Case Study: State Vs. Scroggs

Now it’s time to write a 1-page individual report on your virtual team activity for Week 04. Answer the questions below in a Word document to submit it to the Drop Box.

Think back on the decision-making process that you and your team members went through in deciding the case of “State vs. Scroggs.” Do you feel any of you used a rational decision-making model? As you explain, you might recall that rational decision-making goes through six steps:

  1. Define the problem. (Did Scroggs do it or not?)
  2. Identify decision criteria, etc.
  3. Weight the criteria.
  4. Generate alternatives.
  5. Rate each alternative on each criterion.
  6. Compute the optimal decision.

If no one followed this rational decision-making model exactly, did anyone follow even one of the steps – or some half way? As you explain, you might consider that you could have been using what we call bounded rationality? (That’s where you satisfice – that is, you don’t follow such a rigorous model, but rather you seek solutions that are merely satisfactory.) In bounded rationality, you use some rationality, but you are not completely disciplined about it.

Case Study: State vs. Scroggs

In the fall of 1875, Hiram Smith filed a claim on a very fertile piece of land in South Dakota with the land office. Before he could make any improve­ments on the land, he died. A young Swede, newly immigrated, filed a counterclaim to the land at once, and by late spring of the following year, he had built a home and had begun to cultivate the land.

In the meantime the widow of the original claimant was on her way West with her two daughters and her son, Hiram, Jr. She built a house on the land, across a ravine from the Swede’s home, and cultivated that half of the claim. Both parties sent their claims to the Department of the Interior, but ten years went by without a decision. Both the Swede and Mrs. Smith built barns and cultivated the land intensively each on their own side of the ravine.

A distant relative of Mrs. Smith, a clergyman named Rev. Wilbur Scroggs, lived in a small town about two miles from the rival farms. He had been an advisor for the Swede on all matters of religion and politics since the fellow had first taken up farming in Dakota.

He had often complimented the Swede on his land and had expressed his opinion at the general store that it was the best land in the West.

Wilbur Scroggs had acted as arbiter for the disputants and had corresponded with the Secretary of the Interior in regard to the land. One day at the general store he told the Swede that he thought the Swede’s claim would be supported. The Swede swore that no one was going to put him off the land.

The next day Scroggs went to the Smith farm and showed Mrs. Smith a paper from Washington , D.C. , ratifying her claim to the land. He said it would be all right for them to take possession of the entire claim. Young Hiram Smith, Jr. hitched a team to the plow and went over on to the Swede’s side of the farm. Scroggs, Mrs. Smith, and the two daughters went along, with Scroggs on his horse. Young Hiram, Jr. had just started plowing when the Swede ran out of his house with a gun and shot him.

Two more shots killed the horses at the plow. Scroggs galloped off and shouted that he was going after the marshal. When the marshal and a posse arrived, they found the Swede had killed the three women and had then committed suicide. Rev. Scroggs, being the only relative of the dead woman, would stand to inherit both pieces of land.

The marshal, who was very familiar with the case, confronted Rev. Scroggs. “I place you under arrest, Sir, for inciting these murders. You are innocent until proven guilty under the law. But you must go to trial.

 
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Public Health 10 Slide On Hiv/Aids

please read attachments…. please…Your public health presentation should be 10 slides in length, use an appropriate application (PowerPoint, Prezi, etc.), and comprehensively address the public health issue using speaker notes and scholarly resources for support. Support for your speaker notes will come from scholarly resources, including the following: at least two scholarly resources for the background of the public health issue, at least two scholarly resources for response to the problem, and at least two scholarly resources for current directions to address the problem.

 

It should be a complete, polished artifact containing all of the critical elements of the final product.

 

I am attaching the topic and artifacts and critical elements for your 10 slide public health presentation.

General Guidance for Presentations Consider your presentation as consisting of two complementary elements: the narrative and the visual. Your speaker notes are the equivalent to the narrative, so write them clearly, succinctly, and with proper grammar and spelling, so they are easily understood by a general audience. (Note that you will not be speaking, just writing.) The visual element, the slides themselves, support the narrative. Visuals keep the eyes involved in the presentation while the presenter speaks. As such, they should not repeat the narrative. Graphics that support the narrative are best: charts, tables, timelines, illustrations, and photographs. Visuals should never be simply “window dressing,” like a group photograph of a meeting; they must specifically support the points being made in the narrative. Bullet points are acceptable in combination with or, if necessary, without graphics. If possible, keep each bullet point to a single line. Powerful quotes from your resources can sometimes drive home your point. Finally, do not be tempted to fill the entire visual space. Insufficient white space results in visual clutter, prompting your audience to spend too much effort figuring it out (distracting the audience from the speaker) or simply ignoring it. The following are recommended steps for each section:  Write your speaker notes first, using the worksheets from your milestone assignments.  Create the visual element.  Read the narrative to test for easy comprehension.  Add visual elements that support the speaker notes. Try to visualize what the notes are saying.

 

Develop a presentation (using PowerPoint, Prezi, etc.) that describes a public health issue and national goals set for that problem on Healthy People 2020. The presentation will give an overview of the distribution of the problem in the United States, factors associated with the problem, social determinants of the problem, and any health disparities. Your presentation must contain speaker notes that fully address the contents below. Support for your speaker notes will come from scholarly resources. Specifically, the following critical elements must be addressed: I. Background: Provide a clear background of your selected priority public health issue. Be sure you address the issue’s goal statements and relevant context for the issue in terms of the ecological model, citing scholarly support. II. Epidemiology A. Analyze the epidemiological patterns, causes, and effects of the health issue in the population. For example, how is the issue distributed in the population? B. Describe the social determinants associated with the issue. How do these determinants impact the health of those affected by the issue? C. Describe known disparities (i.e., socioeconomic, demographic, cultural, and geographic) associated with the health outcomes of your specific population with regard to the public health issue. III. Public Health Interventions: In this section, you will examine public health interventions published in the scholarly literature for how they addressed your selected public health issue. A. Analyze two published public health interventions used to address the issue, including the theoretical basis of each intervention. In other words, what were the strategies used to address this problem and what was the rationale for those actions, according to the scholarly resources? B. Explain how the selected interventions reflect primary, secondary, and/or tertiary intervention strategies for public health prevention. C. Explain how the interventions address social determinants of health and the disparities in healthcare associated with the issue. IV. Public Health Response: In this section, you will inspect the public health landscape to identify who is involved in responding to your public health issue and what actions they are taking. A. Describe the public health organizations involved in the response to the public health issue at the national and local levels. Use examples that show which entities are working on the issue and what they are doing. For example, what federal and local agencies and/or not-for-profit entities are involved, and what are their roles in the response? B. Explain the specific public health subdisciplines involved in understanding and responding to the issue, including what their roles are. Examples of public health subdisciplines include biostatistics, epidemiology, maternal and child health, and disaster-response planning. C. Explain the public health services involved in the response to the issue. What types of services, programs, or campaigns have been offered by organizations in response to the problem? Be sure to provide examples. V. Current Directions: Based on your understanding of the health goals and interventions, identify gaps in the response and draw connections to the broader field of public health. A. Explain the overall effectiveness of the public health response to your issue, based on any gaps between its goals and the current information and strategies. In other words, given what you understood about the distribution of the public health issue and the strategies that have been undertaken to address it, what are the obstacles to this public health response meeting its goals? B. Discuss the unique perspective that public health theoretical  frameworks provide in addressing this issue. In other words, how is the public health approach different from the way other medical models might address this issue, and what advantages do public health frameworks have in terms of promoting positive health outcomes with regard to the issue? C. Reflect on the connections between the public health response to this issue and broader ethical questions of social justice, poverty, and systematic disadvantage. Specifically, how does the response help to improve conditions for people in their communities? Keep in mind ethical theories and principles studied in this course

 
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Blocks Of Teams

Building an effective team is more than just choosing team members, you will to consider many factors.

Recall the dynamics of the organization:

Organization: Health Care Inc.

Employees: 15-20 thousand worldwide

Employee Occupations: Nurses, IT Specialist, Human Resources, Administration Staff, Management, Nursing Assistants (various levels & positions)

Goal of team: The business needs to expand to remain competitive in the worldwide marketplace. A team needs to be created to help the organization evaluate, justify, and propose ideas.

Business Module: Contract Nurses and Nursing Assistants to organizations worldwide.

