1.1.1 The art of getting things done through people
Mary Follett (1868-1933) highlighted the fact that managers achieve organisational goals by arranging for others to perform tasks in her definition of management: the art of getting things done through people .
This definition correctly interprets the role of a manager as someone who makes decisions, allocates resources and directs the activities of others to achieve goals. Who are the 'others'? They are group/team members, superiors, 'laterals' and persons and companies external to the organisation.
Note: To reflect the more democratic nature of work today the term group member or team member is used frequently instead of employee. People who have no employees are also managers. These managers engage in operational, technical and professional work that requires by its nature that they 'manage' themselves and others, although there is no formal management structure.
The common thread in management activities and in the functions to be performed and the skills required of a manager is the importance of managing people .
Some more comprehensive definitions follow:
- Your textbook (refer page 5) defines management as the process of achieving organisational goals through engaging in the four functions of planning, organising, leading and controlling.
- Stoner et al (1994, page 7) define management as the process of planning, organising, leading and controlling the work of organisation members and of using all available organisation resources to reach specific organisational goals .
These definitions include the traditional four (4) functional areas of management - planning, organising, leading and controlling . The definitions also recognise that resources include both physical and human and that the organisation works towards predetermined goals.
Consider this
A team of six stevedores can do 170 container lifts in an 8-hour shift without a manager. Should I hire you to manage them and they still do 170 lifts what is the benefit to my business of having hired you? However, if they do 250 lifts, you, the manager have value.
Management is the art of making people more effective than they would have been without you. Some would say the science is in using the four functions. Can your group work better with you than without? Can they serve the customer better, handle more calls, and achieve more? This is the value of management - making a group of individuals more effective.