leading, and co-ordinating became organising.
2 Mintzberg is mentioned quiet early on in the textbook - Inkson & Kolb, 2003 - but I dont' think it explains how he debunked the myth of the manager spending her/his time PLOCing.
References
Inkson, K., & Kolb, D. G. (2002). Management: Perspectives for New Zealand (3rd ed.). Auckland: Pearson Education.
Peters, T. J., & Waterman, R. H. (1982). In search of excellence: Lessons from America's best-run companies (1st ed.). New York: Harper & Row.
Turner, S. P. (1994). The social theory of practices: Tradition, tacit knowledge and presuppositions. Cambridge: Polity Press.