For the first phase of your project, using your reading and other resources, create your plan for building your team by answering the following:

  • Using the five stages of the team building process, create specific examples work through the stage. For example, what tasks or rules would you establish? please review the attached documents these are the stages we are discussing
  • Decide team size, select team members, and justify section.
    • For example, which employee positions would you include (Nurses, HR, management, etc)
  • Construct a reward system that the team committed to the goals.
  • Develop a strategy to deal with team emotions.
  • From your knowledge of teambuilding so far, prioritize the top three items that will help your team be effective.
    • For example, creating strong team goals will help the team focus on the end results and enhance effectivenes
  • APA Format with intext citation, reference page
 
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Can Someone Do My Week 4 Discussion Plus Comments In Strategic Planning For Organizations?

Measuring Emergent Strategies [WLOs: 1, 2, 3, 4] [CLOs: 1, 2, 4, 5]

Before beginning the discussion, carefully read and review Chapters 7, 8, and 9 of the course text. Most strategies are deliberate in structure. They are intentional, vetted, and data supported prior to implementation. There are occasions that a change of plans might occur due to unexpected events requiring a change of action. This strategy is called emergent. Define and debate the origins and differences between a deliberate strategy and an emergent strategy. How might an emergent strategy help with future strategic planning processes?

Deliberate strategies are planned, data supported, implemented, and managed. Emergent strategies are often unexpected, reactionary, and untested. Part of the process for strategic development is the establishment of metrics to measure the progressive success of the strategic plan. Based on the metric options discussed in Chapter 8 of the text, what types of measurement would be appropriate and necessary to support the change when considering the deployment of an emergent strategy? What are the potential consequences for ignoring emergent strategies? Research and discuss an emergent strategy implemented by an organization and its success or failure.

 
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IFSM 201 Excel Project 3

Excel Project 3 – MS Excel (Fall 2018)

Use the project description HERE to complete this activity. For a review of the complete rubric used in grading this exercise, click on the Assignments tab, then on the title Excel Project #3. Click on Show Rubrics if the rubric is not already displayed.

Summary

Create a Microsoft Excel file with four worksheets that provides extensive use of Excel capabilities for charting. The charts will be copied into a Microsoft PowerPoint file and the student will develop appropriate findings and recommendations based on analysis of the data.

A large rental car company has two metropolitan locations, one at the airport and another centrally located in downtown. It has been operating since 2015 and each location summarizes its car rental revenue quarterly. Both locations rent four classes of cars: economy, premium, hybrid, SUV. Rental revenue is maintained separately for the four classes of rental vehicles.

The data for this case resides in the file fall2018rentalcars.txt and can be downloaded by clicking on the Assignments tab, then on the data tile name. It is a text file (with the file type .txt).

Do not create your own data, you must use the data provided and only the data provided.

Default Formatting. All labels, text, and numbers will be Arial 10, There will be $ and comma and decimal point variations for numeric data, but Arial 10 will be the default font and font size.

Step Requirement Comments 1 Open Excel and save a blank workbook with the following name: a. “Student’s First InitialLast Name Excel Project 3” Example: JSmith Excel Project 3 b. Set Page Layout Orientation to Landscape Use Print Preview to review how the first worksheet would print. 2 Change the name of the worksheet to Analysis by. 3 In the Analysis by worksheet: a. Beginning in Row 1, enter the four labels in column A (one label per row) in the following order: Name:, Class/Section:, Project:, Date Due: b. Place a blank row between each label. Please note the colon : after each label. c. Align the labels to the right side in the cells It may be necessary to adjust the column width so the four labels are clearly visible within Column C (not extending into Column D). Format for text in column A: • Arial 10 point • Normal font • Right-align all four labels in the cells

Step Requirement Comments 4 In the Analysis by worksheet with all entries in column C: a. Enter the appropriate values for your Name, Class and Section, Project, Date Due across from the appropriate label in column A. b. Use the formatting in the Comments column (to the right). It may be necessary to adjust the column width so the four labels are clearly visible within Column C (not extending into Column D). Format for text in column C: • Arial 10 point • Bold • Left-align all four values in the cells 5 a. Create four new worksheets: Data, Slide 2, Slide 3, Filter Analysis. Upon completion, there must be the Analysis by worksheet as well as the four newly created worksheets. b. Delete any other worksheets. 6 After clicking on the blank cell A1 (to select it) in the Data worksheet: a. Import the text file fall2018rentalcars.txt into the Data worksheet. b. Adjust all column widths so there is no data or column header truncation. Though the intent is to import the text file into the Data worksheet, sometimes when text data is imported into a worksheet, a new worksheet is created. If this happens, delete the blank Data worksheet, and then rename the new worksheet which HAS the recently imported data as “Data.” It may be necessary to change Revenue data to Currency format (leading $ and thousands separators) with NO decimal points and to change NumCars data to Number format with NO decimal points, but with the comma (thousands separator) because of the import operation. This may or may not occur, but in case it does it needs to be corrected. Adjust all column widths so there is no data or column header truncation. Format for all data (field names, data text, and data numbers) • Arial 10 point. • Normal font The field names must be in the top row of the worksheet with the data directly under it in rows. This action may not be necessary as this is part of the Excel table creation process. The data must begin in Column A.. 7 In the Data worksheet: a. Create an Excel table with the recently imported data. b. Pick a style with the styles group to format the table (choose a style that shows banded rows, i.e., rows that alternate between 2 colors). c. The style must highlight the field names in the first row. These are your table headers. d. Ensure NO blank cells are part of the specified data range. e. Ensure that Header Row and Banded Rows are selected in the Table Style Options Group Box. Do NOT check the Total Row. Some adjustment may be necessary to column widths to ensure all field names and all data are readable (not truncated or obscured).

8 In the Data worksheet, a. Sort the entire table by Year (Ascending).

Step Requirement Comments b. Delete rows that contain 2016 data as well as 2017 data. Erasing or deleting only the data DOES NOT remove the rows from the Excel table. The resulting table must consist of Row 1 labels followed by 32 rows of 2015 data, with NO empty cells or rows within the table. 9 In the Data worksheet: a. Select the entire table (data and headers) using a mouse. b. Copy the table to the Slide 2, Slide 3, and Filter Analysis worksheets. For the Filter Analysis worksheet use Paste | Values so that the values are copied by the formatting of the Excel table are not copied. c. The upper left-hand corner of the header/data must be in cell A1 on Slide 2 and Slide 3 d. Format specifications from Data worksheet are required for these three worksheets. Adjust columns widths if necessary to ensure all data and field names are readable. 10 In the Slide 2 worksheet, based solely on the 2015 data: a. Create a Pivot Table that displays the total number of car rentals for each car class and the total number of car rentals for each of the four quarters of 2015. A grand total for the total number of rentals (NumCar) must also be displayed. The column labels must be the four quarters and the row labels must be the four car classes. b. Place the pivot table two rows below the data beginning at the left border of column A. Ensure that the formatting is as listed in the Comments column. c. Create a Pivot Table that displays the total number of car rentals for each location and the total number of car rentals for each of the four quarters of 2015. A grand total for the total number of rentals must also be displayed. The column labels must be the four quarters and the row labels must be the two locations. Place this pivot table two rows below the pivot table (step 10 a) beginning at the left border of column A. Ensure that the formatting is as listed in the Comments column. After the both pivot tables are created and appropriately formatted, adjust the column widths as necessary to preclude data and title and label truncation. Some of the columns will appear disproportionally large in the Excel table to preclude data and title truncation in the two pivot tables. Format (for both pivot tables): • Number format with comma separators (for thousands) • No decimal places • Arial 10 point • Normal • Right-align the Q1 through Q4 as well as Grand Total labels in both pivot tables 11 In the Slide 2 worksheet, based solely on the 2015 data: a. Using the pivot table created in Step 10 a, create a bar or column chart that displays the number of car rentals by car class for the four 2015 quarters. Both car types and quarters must be clearly visible. The charts must allow a viewer to determine approximate number or car rental by car class (first chart) and number of car

