This document discusses Peter Drucker's view of management as dealing with human dimensions like behavior, creativity, and morality. It summarizes Drucker's belief that human dignity is based on Judeo-Christian concepts of humans being created in God's image. It also discusses how Drucker felt managers should focus on developing people's strengths, integrity, and performance to help them find status and function. The document uses examples from companies like ServiceMaster and Dacor to illustrate applying Drucker's principles of respecting human dignity and developing the whole person.
The Human Dimension and Management as a Liberal Art
1. The Human DimensionAnd the Management as a Liberal Art From Drucker’s Lost Art of Management Joseph A. Maciariello and Karen E. Linkletter
2. The Human Dimension in Management Management as a liberal art deals with questions of the human condition. The liberal arts ideal involves the study of human behavior, creativity, emotions, decision making, and moral values. Drucker based his model of a functioning society on the Judeo-Christian concept of humans as created in the image of God. Drucker’s idea of human dignity follows in the trajectory of discussions of US human rights.
3. Drucker’s Worldview: Judeo-Christian Foundations Questions of worldview are particularly relevant to our work and to the management of organizations where we work. Answers to the question of one’s worldview are critical to understanding oneself and how to manage people. Status and function are related to each other but not achieved in exactly the same way: Status is inherent in the individual. Function is achievable only in society. Both status and function may be enhanced or degraded by the actions of management.
4. Human Dignity and Human Rights Drucker’s view of human dignity is clearly a derivative of natural-rights theory. If rights were natural, then there would be no reason to write those rights down. Anti-Federalists believed that if the US Constitution were not specific regarding which rights were protected, at some point the government itself would define those rights to its advantage. We have the Anti-Federalists to thank for our Bill of Rights. Defining liberty or happiness for a given culture at any given time will not necessarily result in the same answer.
5. Human Nature and Work While expressions of individual spirituality differ, recognition of people’s spiritual nature is a necessary feature of Drucker’s management philosophy. Although he regularly argued that a person’s spiritual side was extremely private, Drucker noted that this private sphere had an impact on the workplace. Managers must establish conditions so workers can experience a sense of achievement, fulfillment, and growth.
6. Status and Function at Work &Obstacles to Realizing Status and Function Individuals are not naturally designed to work in organizations. Organizations are human-made structures for achieving desired outcomes. Unemployment (or underemployment) is the most obvious example of the loss of status and function. Less obvious, is the employed worker who also may encounter loss of status and function. The employed worker often lacks status and function if he or she is treated as a “human machine” and perceived as the object of work.
7. Responsibilities of Management In Drucker’s worldview, management is about being the employer, organizer, and developer of the whole person within human and social organizations. People are the building blocks of organizations—performance in organizations therefore depends upon the performance of people. The task of management is to make people productive while developing their skills, character, and intellectual capacity.
8. The Human Being at Work There are four interrelated categories of practices in managing and developing the human being at work: Integrity and values People and their development Strengths and opportunities Performance and results
9. Integrity and Values Drucker calls integrity the touchstone of management. The power of integrity in a leader is the example it provides for the rest of the organization. In order to practice integrity, organizations must decide upon a set of moral values that are upheld and agreed upon. For Drucker, what is immoral for the person should be immoral for the company—there can be no business ethics separate from moral personal behavior.
10. People and Their Development A worldview that accepts the inherent dignity and worth of the human being will lead executives to treat individuals as assets and develop whatever strengths they possess.
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12. Drucker thought that “to make strengths productive” is the unique purpose of the organization.
19. Must ask, “If I were not doing this right now, would I decide to do it today?”
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22. The four Drucker practices and the four ServiceMaster objectives create overlapping and dynamic practices and objectives that have the potential for developing human capacity and character for the common good.
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24. The company attempts to make its people feel good about themselves and their abilities. Self esteem is the issue.
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26. Chapter 5 Take Aways Management involves dealing with the messy business of human emotions, ethics, morality, and other subjective matters. Drucker approached this reality by focusing on the subject of human dignity. To understand Drucker’s concept of management as a liberal art, we need to comprehend what qualities he ascribed to human beings as natural rights. All workers must be valued regardless of status, education level, or intelligence.