2. Six Core Managerial Competencies:
What It Takes to Be a Great Manager
Communication Competency
Planning and Administration Competency
Teamwork Competency
Strategic Action Competency
Multicultural Competency
Self-Management Competency
3. Communication Competency
Ability to effectively transfer and exchange information
that leads to understanding between yourself and others
Informal Communication
Used to build social networks and good
interpersonal relations
Formal Communication
Used to announce major
events/decisions/ activities and keep
individuals up to date
Negotiation
Used to settle disputes, obtain
resources, and exercise influence
4. Deciding what tasks need to be done, determining
how they can be done, allocating resources to
enable them to be done, and then monitoring
progress to ensure that they are done
Information gathering, analysis, and problem
solving from employees and customers
Planning and organizing projects with agreed
upon completion dates
Time management
Budgeting and financial management
5. Accomplishing tasks through small groups of
people who are collectively responsible and
whose job requires coordination
Designing teams properly involves having
people participate in setting goals
Creating a supportive team environment gets
people committed to the team’s goals
Managing team dynamics involves settling
conflicts, sharing team success, and assign
tasks that use team members’ strengths
6. Strategic Action Competency
Understanding the overall mission and values
of the organization and ensuring that
employees’ actions match with them
Understanding how departments or divisions
of the organization are interrelated
Taking key strategic actions to position the
firm for success, especially in relation to
concern of stakeholders
Leapfrogging competitors
7. Snapshot
“Sony must sell off businesses that don’t fit its
core strategy of fusing gadgets with films,
music, and game software. That means
selling off its businesses in its Sony Financial
Holdings, which are very profitable.”
Howard Stringer, CEO, Sony
8. Understanding, appreciating and responding
to diverse political, cultural, and economic
issues across and within nations
Cultural knowledge and understanding of the
events in at least a few other cultures
Cultural openness and sensitivity to how
others think, act, and feel
Respectful of social etiquette variations
Accepting of language differences
Multicultural Competency
9. Self-Management Competency
Developing yourself and taking responsibility
Integrity and ethical conduct
Personal drive and resilience
Balancing work and life issues
Self-awareness and personal development
activities
10. Snapshot
“My strengths and weaknesses haven’t
changed a lot in 51 years. The important
thing is to recognize the things you don’t
do well and build a team that reflects what
you know the company needs.”
Anne Mulcahy, CEO, Xerox
Self-Management Competency
11. Who Is the Manager?
1. College Dean?
2. Police officer?
3. Surgeon?
4. Web-designer?
5. Football coach?
6. Chef?
7. Managing your checking account?
12. The Manager’s Job Is To:
PLAN:
A manager cannot operate effectively unless
he or she has long range plans.
A plan for each day’s work:
What is to be done, and why do it?
When is it to be done, and how will it be
done?
Who is to do the job?
Where should it be done?
13. The Manager Must Organize
When there is more than one employee
needed to carry out a plan.
Then organization is needed.
A team must be formed.
Each job must be carefully defined in
terms of what is to be done.
Establish delegation of responsibility.
14. Role vs. Status
Role is the behavior
expected of an
individual who occupies
a given social position
or status.
A role is a
comprehensive pattern
of behavior that is
socially recognized,
providing a means of
identifying and placing
an individual in a
society.
Status refers to the
honor or prestige
accorded to a role in the
society.
Status is the rank in
social hierarchy while
role is the behavior that
is expected of a person.
15. Example:
Status as student
Role 1: Classroom: Attending class, taking notes,
and communicating with the professor
Role 2: Fellow student: Participating in study
groups, sharing ideas, quizzing other students
Status as employee
Role 1: Warehouse: Unloading boxes, labeling
products, restocking shelves
Role 2: Customer service: Answering questions,
solving problems, researching information
16. Managerial Roles
Leading your team and also resolving a conflict,
negotiating new contracts,
representing your department at a board
meeting, or approving a request for a new
computer system.
Managers are constantly switching roles as tasks,
situations, and expectations change.