Step Requirement Comments b. Add a title that reflects the information presented by the chart. c. Position the top of the chart in row 1 and two or three columns to the right of the data table. Use this same type of bar or column chart for the remaining three charts to be created. d. Using the pivot table created in 10 c, create a bar or column chart that displays the number of car rentals by location for the four 2015 quarters. Both locations and quarters must be clearly visible. e. Add a title that reflects the information presented by the chart. f. Left-align this chart with the left side of the first chart and below it. The same type of bar or column chart must be used throughout this project. rentals by location (second chart) The top chart must have no more than sixteen bars or columns. The bottom chart must have no more than eight bars or columns. ALL FOUR (Slide 2 as well as Slide 3) charts must have the same “format.” 12 In the Slide 3 worksheet, based solely on the 2015 data: a. Create a Pivot Table that displays the total revenue for each car class and the total revenue for each of the four quarters of 2015. A grand total for the total revenue must also be displayed. The column labels must be the four quarters and the row labels must be the four car classes. b. Place the pivot table two rows below the data beginning at the left border of column A. c. Create a Pivot Table that must displays the total revenue for each location and the total revenue for each of the four quarters of 2015. A grant total for the total revenue must also be displayed. The column labels must be the four quarters and the row labels must be the two locations.. d. Place this pivot table two rows below the pivot (step 12a) table beginning at the left border of column A. After the both pivot tables are created and appropriately formatted, adjust the column widths as necessary to preclude data and title and label truncation. Some of the columns will appear disproportionally large in the Excel table to preclude data and title truncation in the two pivot tables. Format (for both pivot tables): • Currency ($) with comma separators (for thousands) • No decimal places • Arial 10 point Normal ● Right-align the Q1 through Q4 and Grand Total labels in both pivot tables 13 In the Slide 3 worksheet, based solely on the 2015 data: a. Using the pivot table created in Step 12 a, create a bar or column chart that displays the revenue from car rentals by car class for the four 2015 quarters. Ensure both car types and quarters are clearly visible. b. Add a title that reflects the information presented by the chart. c. Position the top of the chart in row 1 and two or three columns to the right of the data table. The same type of bar chart must be used throughout this project. The charts must allow a viewer to determine approximate number or car rental by car class (first chart) and number of car rentals by location (second chart) The top chart must have no more than sixteen bars or columns. The

Step Requirement Comments d. Using the pivot table created in Step 12 c, create a bar or column chart that displays the revenue from car rentals by location for the four 2015 quarters. Ensure both locations and quarters are clearly visible. e. Add a title that reflects the information presented by the chart. f. Left-align this chart with the left side of the first chart and below it. The same type of bar chart must be used throughout this project. bottom chart must have no more than eight bars or columns. ALL FOUR (Slide 2 as well as Slide 3) charts must have the same “format.”

14

In the Filter Analysis worksheet, highlight the entire non-Excel table to include the row of titles and all 32 rows of 2015 rental car data. Click Data at the top of the worksheet. Turn on filtering for all 33 rows.

15

In the Filter Analysis worksheet:

a. Select Hybrid ONLY and Quarter 1 ONLY in their respective columns.

b. Two rows below the last line of data, in the revenue and number of cars columns, calculate the sum of that column using a function using a SUM function.

c. Format the two values to match the data above in the particular column.

The two values should match the values from the previously created pivot tables.

16

a. Open a new, blank Power Point presentation file.

b. Save the Presentation using the following name: “Student’s First Initial Last Name Presentation”

Example: JSmith Presentation

17

Slides are NOT Microsoft Word documents viewed horizontally. Be brief. Full sentences are not needed. Blank space in a slide enhances the viewer experience and contributes to readability.

Slide 1:

a. Select an appropriate Design to maintain a consistent look and feel for all slides in the presentation. Blank slides with text are not acceptable.

b. This is your Title Slide.

c. Select an appropriate title and subtitle layout that clearly conveys the purpose of your presentation.

d. Name, Class/Section, and Date Due must be displayed.

No speaker notes required.

Remember, the title on your slide must convey what the presentation is about. Your Name, Class/Section, and Date Due can be used in the subtitle area.

18

Slide 2:

a. Title this slide “Number of Cars Rented in 2015”

b. Add two charts created in the Slide 2 worksheet of the Excel file

c. The charts must be the same type and equal size and be symmetrically placed on the slide. Ensure that there are no grammar or spelling errors on your chart and in your speaker notes.

Step Requirement Comments

d. A bullet or two of explanation of the charts may be included, but is not required if charts are self-explanatory.

e. Use the speaker notes feature to help you discuss the bullet points and the charts (four complete sentences minimum).

19

Slide 3:

a. Title this slide “Car Rental Revenue in 2015”

b. Add two charts, created in the Slide 3 worksheet of the Excel file.

c. The charts must be the same type and equal size and be symmetrically placed on the slide.

d. A bullet or two explanation of the charts may be included, but is not required if charts are self-explanatory.

e. Use the speaker notes feature to help you discuss the bullet points and the charts (four complete sentences minimum).

Ensure that there are no grammar or spelling errors on your chart and in your speaker notes.

20

Slide 4:

a. Title this slide “And in Conclusion…..”

b. Write and add two major bullets, one for findings and one for recommendations.

c. There must be a minimum of one finding based on slide 2 and one finding based on slide 3. Findings are facts that can be deduced by analyzing the charts. What happened? Trends? Observations?

d. There must be a minimum of one recommendation based on slide 2 and one recommendation based on slide 3. Recommendations are strategies or suggestions to improve or enhance the business based on the findings above.

e. Use the speaker notes feature to help you discuss the findings and recommendations (four complete sentences minimum).

Ensure that there are no grammar or spelling errors on your chart and in your speaker notes.

21

Add a relevant graphic that enhances the recommendations and conclusions on slide 4. If a photo is used, be sure to cite the source. The source citation must be no larger than Font size of 6, so it does not distract from the content of the slide.

22

Create a footer using “Courtesy of Your Name” so that is shows on all slides including the Title Slide. The text in this footer must be on the left side of the slides IF the theme selected allows. Otherwise let the theme determine the position of this text.

Replace the words “Your Name” with your actual name.

23

Create a footer for automated Slide Numbers that appears on all slides except the Title Slide. The page number must be on the right side of the slides IF the theme selected allows. Otherwise let the theme determine the position of the page number.

Ensure that your name does appear on every slide, but the page numbers start on slide #2. This will involve slightly different steps to accomplish both.

Depending upon the theme you have chosen, the page number or your name may not appear in the lower portion of the slide. That is ok, as long as both appear somewhere on the slides.

Step Requirement Comments

24

Apply a transition scheme to all slides.

One transition scheme may be used OR different schemes for different slides

25

Apply an animation on at least one slide. The animation may be applied to text or a graphic.

TOTAL

Be sure you submit BOTH the Excel file and the PowerPoint file in the appropriate Assignment folder (Excel Project #3).

 
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I Need A Final Paper Written For My Wk 10 Class For MBA In Business

JWI 510: Leadership in the 21st Century

Assignment 2: Part B

 

© Strayer University. All Rights Reserved. This document contains Strayer University confidential and proprietary information and may not be copied, further distributed, or otherwise disclosed, in whole or in part, without the expressed written permission of Strayer University. This course guide is subject to change based on the needs of the class.

JWI 510 – Assignment 2B (1202) Page 1 of 5

 

Part B: Going Beyond the Case

25% of Course Grade (Due: Sunday, midnight of week 10)

 

Instructions

 

As you know, a core principle at JWMI is “learn it today; apply it tomorrow.” This assignment is a continuation

of the work you did in Part A, but the questions challenge you to go beyond simply analyzing what Satya

Nadella did at Microsoft. It is time to consider how you can apply the leadership principles presented in the

case to your own career. To prepare for Part B of this assignment, reread the entire case and review the

feedback you received from your professor on Part A.

 

Write a 6-7 page paper that draws links between the case and your own leadership journey. Of the six topic

areas below, select four (4) you would like to focus on.

 

1. Learning from Nadella’s Example

2. Building a High Performing Culture

3. Channeling Conflict

4. Effective Communication

5. Fostering Diversity and Learning

6. Building a Learning Organization

 

Make sure you consider each question in your response. Remember, a good response paper is one in which

you: (a) show you understand what happened in the case, (b) apply tools and citations from course materials,

and (c) offer insights into how you can apply the case and course materials to your own leadership journey.

 

1. Learning from Nadella’s Example

a. What characteristics does Nadella display that most closely align to traits you have, or aspire

to develop, in your own leadership style? How are you most different from him in your

leadership style?

b. What did he bring in terms of his own background (professional and personal) that helped

him to be successful in stepping into the CEO role?

c. What makes Nadella an “authentic leader”? What actions did Nadella take that demonstrate

he believes in role-model management?

d. Why is it important for leaders to take (appropriate) risks?

 

2. Building a High Performing Culture in Your Organization

a. In what ways is the culture in your current or former organization similar to what Nadella

faced when he took over Microsoft?

b. If you wanted to change or realign this culture, where would you begin?

c. What would be your biggest challenges? Why?

d. What steps can you take to build a learning culture?

 

 

 

 

JWI 510: Leadership in the 21st Century

Assignment 2: Part B

 

© Strayer University. All Rights Reserved. This document contains Strayer University confidential and proprietary information and may not be copied, further distributed, or otherwise disclosed, in whole or in part, without the expressed written permission of Strayer University. This course guide is subject to change based on the needs of the class.

