manager
(noun)
A person whose job is to manage something, such as a business, a restaurant, or a sports team.
Examples of manager in the following topics:
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Middle-Level Management
- Middle management is the intermediate management level accountable to top management and responsible for leading lower level managers.
- Most organizations have three management levels: first-level, middle-level, and top-level managers.
- Middle-level managers can include general managers, branch managers, and department managers.
- Defining and discussing information and policies from top management to lower management;
- Because middle managers work with both top-level managers and first-level managers, middle managers tend to have excellent interpersonal skills relating to communication, motivation, and mentoring.
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Definition of Management
- This view opens the opportunity to manage oneself, a pre-requisite to attempting to manage others.
- There are different types of management styles, and the management process has changed over recent years.
- The addition of work teams and servant leadership has changed what is expected from managers, and what managers expect from their employees.
- There is a hierarchy of employees, low level management, mid-level management, and senior management.
- In traditional management systems, the manager sets out expectations for the employees who need to meet goals, but the manager receives the reward of meeting those goals.
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Social Entrepreneurship
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Ownership Structures
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Management Levels: A Hierarchical View
- Examples of top-level managers include a company's board of directors, president, vice-president and CEO; examples of middle-level managers include general managers, branch managers, and department managers; examples of low-level managers include supervisors, section leads, and foremen.
- General managers, branch managers, and department managers are all examples of middle-level managers.
- Middle-level managers devote more time to organizational and directional functions than top-level managers.
- Also referred to as first-level managers, low-level managers are role models for employees.
- These managers provide:
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Frontline Management
- Most organizations have three management levels: first-level, middle-level, and top-level managers.
- Frontline managers belong to the first level of management.
- Frontline managers are managers who are responsible for a work group to a higher level of management.
- Frontline management is the level of management that oversees a company's primary production activities.
- Another example of a frontline manager might be a grocery store manager.
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Functional vs. General Management
- General managers focus on the entire business, while functional managers specialize in a particular unit or department.
- Functional management and general management represent two differing responsibility sets with an organization.
- General managers include owners and managers who head small-business establishments with duties that are primarily managerial.
- Each functional manager is in control of a particular area of expertise—e.g., operations or policy and planning—and the general manager supervises all the functional managers.
- Differentiate between functional management and general management from a business perspective
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The Role of Management in an Organization
- Different levels of management will participate in different components of this design process, with upper management creating the initial organizational architecture and structure.
- All levels of management perform these functions.
- However, the amount of time a manager spends on each function depends on the level of management and the needs of the organization—factors which play a role in organizational design.
- Middle-level managers include general managers, branch managers, and department managers, all of whom are accountable to the top-level management for the functions of their departments.
- Lower-level managers will look at specific processes within functions or regions.
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Introduction
- understand three of the most important operations management practices: Total Quality Management, Supply Chain Management, and Just-in-Time/Lean Operations
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Administrative Management: Fayol's Principles
- Fayol's approach differed from scientific management in that it focused on efficiency through management training and behavioral characteristics.
- Fayol was a classical management theorist, widely regarded as the father of modern operational-management theory.
- Fayol developed 14 principles of management in order to help managers conduct their affairs more effectively.
- Fayol is also famous for his five elements of management, which outline the key responsibilities of good managers:
- Outline Fayol's effect on administrative management through the recognition of his 14 management principles