Management expert and professor Henry
Mintzberg recognized this, and he argued that
there are ten primary roles or behaviors that can
be used to categorize a manager's different
functions.
17. The Roles
Mintzberg published his Ten Management
Roles in his book, "Mintzberg on
Management: Inside our Strange World of
Organizations," in 1990.
The ten roles are:
1. Figurehead.
2. Leader.
3. Liaison.
4. Monitor.
5. Disseminator.
6. Spokesperson.
7. Entrepreneur.
8. Disturbance Handler.
9. Resource Allocator.
10. Negotiator.
18.
19. Interpersonal Category
The managerial roles in this category involve providing
information and ideas.
1. Figurehead – As a manager, you have social, ceremonial
and legal responsibilities. You're expected to be a source of
inspiration. People look up to you as a person with authority,
and as a figurehead.
2. Leader – This is where you provide leadership for your
team, your department or perhaps your entire organization;
and it's where you manage the performance and
responsibilities of everyone in the group.
3. Liaison – Managers must communicate with internal and
external contacts. You need to be able to network effectively
on behalf of your organization.
20. Informational Category
The managerial roles in this category involve
processing information.
4.Monitor – In this role, you regularly seek out
information related to your organization and industry,
looking for relevant changes in the environment. You
also monitor your team, in terms of both their
productivity, and their well-being.
5.Disseminator – This is where you communicate
potentially useful information to your colleagues and
your team.
6.Spokesperson – Managers represent and speak for
their organization. In this role you're responsible for
transmitting information about your organization and its
goals to the people outside it.
21. Decisional Category
The managerial roles in this category involve using
information.
7.Entrepreneur – As a manager, you create and control
change within the organization. This means solving problems,
generating new ideas, and implementing them.
8.Disturbance Handler – When an organization or team hits
an unexpected roadblock, it's the manager who must take
charge. You also need to help mediate disputes within it.
9.Resource Allocator – You'll also need to determine where
organizational resources are best applied. This involves
allocating funding, as well as assigning staff and other
organizational resources.
10.Negotiator – You may be needed to take part in, and
direct, important negotiations within your team, department, or
organization.
22. Managerial Skills
In addition to fulfilling roles, managers also
need a number of specific skills.
The most fundamental management skills
are:
Technical
Interpersonal
Conceptual
Diagnostic
Communication
Decision-making
Time-management
23. Technical Skills
Necessary to
accomplish or
understand the specific
kind of work being
done.
These skills are
especially important for
first line managers.
24. Interpersonal Skills
The ability to
communicate with,
understand, and motivate
both individuals and
groups.
Be able to get along with:
Subordinates
Peers
Those at higher levels
25. Conceptual Skills
A manager’s ability to think in
the abstract.
The mental capacity to:
Understand organizational
goals and its environment.
How the organization is
structured.
Viewing the organization as
system.
26. 1 - 26
Diagnostic Skills
Skills that enable a
manager to
visualize the most
appropriate
response to a
situation.
27. Communication Skills
A manager’s abilities
both to effectively
convey ideas and
information to others
and to effectively
receive ideas and
information from
others.
28. Decision-Making Skills
A manager’s ability to
correctly recognize and
define problems and
opportunities and to then
select an appropriate
course of action to solve
problems and capitalize on
opportunities.
29. Time-Management Skills
The manager’s
ability to prioritize
work, to work
efficiently, and to
delegate
appropriately.
30. Becoming a Manager
How does one acquire the skills necessary
to blend the science and art of
management to become successful
manager?
32. The Nature of Management
The manager’s job is
fraught with:
Uncertainty
Change
Interruption
Fragmented activities
33. A Manager Must be a Leader of
Employees
It means overseeing the
team by influencing the
employees to get the job
done.
Motivating employees.
Creating an environment
that makes employees
work efficiently.
Managers get employees
to put forth their best
effort.
34. You Have Been Assigned As
Manager of Your Group
The manager whose place you are taking
is being left on the job for a period to train
you, but he is not training you.
You find the previous manager has been
running a one person show.
The morale of the employees really could
be better.
What are you going to do?