JWI 510 – Assignment 2B (1202) Page 2 of 5

3. Channeling Conflict

a. In what ways did Nadella embrace conflict in his role as leader?

b. What are some of the biggest potential areas of conflict within your own organization?

c. How well do you and your organization handle conflict now? Explain.

d. How do you determine which conflicts to embrace and which conflicts to avoid, and once you

make that decision, what can you do to encourage a positive resolution to the conflict?

 

4. Effective Communication

a. What were the biggest communicative barriers that Nadella faced in creating “one Microsoft”?

b. Are these barriers unique to large corporations, or do all organizations face them?

c. Do they occur in your own organization? Explain.

d. What tools and communication practices would be most useful to you in building teams that

embrace a common vision?

 

5. Fostering Diversity and Learning

a. How did Nadella seek to enhance diversity at Microsoft?

b. Why is diversity – in terms of culture, experience, background, and viewpoint – so important for

an organization?

c. What are some risks or obstacles to instilling more diversity?

d. What steps can you take to make your organization stronger by bringing in more diversity?

 

6. Building a Learning Organization

a. What did Nadella do to transform his team from “know-it-alls” to “learn-it-alls”?

b. On the “knowledge-learning” spectrum, where does your organization fit?

c. Jack has said that to be an effective leader, you have to be confident enough to ask a lot of

questions and not be afraid of looking like the dumbest person in the room.

i. How can you promote a hunger for learning in your team?

ii. How can you support team members who may be too afraid to ask questions or

challenge the status quo?

d. As an MBA student, especially if you have been out of school for a long time, what does a

“learn-it-all” mindset mean to you? What will you do to embrace it?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

JWI 510: Leadership in the 21st Century

Assignment 2: Part B

 

© Strayer University. All Rights Reserved. This document contains Strayer University confidential and proprietary information and may not be copied, further distributed, or otherwise disclosed, in whole or in part, without the expressed written permission of Strayer University. This course guide is subject to change based on the needs of the class.

JWI 510 – Assignment 2B (1202) Page 3 of 5

 

Professional Formatting Requirements:

 

 Typed, double spaced professional font (size 10-12), includes headings and subheadings, with

one-inch margins on all sides. See the Sample Professional Paper under Course Documents for

an example.

 References must be included and provide accurate information that enables the reader to locate

the original source. Application and analysis of course materials and resources is expected.

Additional research is welcome.

 Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, your name, the professor’s name, the

course title, and the date.

 The paper’s length is 6-7 pages, excluding your Cover page and Reference list.

 Before submitting your paper, use Grammarly to check for punctuation and usage errors, and

make the required corrections.

 

 

 

 

JWI 510: Leadership in the 21st Century

Assignment 2: Part B

 

© Strayer University. All Rights Reserved. This document contains Strayer University confidential and proprietary information and may not be copied, further distributed, or otherwise disclosed, in whole or in part, without the expressed written permission of Strayer University. This course guide is subject to change based on the needs of the class.

JWI 510 – Assignment 2B (1202) Page 4 of 5

Rubric Assignment 2: Part B

Weight: 25% Assignment 2 – Part B: Going Beyond the Case

Criteria Unsatisfactory Low Pass Pass High Pass Honors

1.

Engages with the case, as well as other course materials.

 

Weight: 25%

Does not make any reference to the case or course materials.

It lacks any link to the course.

 

Vaguely alludes to the case or course materials.

It does not contain much detail about any resources used.

Satisfactorily refers to the case and/or course materials.

It is somewhat logical, clear, and concise.

Refers in detail to the case and other course materials; demonstrates a clear understanding of the materials.

It is mostly logical, clear, and concise.

Exemplarily refers to the case and other materials; draws comprehensive and detailed insights that expand upon the materials.

It is highly logical, clear, and concise.

2.

Provides detailed answers to prompts in four unique topic areas.

 

Weight: 20%

 

Does not respond or responds to two or fewer unique topic areas; ignores all of the stated prompts.

Partially responds to three or fewer unique topic areas; not all of the stated prompts are answered.

Satisfactorily responds to four unique topic areas and provides good, but basic answers to all of the stated prompts.

 

Responds to four unique topic areas and answers all of the stated prompts; answers are kept distinct and detailed.

Offers comprehensive and detailed answers to all prompts in four unique topic areas; demonstrates a thorough understanding of the chosen topics.

3. Draws lessons and insights from the materials to the student’s personal leadership journey.

 

Weight: 35%

Does not or unsatisfactorily makes reference to the student’s leadership journey; does not talk about the student at all, and does not demonstrate an ability to apply the materials.

Partially refers to the student’s leadership journey, but does not go into significant detail.

Very few links are made back to the reading materials.

Satisfactorily refers to the student’s leadership journey with some detail.

References are made to the reading materials, but clear links may be missing.

Offers a strong explanation of the student’s leadership journey, as well as how to apply lessons from the reading materials.

Links are extremely clear and strong.

Provides an extremely comprehensive analysis of lessons from the materials and how to apply them to the student’s leadership journey.

Links to readings and other resources are insightful, impactful, and manifold.

 

 

 

 

 

JWI 510: Leadership in the 21st Century

Assignment 2: Part B

 

© Strayer University. All Rights Reserved. This document contains Strayer University confidential and proprietary information and may not be copied, further distributed, or otherwise disclosed, in whole or in part, without the expressed written permission of Strayer University. This course guide is subject to change based on the needs of the class.

JWI 510 – Assignment 2B (1202) Page 5 of 5

 

Weight: 25% Assignment 2 – Part B: Going Beyond the Case

Criteria Unsatisfactory Low Pass Pass High Pass Honors

4. The paper is professionally formatted and includes in-text citations, references, and is free from grammar and spelling errors.

 

Weight: 20%

The paper is unsatisfactorily formatted.

It may not include a cover page and headings, or lacks professional choices in formatting, font, and spacing.

Sources are not consistently cited in text, and accurate references are not included.

There are mechanics and/or usage errors.

The paper is partially satisfactorily formatted.

It may not include a cover page and headings, or lacks professional choices in formatting, font, and spacing.

Sources are not consistently cited in text, and accurate references may not be included.

There are some mechanics or usage errors.

The paper is satisfactorily formatted.

It includes a cover page and headings, but may lack professional choices in formatting, font, and spacing.

Sources may not be consistently cited in text, and accurate references may not be included.

There may be some minor mechanics or usage errors.

The paper is professionally formatted.

It includes a cover page, headings, professional formatting, font, and spacing.

All sources are consistently cited in text, and accurate references are included.

There are no mechanics or usage errors.

The paper is exceptionally formatted. It is highly professional in look and easy to quickly locate information.

It includes a cover page, headings, professional formatting, font, and spacing.

All sources are consistently cited in text, and accurate references are included.

There are no mechan ics or usage errors.

 
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W3A1

Leadership Development – Consolidated Products

Before beginning this assignment:

· Read the weekly assigned chapters and view the PowerPoint presentations.

· Read the case study titled “Consolidated Product,” located at the end of Chapter 2 of The Leadership Experience.

Consolidated Products is a medium-sized manufacturer of consumer products with nonunionized production workers. Ben Samuels was a plant manager for Consolidated Products for 10 years, and he was very well liked by the employees there. They were grateful for the fitness center he built for employees, and they enjoyed the social activities sponsored by the plant several times a year, including company picnics and holiday parties. He knew most of the workers by name, and he spent part of each day walking around the plant to visit with them and ask about their families or hobbies. Ben believed that it was important to treat employees properly so they would have a sense of loyalty to the company. He tried to avoid any layoffs when production demand was slack, figuring that the company could not afford to lose skilled workers that are so difficult to replace. The workers knew that if they had a special problem, Ben would try to help them. For example, when someone was injured but wanted to continue working, Ben found another job in the plant that the person could do despite having a disability. Ben believed that if you treat people right, they would do a good job for you without close supervision or prodding. Ben applied the same principle to his supervisors, and he mostly left them alone to run their departments as they saw fit. He did not set objectives and standards for the plant, and he never asked the supervisors to develop plans for improving productivity and product quality. Under Ben, the plant had the lowest turnover among the company’s five plants, but the second worst record for costs and production levels. When the company was acquired by another firm, Ben was asked to take early retirement, and Phil Jones was brought in to replace him. Phil had a growing reputation as a manager who could get things done, and he quickly began making changes. Costs were cut by trimming a number of activities such as the fitness center at the plant, company picnics and parties, and the human relations training programs for supervisors. Phil believed that human relations training was a waste of time; if employees don’t want to do the work, get rid of them and find somebody else who does. Supervisors were instructed to establish high performance standards for their departments and insist that people achieve them. A computer monitoring system was introduced so that the output of each worker could be checked closely against the standards. Phil told his supervisors to give any worker who had substandard performance one warning, and then if performance did not improve within two weeks to fire the person. Phil believed that workers don’t respect a supervisor who is weak and passive. When Phil observed a worker wasting time or making a mistake, he would reprimand the person right on the spot to set an example. Phil also checked closely on the performance of his supervisors. Demanding objectives were set for each department, and weekly meetings were held with each supervisor to review department performance. Finally, Phil insisted that supervisors check with him first before taking any significant actions that deviated from established plans and policies. As another cost-cutting move, Phil reduced the frequency of equipment maintenance, which required machines to be idled when they could be productive. Since the machines had a good record of reliable operation, Phil believed that the current maintenance schedule was excessive and was cutting into production. Finally, when business was slow for one of the product lines, Phil laid off workers rather than finding something else for them to do. By the end of Phil’s first year as plant manager, production costs were reduced by 20 percent and production output was up by 10 percent. However, three of his seven supervisors left to take other jobs, and turnover was also high among the machine operators. Some of the turnover was due to workers who were fired, but competent machine operators were also quitting, and it was becoming increasingly difficult to find any replacements for them. Finally, there was increasing talk of unionizing among the workers.

