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1.2.2 Effectiveness and efficiency

A manager with the appropriate skill mix is likely to be effective and efficient in performing his or her job - which is a good thing given the current emphasis on efficiency in today's economic climate.

In the maritime transport industry a good example of the push for efficiency could be seen in the Waterfront Reform Program of the late 1990s, which was intended to improve the efficiency, productivity, reliability and the industrial relations record of the Australian waterfront.

Just what is efficiency ? How does it relate to effectiveness and performance?

In an attempt to define what constitutes excellent or 'high' performance Drucker (1967) states that performance actually consists of two important dimensions: effectiveness and efficiency .

If you are effective you achieve the desired outcome in a decisive manner. If you are also efficient , you achieve the same outcome not only decisively, but also productively, without waste. Effectiveness is the ability to choose appropriate goals and achieve them.

Effectiveness has two parts: firstly, goals must be appropriate and secondly, those goals must be achieved. Efficiency is the ability to make the most appropriate use of available resources in the process of achieving your goals.

Some examples should assist in understanding the importance of being both effective and efficient.

For example

1. For a port to be effective it must possess a number of resources. These include infrastructure (for example, berths, yards) and superstructure (for example, cargo handling equipment, warehousing, transit sheds) tugs and navigation aids etc. Geographical location is also important (for example, Singapore , Hong Kong ).

How efficient the port is depends on how it utilises these resources in order to achieve objectives. For example, how do you allocate cargo handling equipment to achieve a quick turnaround time; how do you arrange yard space to receive containers; how do you allocate gangs for the maximum usage of work; how do you allocate tasks for maximum productivity. Do you change crane operators after a particular time to maximise productivity, for example?

2. Assume that I have a project to complete by a designated deadline. Let us say that I am very effective in that I get the job done. I knew the 'right things' that I had to do in order to get the job completed and I effectively completed the project. However, did I complete the project smartly ? Did I use my physical, human and financial resources, as well as the resource of time efficiently ? Did I complete the project with the most efficient use of resources? Was I both efficient and effective?

You can probably think of several situations where you were effective in actually getting a task or job completed, but when you consider how you utilised your resources, you discover that you could have been more efficient.

Drucker has said that there is surely nothing quite so useless as doing with great efficiency what should not be done at all.

Therefore, not all effective organisations are necessarily efficient. Effectiveness is concerned with goal attainment, while efficiency is concerned with resource usage. However, if an organisation's managers possess the appropriate skill mix, as well as the appropriate attitudes, both effectiveness and efficiency are more likely to be achieved.

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