Write a 6–8 page paper in which you:

1. Describe the leadership style that Ben Samuels exhibited as the plant manager for Consolidated Products. Provide three examples of his leadership actions and behavior. Discuss the pros and cons in each example you describe to support the response.

2. Analyze the leadership style that Phil Jones exhibited as he took over to replace Ben. Provide three examples of his leadership actions and behavior, assessing the pros and cons in each example you describe to support the response.

3. Compare and contrast the leadership styles of Ben and Phil. Provide three examples of the similarities and differences between these leaders and discuss how each leader might address contemporary leadership issues and challenges in Israel today.

4. Discuss what you would do now with Phil, based on his performance. Discuss the pros and cons of your decision.

5. Use at least three quality resources in this assignment. Note: Wikipedia and similar websites do not qualify as quality resources.

This course requires the use of Strayer Writing Standards. For assistance and information, please refer to the Strayer Writing Standards link in the left-hand menu of your course.

The specific course learning outcome associated with this assignment is:

· Determine the most appropriate leadership style in a project environment to manage the project effectively.

 
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Leadership Development Program

· Case Study Assignment

Read the Harvard Business Review Case Study: Leadership Development Perk or Priority? by Idalene F. Kesner. Prepare a proposal for Barton to present to Palmer for a customized leadership development program that includes coaching. In your proposal, make sure to discuss:

1. The financial value of great leaders to the company. In particular, what are the outcomes that can be expected if they develop “great” leaders as that term is used by Zenger & Folkman in The Extraordinary Leader.  Include references to quantitative data here.

2. The group of employees, based on their career stage, as that term is used by Dalton & Thomson, that should be the focus of the program.

3. The design of the program.  How will you determine who should participate in the developmental programs? What do you advocate for skill development for the participants? How will you measure skill development?

4. Explain the role that coaching will play in the development program. How will you use coaching? What, if any, leadership development will be aimed at developing the ability of participants to act as coaches?

Your proposal should be no more than 5 pages, double-spaced, and with a font no smaller than 12 pt.

 

Something to consider:

What are the undisputed facts?

a) Actions affecting Barton’s interests?

b) About Palmer & Stockton’s interests?

c) About Barton’s interests?

How should Barton “make her case” for executive education?

Make her case: advocate for what she wants

 
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Strengths, Needs, And Cultural Assessment And Treatment Plan ( No Wor Count)

Often in Human Services, it is helpful to obtain background information on your clients. This is often done via a psychosocial assessment. However, there are various approaches in obtaining this information.

One common approach when working with families is referred to as the Strengths, Needs, and Cultural Assessment. This is a great way to find out information about the individual, and his or her family and their culture in an individualized and strengths-based way.

Refer to the “Guidelines for Strengths, Needs, and Culture Discovery.” You may also search online for other government agencies’ assessments. A good example is Butler County Strengths, Needs, Cultural Discovery Domain Interview through Ohio state government (www.fcf.ohio.gov).

Imagine your supervisor has asked you to perform a strengths, needs, and cultural assessment to gauge your abilities to conduct this type of information gathering. Your supervisor has given you the option of completing a strengths, needs and cultural assessment on a family member or friend. Your supervisor has emphasized that you change the name of the individual you use as the basis of the assessment to protect their privacy.

Use the Adapted Counseling Strengths, Needs, and Cultural Assessment to record the results of your assessment.  Be sure to address your areas of strength and needs.

Use the results of the assessment to develop a treatment plan to address your needs.

complete the  attached “Counseling Strengths, Needs, and Cultural Assessment Worksheet”

 
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Management Development

Chapter 13 excerpt : Management Development For at least the past seventy years, managers have been viewed as a dynamic and important element of business organizations. Given the turbulence in today’s environment, an organization must have a high-quality, flexible, and adaptive management team if it is to survive and succeed. 1 This is true even for organiza- tions that have chosen to restructure (e.g., with flatter hierarchies, and fewer per- manent employees) and empower employees to be more a part of organizational decision making. It is managers who are ultimately responsible for making the decision to change their organizations’ strategies and structures, and it is managers who must ensure that these new approaches are implemented, modified, and executed in a way that achieves the organizations’ goals. While they may do this in a different way than they have in the past (e.g., less command and control, more leading and coaching), managers still play a critical role in organizations’ adaptation and success. 2 In essence, using fewer managers in an organization makes it more important that each manager is effective. It should be noted that, even though popular press reports suggest that the number of managers is shrinking, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics estimated that the category of “management, business, and financial occupations” contained approximately 15.7 million people in 2008. Furthermore, this category is expected to show a net gain of 1.7 million jobs between 2008 and 2018, for a projected 10.6 percent increase.3 Management development is one major way for organizations to increase the chances that managers will be effective. While many believed that the ability to manage (like the ability to lead) is primarily an inborn capability, the current prevailing view is that most of the KSAOs (knowledge, skills, abilities, and other characteristics) required to be an effective manager can be learned or enhanced.4 Efforts to recruit, retain, and assess managerial talent are discussed elsewhere.5 Management development is a very popular HRD activity. Management development has been defined in many ways. 6 For the purposes of this chapter, the following definition captures the essence of management development as it can and should be practiced in organizations: An organization’s conscious effort to provide its managers (and potential managers) with opportunities to learn, grow, and change, in hopes of producing over the long term a cadre of managers with the skills necessary to function effectively in that organization.7 First, this definition suggests that management development should be seen as specific to a particular organization. Although there appear to be roles and compe- tencies that apply to managing in a variety of settings, each organization is unique, and its goal should be to develop individuals to be more effective managers within its own context.8 Second, management development consists of providing employees with opportunities for learning, growth, and change. All of the issues pertaining to learning—and especially adult learning come into play as we seek to assist managers in “learning how to learn.”9 While there is no guarantee that particular individuals will take advantage of, or profit from, these opportunities, management development cannot occur unless oppor- tunities are at least provided.10 Third, management development must be a con- scious effort on the part of an organization. Leaving development to chance greatly reduces the likelihood that the organization will achieve the kinds of changes it needs and desires. Fourth, management development (like all HRD activities) should be directly linked to the organization’s strategy, that is, it must meet the organization’s business needs if it is to be a sound investment.11 While many cur- rent management development programs do not conform to this definition, we think this serves as a benchmark to which such programs can and should aspire. Management development can be described as having three main components: management education, management training, and on-the-job experiences.12 Management education can be defined as “the acquisition of a broad range of con- ceptual knowledge and skills in formal classroom situations in degree-granting institutions.”13 As we will describe later, the “formal classroom situations” to which the definition refers include a wide range of activities, with the classroom setting increasingly being used to bring together and process the results of outside activities to draw conclusions about what has been learned. Management training focuses more on providing specific skills or knowledge that can be immediately applied within an organization and/or to a specific position or set of positions within an organization (e.g., middle managers).14 On-the-job experiences are planned or unplanned opportunities for a manager to gain self-knowledge, enhance existing skills and abilities, or obtain new skills or information within the context of day- to-day activities (e.g., mentoring, coaching, assignment to a task force).15 In this chapter, we will discuss a number of management development activities that are used within each of these three components. Extent of Management Development Activities As mentioned earlier, management development is one of the most commonly offered approaches to HRD. In a 2010 survey, organizations reported using 27percent of their training budgets to providing management development, with an additional 22 percent for executive development. Strikingly, only 26 percent of all training dollars were spent on nonexempt employees, with the rest (25 percent) going to exempt-level, non-managerial employees. The total cost of formal training aimed at management (including executives) was estimated to be almost $26 billion.16 The most frequently cited reasons for developing managers include broadening the individual and providing knowledge or skills.17 Organization of the Chapter Management development comprises such a broad range of issues and approaches that we cannot cover it all in a single chapter. Rather, we will focus our discussion in the following areas: 1. Describing the managerial job, including roles managers must perform and the competencies necessary for performing them effectively 2. Making management development strategic 3. Assessing options available for management education 4. Assessing options available for management training and using on-the-job experiences for management development 5. Providing a description of two common approaches used to develop managers (leadership training and behavior modeling training for interpersonal skills) 6. The designing of management development programs DESCRIBING THE MANAGER’S JOB: MANAGEMENT ROLES AND COMPETENCIES Given that almost all organizations employ managers, the scrutiny under which managers operate, and the vast literature on management and its subfields, one would expect that we would have a clear idea of what managers do, the KSAOs necessary to do those things effectively, and how to identify and develop those KSAOs. Unfortunately, there is not an extensive research literature concerning what managers do, how they learn to do it, and how they should be developed.18 While it is true that popular conceptions of a manager’s role and development are available, scientific research has yet to provide a clearly supported and accepted model that can be used to guide management development. Even among the best empirical studies in this area, such as the Management Progress Study con- ducted over a thirty-year period at AT&T, there are significant limitations (e.g., small sample sizes, analysis of only one organization) that make it difficult to con- fidently conclude what most or all managers do and how they develop.19 The changes that have occurred in organizations in the past two decades have only complicated this picture. Many of the research studies from the 1970s and earlier looked at management in hierarchically structured organizations that operated in relatively stable environments. As we have pointed out many times, organizations must respond to environmental challenges to stay competitive, and the structures and strategies they use change over time. The role of management has changed in most organizations as well. It is likely that the established views of the management job may be more relevant for some organizations than others. This is not to say that what we learned in the past is useless. But we do need to know which aspects from the past are still relevant and descriptive of manag- ing at the present time. This underscores the need for HRD professionals to identify what the management job is (and needs to be) in their own organization before they can design and deliver management development processes and pro- grams that will meet the needs of their own business and contribute to its com- petitiveness and effectiveness. In this section of the chapter, we briefly describe several approaches to conceptualizing the management role to suggest a starting point in designing a reasonable management development program. As indicated in the definition of management development presented above, meaningful management development is likely to differ among organizations, considering the context and challenges facing each particular organization. Designers of such programs should begin their efforts by obtaining a clear understanding of an organization (including its external environment, goals, strategic plan, culture, strengths and weaknesses) and the characteristics of the target population (man- agers and managers-to-be). 20 The research available on what managers do, how they do it, and how they develop the needed capabilities can provide a useful base from which to begin the needs assessment process. It is unrealistic, however, to expect such research to provide the blueprint for any particular organization’s management development strategy. Approaches to Understanding the Job of Managing Researchers who have examined the job of managing have done so from at least three perspectives: describing the characteristics of the job as it is typically performed, describing the roles managers serve, and developing process models that show how the various components of managing relate to each other.21 The characteristics approach involves observing the tasks managers perform and grouping them into meaningful categories. McCall, Morrison, and Hannan review the results of a group of observational studies and conclude that ten elements of managing are con- sistently present.22 These elements indicate that the management job involves long hours of work (primarily within an organization), high activity levels, fragmented work (e.g., many interruptions), varied activities, primarily oral communication, many contacts, and information gathering. In addition, managers tend not to be reflective planners (given the variety of tasks and fragmented nature of the work) and do poorly in accurately estimating how they spend their time. While these observations may be interesting, they do not provide much assis- tance in describing specifically what managers do, how they do it, and how they should be developed. A common conclusion from such studies is that important questions about the job remain unanswered (e.g., the relationship of the activities to each other) and that “knowing that the managerial job is varied and complex is not particularly helpful in the identification and/or development process.”23 A second approach to describing the managerial job is to identify the roles that managers are typically assigned. This can be accomplished by using either an observa- tional approach or an empirical approach. The observational approach is typified by Fayol’s five management functions (planning, organizing, commanding, coordinat- ing, and controlling) and Mintzberg’s managerial roles: interpersonal (figurehead, leader, liaison), informational (monitor, disseminator, spokesperson), and decisional (entrepreneur, disturbance handler, resource allocator, and negotiator).24 While these categorizations are quite popular, they too do not adequately describe what managers do. They also lack specificity.25 The empirical approach relies on a descriptive questionnaire (e.g., the Man- agement Position Description Questionnaire) that is completed by managers them- selves, and/or by others who work with them.26 However, even this approach has failed to provide practical, meaningful descriptions of the job.27 Taken together, the observational and empirical approaches to categorizing the managerial role have not proved very useful as a definition of the managerial job or as a guide to developing managers. One way researchers try to overcome the limitations of previous approaches is to develop process models that take into account the relevant competencies and constraints involved in performing the management job. Two process models we highlight are the integrated competency model and the four-dimensional model.28 The integrated competency model is based on interviews of over 2,000 managers in twelve organizations. The model focuses on managerial competencies, that is, skills and/or personal characteristics that contribute to effective performance, rather than the roles managers perform.29 The model identifies twenty-one competencies that are grouped into six categories: human resource management, leadership, goal and action management, directing subordinates, focus on others, and specialized knowl- edge.30 Table 13-1 shows the specific competencies included in each cluster. The human resources, leadership, and goal and action clusters are seen as most central to managing. A major contribution of this model from Boyatzis and colleagues is its attempt to describe the managerial job in terms of the competencies that contribute to performance and the relationships among these competencies. The integrated competency model is an example of a competency-based approach to manage- ment development. Competency-based approaches have become very popular, not only as the basis for management development programs, but for other train- ing and development programs and HR programs as well. A weakness of the integrated competency model is that the model is based on a narrow range of measuring devices, which are not likely to represent or reveal all of the traits, skills, and knowledge needed for managerial perfor- mance.32 In addition, the method by which the competencies are identified has been criticized. The instrument used, called the Behavioral Event Interview (BEI), asks managers to describe three job incidents they feel were effective and three job incidents they feel were ineffective. Barrett and Depinet argue that this method is inappropriate for measuring competencies as Boyatzis describes them.33 That is, Boyatzis describes a competency as “an underlying characteristic of a person in that it may be a motive, trait, skill, aspect of one’s self-image or social role, or a body of knowledge he or she uses” (p. 21), and says competen- cies may be unconscious and that an individual may be “unable to articulate or describe them” (p. 21). 34 The validation process used to support this model (and other competency models) has been challenged. 35 The second process model of the managerial job that can contribute to designing management development efforts is the four-dimensional model.36 Based on various information sources (e.g., managerial diaries, interviews, performance evaluation documents, observation), this model depicts the manage- rial role as having the following dimensions: 1. Six functions—forecasting and planning, training and development, persuasivecom- munication, influence and control, expertise/functional area, and administration 2. Four roles—innovator, evaluator, motivator, director 3. Five (relational) targets—peers, subordinates, superiors, external, and self 4. An unspecified number of managerial styles (attributes that describe the image and approach of the manager)—examples include objectivity, personal impact, leadership, energy level, and risk taking The four-dimensional model states that managers interact with various tar- gets (e.g., subordinates), carrying out an assortment of functions by performing specific roles (i.e., the roles that exist within each of the functions). The way they perform these functions and roles is consistent with their managerial style. For example, in performing the training and development function with a sub- ordinate (the target), the manager may have to direct the subordinate, motivate him or her during training, and evaluate progress (all roles contained within the training and development function). The manager may do this by using a par- ticular style (e.g., objectivity, which involves evaluating and responding to the subordinate in an unbiased manner). The four-dimensional and integrated competency models include similar skills, roles, and activities and provide a solid basis for describing the managerial job and designing management development programs (see Schoenfeldt & Steger for a dis- cussion of the relationships among the models).37 These models provide a conceptual basis to view the role of managers within a specific organization and the competen- cies managers need to perform effectively. However, these models do not have a sizable body of empirical research to support their validity. Just as importantly, these models should not be viewed as substitutes for a thorough needs assessment. Managers As Persons: A Holistic View of the Manager’s Job The approaches we have presented to describing the manager’s job all have one thing in common: they attempt to describe the manager’s job by identifying its elements. This approach has its risks and limitations, according to authors such as Henry Mintzberg and Peter Vaill.38 Mintzberg describes the problem as follows: If you turn to the formalized literature, you will find all kinds of lists—of tasks or roles or “competencies.” But a list is not a model … and so the integrated work of managing still gets lost in the process of describing it. And without such a model we can neither understand the job properly nor deal with its many important needs—for design, selection, training, and support … We have been so intent on breaking the job into pieces that we never came to grips with the whole thing.39 Vaill raises this concern in light of the turbulent environment in which man- agers must manage. 40 While he believes that naming the functions that managers must perform can “define the territory that leaders and managers are concerned with” (p. 114), the list-of-functions approach leaves out something essential: the performing of the managerial job. Vaill explains the problem this way: The list of functions approach forgets that action taking is a concrete process before it is anything else. Furthermore, it is a concrete process performed by a whole person in relation to a whole environment populated by other whole persons (that is, not other lists of functions). This whole process is embedded in time and is subject to the real time of its operation and to all the turbulence and change that surround it, that indeed suffuse it, because the turbulence and change are within action takers as much as they surround them. Simply to name the function to be performed as though it were the action ignores all of this richness of the actual action-taking process, and worst of all, ultimately masks the richness and leads to an empty model of what the action-taking process is [emphasis in original].41 Vaill uses the metaphor of “managing as a performing art” to show that the job of managing is more than the sum of its competencies, roles, and functions, just as, for example, a jazz band or dance troupe performance is more than the pieces or knowledge and skills that make it up.42 He criticizes the competency movement, arguing that it is based on a set of assumptions that may not be true, in effect “pre- suming a world that does not exist, or that is at least quite improbable.”43 In response to these deficiencies, Mintzberg developed a model of the man- ager’s job that attempts to bring together what has been learned about managing in a more holistic or integrated way.44 His goal is to develop a model that reflects the richness and variety of styles individuals use in carrying out the managerial job. The model represents the manager’s job as a framework of concentric cir- cles, in what he calls a “well-rounded” job. Figure 13-1 shows a diagram of Mintzberg’s well-rounded model. The words in the model refer to the seven interrelated roles Mintzberg sees as making up the managerial job: conceiving, scheduling, communicating, controlling, leading, linking, and doing. At the center of the model is the person in the job. The person brings to the job a set of values, experiences, knowledge, competencies, and mental models through which he or she interprets environmental events. These components combine to form the individual’s managerial style, which drives how the person carries out the job. The next circle contains the frame of the job, which is the “mental set the incumbent assumes to carry it out” (p. 12). The frame includes the person’s idea of the purpose of what he or she is trying to accomplish as well as the person’s approach to getting the job done. Working within this frame involves the role Mintzberg calls conceiving. The heavy line curving around the frame of the job is meant to depict everything in the organization that is under the manager’s control, that is, his or her span of control. The next circle contains the agenda of the work. The agenda is made up of the issues that are of concern to the manager and the schedule (i.e., allocation of time) used to accomplish the work. Dealing with the agenda of the work involves the role of scheduling. The frame of the job and agenda of the work are surrounded by the actual behaviors that managers perform, both inside and outside of the unit they manage. Mintzberg sees three levels of action: managing through information (which involves the roles of communicating and controlling), managing through people (which involves the roles of linking and leading), and managing through direct action (which involves the role of doing tasks). Mintzberg’s central argument is that “while we may be able to separate the components of the job conceptually, I maintain that they cannot be separated behaviorally … it may be useful, even necessary, to delineate the parts for pur- poses of design, selection, training and support. But this job cannot be practiced as a set of independent parts” (p. 22). He points out that the manager’s job will vary, depending on what is called for by the work and the particular approach or style a manager uses. The manager’s style will affect his or her work through the roles he or she favors, the way in which the roles are performed, and the rela- tionship that exists among the roles. Mintzberg states that interviews with man- agers he has met bear out his ideas of the variety and richness of the managerial job. Like the other approaches to describing the manager’s job, Mintzberg’s model should be seen as a work-in-progress, awaiting further development and validation through research. 45 Recently, Scott Quatro and colleagues proposed a framework for developing holistic leaders that emphasized four domains, i.e., analytical, conceptual, emotional, and spiritual domains of leadership practice.46 What can HRD professionals take away from the ideas presented by Vaill and Mintzberg? We think the main contribution is that they remind us that the job of managing is a complex, multifaceted, and integrated endeavor. While competency models and lists of KSAOs are useful in identifying what it takes to do the job and as focal points for management development programs, HRD professionals should not think that management development is only about developing roles and competencies. We need to remember that managers are people who perform work, not collections of competencies or KSAOs. Some practical implications of this are that HRD professionals should: 1. Recognize that one of the goals of management development is to develop the whole person, so that he or she can manage effectively within the con- text of the organization and external environment. 2. Design programs and processes that go beyond the one-shot event, and include ongoing activities that provide the opportunity to reinforce and refine what has been learned in the context of performing the work. 3. Build into programs and practices a recognition of the interrelationships between the “components” of managing, so that participants can see and feel how what they are learning can be integrated into the whole of the management job. 4. Implement programs and processes in a way that recognizes and takes advan- tage of the values, knowledge, and experiences that participants bring to the management experience. 5. Consider what the person brings to the job of managing when dealing with learning and transfer of training issues. 6. Include recognition of these issues when conducting needs assessment and evaluation activities for management development programs. Importance of Needs Assessment in Determining Managerial Competencies As we stated in Chapter 4, needs assessment provides critical information in determining the conditions for training, where training is needed, what kind of training is needed, and who needs training. Given the fact that research on the managerial job has left many unanswered questions, the importance of conduct- ing a thorough needs assessment before designing a management development program is amplified.47 Despite this, many organizations fail to conduct proper needs assessments. According to a survey of 1,000 organizations by Lise Saari and colleagues, only 27 percent of respondents reported conducting any needs assessment before designing management development programs. 48 A review of forty-four studies where needs assessment was discussed found that 36 percent analyzed organizational-level needs, with lower percentages for assessment of process, group, or individual-level needs.49 A survey of quality managers in three European countries found a reliance on supervisory opinion as the primary basis for needs assessment, rather than any of the more formal assessment meth- ods presented in Chapter 4.50 Ronald Riggio recently lamented the relative lack of needs assessment efforts prior to the implementation of leadership develop- ment programs, despite the billions of dollars per year spent on such programs. Cumulatively, these studies suggest that many organizations are likely wasting critical resources on inadequately focused management development efforts. Some organizations are doing a good job of needs assessment for management development and as a result have a clearer idea of the competencies and issues their development programs should address. For example, Aeroquip-Vickers have top managers identify the top twenty-five competencies that managers need for future success. This is then used to form a managerial success profile that guides subsequent management development efforts in this organization.52 As a second example, the Ritz-Carlton hotel chain based their award-winning leadership training program on both the organizational mission and a needs analysis.53 Similarly, the Blanchard Valley Health Association, a healthcare system in Findlay, Ohio, used needs assess- ment to formulate its Leaders for Tomorrow program. This year-long program includes classroom learning, small-group discussion, computer learning modules, and an “action learning” component, where managers work on job-related pro- jects.54 Finally, the State of Idaho completed an intensive needs assessment before implementing its Certified Public Manager (CPM) program for state managers.55 We hope these examples illustrate the value of conducting a thorough investigation of the competencies needed to perform effectively before designing a management development program. The Globally Competent Manager The advent of the global economy has led to recommendations that organiza- tions create management development programs that supplement international assignments in producing globally competent managers. 5 6 Organizations such as Corning Glass, 3M, ITT, and General Electric have incorporated this perspec- tive into their management development programs. We present three examples of how the competencies needed to be an effective global manager have been conceptualized. Bartlett and Ghoshal argue that to succeed in a global environment, organi- zations need a network of managers who are specialists in global issues, and that organizations do not need to globalize all managers.57 They suggest four catego- ries of managers are needed: 1. Business Managers—this type of manager plays three roles, serving as “the strategist for the organization, the architect of its worldwide asset configuration, and the coordinator of transactions across national borders” (p. 125). 2. Country Managers—this type of manager, who works in the organization’s national subsidiaries, also plays three roles, serving as “the sensor and interpreter of local opportunities and threats, the builder of local resources and capabilities, and the contributor to active participation in global strategy” (p. 128). 3. Functional Managers—these managers are functional specialists (e.g., in engineer- ing, marketing, human resources) who “scan for specialized information world- wide, ‘cross-pollinate’ leading-edge knowledge and best practice, and champion innovations that may offer transnational opportunities and applications” (p. 130). 4. Corporate Managers—these managers serve in corporate headquarters and orchestrate the organization’s activities, playing the roles of leader and talent scout (i.e., by identifying potential business, country, and functional man- agers) and developing promising executives. Bartlett and Ghoshal illustrate these roles by using case studies of managers at Procter & Gamble, Electrolux, and NEC.58 They suggest that organizations need to develop management teams capable of performing these functions in concert to achieve the organization’s goals. While this categorization provides some sense of how these roles inter-relate, further research is needed to determine whether this approach can be a useful basis for developing global managers. Adler and Bartholomew present a second point of view.59 These authors identify seven transnational skills that they believe are necessary to managing effec- tively in a global environment: global perspective, local responsiveness, synergistic learning, transition and adaptation, cross-cultural interaction, collaboration, and foreign experience. They argue that transnationally competent managers need a broader set of skills than traditional managers. Adler and Bartholomew state that an organization’s human resource management strategies must be modified in order to manage and develop such managers, and they conclude from a survey of fifty North American firms that these organizations’ HRM strategies are less global than their business strategies.60 These authors provide recommendations for how HRM systems can be modified to become more global—for example, developmental activities should prepare managers to work “anywhere in the world with people from all parts of the world” (p. 59). Follow-up work on global career paths has been presented by Cappellen and Janssens.61 These two views of the globally competent manager differ in at least two ways. First, Bartlett and Ghoshal adopt a role-oriented view, whereas Adler and Bartholomew focus on the competencies managers need. Second, Adler and Bartholomew suggest that all managers become “globalized,” while Bartlett and Ghoshal argue that global management requires a team of managers who per- form different functions and roles (and who require significantly different sets of competencies). 62 Spreitzer, McCall, and Mahoney offer a third point of view on international competencies. 63 They argue that it is important to focus on future challenges that may require different competencies than those required today. Therefore, Spreit- zer and colleagues emphasize competencies involved in learning from experience as a part of the set of competencies used to identify international executive potential and develop effective international managers. Spreitzer et al. identify fourteen dimensions that can predict international executive potential. The list includes: • Eight end-state competency dimensions—for example, sensitivity to cultural differ- ences, business knowledge, courage to take a stand, bringing out the best in people, acting with integrity, insight, commitment to success, and risk taking • Six learning-oriented dimensions—for example, use of feedback, cultural adven- turousness, seeking opportunities to learn, openness to criticism, feedback seeking, and flexibility These authors developed an instrument, called Prospector, that rates managers on these dimensions to identify which managers have the greatest potential to be effective international executives. Using over 800 managers from various levels of six international firms in twenty-one countries, Spreitzer and colleagues pro- vide evidence of the validity and reliability of the Prospector instrument as a way to predict international executive success. The value of the approach taken by Spreitzer and colleagues is that it (1) gives HRD professionals ideas about what dimensions international management devel- opment programs should address, as well as possible ways to select which managers should participate in and most benefit from these activities, (2) reminds HRD pro- fessionals to consider future challenges managers may face that may take them beyond the competencies that have been needed in the past, and (3) provides an excellent model for how HRD professionals can take a scientific approach to iden- tifying and generating supporting evidence for the sets of competencies they will use as the basis of management development. Our purpose in raising these three points of view is not to suggest which is “correct” or would make the better foundation for describing the managerial job and the development of managers (although the method used by Spreitzer and colleagues would seem to be the most worthy of emulation). 64 These models (as well as other ideas about achieving global competency) require further research, testing, and modification.65 These approaches illustrate how the global environ- ment can impact the approach taken to developing an organization’s managers. In addition, they underscore the need to consider an organization’s business strat- egy and environment as foundations for management development efforts. What Competencies Will Future Managers Need? Just as Spreitzer and colleagues include consideration of learning-related dimen- sions to address competency areas that international managers will need in the future, other researchers are trying to estimate the competencies managers will need to navigate their careers in the twenty-first century. 66 For example, Allred, Snow, and Miles argue that new organizational structures demand new sets of managerial competencies.67 Based on a survey of managers, HR executives, and recruiters, Allred and colleagues conclude that five categories of KSAOs will be important for managerial careers in this new century: (1) a knowledge-based technical specialty, (2) cross-functional and international experience, (3) collabo- rative leadership, (4) self-management skills, and (5) personal traits, including integrity, trustworthiness, and flexibility. We mention this example to encourage HRD professionals to consider the question of what future competencies managers will need. It is important that man- agement development activities prepare managers for the future. Estimates will have to be made and should include trends and industry-specific issues that will likely affect the businesses that managers will have to manage. Most of all, this means that management development should be seen as a long-term process. Management devel- opment programs and the development process should not be seen as finished pro- ducts, but as organic works in progress that are regularly evaluated and modified as trends, strategies, and conditions warrant. This approach is already being used in many organizations, including 3M, General Electric, TRW, and Motorola.68 Having explored the nature of the management job and the competencies that managing requires, we turn our attention to the issue of making manage- ment development strategic. MAKING MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIC We have noted that management development should be tied to an organiza- tion’s structure and strategy for accomplishing its business goals. Recall that this point was made back in Chapter 1, as we discussed the learning and performance wheel coming out of the ASTD study.69 Before we describe the management development practices organizations use, it is useful to examine how these activ- ities can be framed and delivered in a way that ensures that this strategic focus is maintained.70 Seibert, Hall, and Kram suggest that three desired linkages should exist between an organization’s strategy and its management development activities: (1) the link between the business environment and business strategy, (2) the link between business strategy and the organization’s management development strategy, and (3) the link between the management development strategy and management development activities.71 Based on an examination of management development practices at twenty-two leading organizations, Seibert et al. con- clude that these organizations pay attention to the first and last links, but the middle linkage between the business strategy and the management development strategy is weak. They suggest that this linkage is weak because the HRD func- tion has too often focused on itself rather than its customer, has been unable to respond rapidly enough to meet customer needs, and has a tendency to see a false dichotomy between developing individuals and conducting business. Seibert and colleagues find that some organizations, such as 3M and Motor- ola, do make this link, by making sure that strategic business issues drive man- agement development, ensuring that HRD professionals provide a timely response to business needs, and by integrating management development as a natural part of doing business. Based on their review, they propose four guiding principles that can help HRD professionals make the necessary strategic links: 1. Begin by moving out and up to business strategy—this involves viewing the HRD professional’s role primarily as implementing strategy, and secondarily as a developer of managers. Practical suggestions include becoming inti- mately familiar with an organization’s strategic objectives and business issues, using these as a starting point for identifying management behaviors and competencies, and looking for developmental opportunities within the activities needed to accomplish strategic objectives. 2. Put job experiences before classroom activities, not vice versa—this involves using job experiences as the central developmental activity, with classroom activities play- ing the role of identifying, processing, and sharing the learning that is taking place on the job. This assumes that on-the-job experiences will be actively man- aged to ensure that learning will take place and strategic needs will be addressed. 3. Be opportunistic—ensure that management development is flexible and open to respond to the business needs and issues an organization is facing and will likely face. This involves moving away from elaborate, rigid programs to programs that can change and are built to be responsive to the organization’s changing needs. 4. Provide support for experience-based learning—this involves creating a culture that expects, supports, and rewards learning as a part of day-to-day challenges and that reinforces individuals for taking control of their own development as managers. 5. Burack, Hochwarter, and Mathys offer another approach to strategic manage- ment development.72 Using a review of so-called “world-class” organiza- tions, Burack et al. identify seven themes common to strategic management development: (1) a linkage between management development and business plans and strategies; (2) seamless programs, which cut across hierarchical and functional boundaries; (3) a global orientation and a cross-cultural approach; (4) individual learning focused within organizational learning; (5) a recogni- tion of the organization’s culture and ensuring that the management develop- ment design fits within and creates or supports the desired culture; (6) a career development focus; and (7) an approach built on empirically deter- mined core competencies. The ideas offered by these authors highlight the strategic issues and offer common practices used in respected organizations. 7 3 They are not time-tested blueprints for success. Furthermore, the “best practices” and “leading organiza- tions” approach to identifying principles and actions should be viewed with some caution. What is found is determined by whom the researchers have cho- sen to include in their sample and what they were able to discover. As was the case with organizations profiled in the best-selling book In Search of Excellence, not all organizations that meet the criteria for inclusion when the study is done continue to meet the criteria in later years. 7 4 The environment we live in is too turbulent for any set of principles to hold true in particular organizations for too long. Finally, the recommendations offered in such studies should be viewed as sug- gestions and should not be copied unthinkingly.75 Other research along these lines has been done, and continues to move our understanding forward concerning stra- tegic management development.76 The authors of the studies we cited remind readers that it is the practitioners’ responsibility to ensure that what is done within their organizations should be based on needs assessment and a thorough knowl- edge of the organization and its environment.

 
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