01 Apr 2013
by Asif J. Mir
in Marketing Eras
Tags: People, Organization, Role, Marketing, Product, Consumer, Customer, Quality, Advertising, company, goods, relationship, demand, market, business, production, manager, economy, potential, attention, task, concept, focus, time, traditional, service, develop, create, establish, effective, component, essential, strategic, partnership, dominate, firm, high, important, commonplace, income, long-term, purchase, dictate, manufacturer, output, narrow, buy, force, area, emphasis, personal, orientation, satisfy, era, department, engineering, look, effort, maintain, involve, operate, emerge, survival, need, want, close, selling, simple, play, reach, number, attempt, carry, step, stress, year, end, shadow, part, contrast, early, pay, finance, match, drop, resist, rapid, exchange, trend, assume, shift, deem, increase, major, retailer, sale, pause, peak, convince, represent, alliance, prior, shortage, value added, war, ration, 20th Century, World war 11, thrust, outbreak
- Production Era: Prior to 1925, most firms operating in highly developed economies focused narrowly on production. Manufacturers stressed production of quality products and then looked for people to purchase them. The production era did not reach its peak until the early part of 20th century.
- Sales Era: Manufacturers began to increase their emphasis on effective sales forces to find customers for their output. Firms attempted to match their output to the potential number of customers who would want it. Companies with a sales orientation assume that customers will resist purchasing products and services not deemed essential and that the task of personal selling and advertising is to convince them to buy. Although marketing departments began to emerge from shadows of production, finance, and engineering during the sales era, marketing dominated sales and other areas. Selling is thus a component of marketing.
- Marketing: Personal incomes and consumer demand for products and services dropped rapidly thrusting marketing into a more important role. Organizational survival dictated that managers pay close attention to the markets for their goods and services. The trend ended with the outbreak of World War 11, when rationing and shortages of consumer goods became commonplace. The war years created only a pause in an emerging trend in business: a shift in the focus from products and sales to satisfying customer needs.
- Relationship: It emerged during the 90s. Organizations carried the marketing era’s customer orientation one step further by focusing on establishing and maintaining relationships. This effort represented a major shift from the traditional concept of marketing as a simple exchange between buyer and seller. Relationship marketing by contrast, involves long-term, value-added relationships developed over time, strategic alliances and partnerships retailers play major roles in relationship marketing.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
03 Feb 2013
by Asif J. Mir
in Strategies for Interactions
Tags: among, Analysis, base, careful, characteristic, choice, chose, deal, efficiency, examination, follow, goal, group, increase, interaction, intergroup, location, manager, occur, Organization, People, Resource, setting, strategy, thorough, unique, variety
Strategies for dealing with interactions among groups must be carefully chosen, following thorough examination and analysis of the groups, their goals, their unique characteristics, and the organizational setting in which the interactions occur. Managers can use a variety of strategies to increase the efficiency of intergroup interactions. Five such choices are location-based strategies, resource-based strategies, goal-based strategies, people, and group-based strategies, and organization-based strategies.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
30 Jan 2013
by Asif J. Mir
in Talking about Bookkeeping
Tags: able, anxiety, appropriate, around, aspect, avoid, bookkeeping, business, capitalize, certain, chance, check, confidence, continue, cost, cure, dark, detection, disease, early, else, experiential, failure, fundamental, good, handle, incline, increase, indicate, inexcusable, intuitive, keep, know, land, last, left, lie, matter, mean, measure, money, neglect, number, People, physical, poor, problem, recordkeeping, reveal, right, roll, slipshod, solve, success, sum, survival, talk, tax, time, track, understand, well, zone
Everyone knows intuitively, if not experientially, that good bookkeeping is good business. If you don’t keep track of your business’s money matters—what comes in and what goes out—you will be in the dark as to how well or poorly your business is doing, and hence how well or poorly you’re handling certain aspects of the business. After all numbers do not lie. If they indicate that all is well, you’ll be able to capitalize on your success by, if nothing else, continuing to do with confidence whatever you’re doing right. If the numbers reveal that all is not well, you will be able to take appropriate measures to solve problems which if left unchecked could land you in failure zone. Just as with certain physical diseases, early detection means early cure and increased chance of survival. Lastly, it goes without saying that slipshod recordkeeping can cost you time, anxiety and even money when tax time rolls around. In sum, while its understandable that people are inclined to avoid and neglect bookkeeping matters, its fundamentally inexcusable.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
30 Nov 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Good Pricing Decisions
Tags: ability, advance, alternative, among, area, available, benefit, budget, change, check, company, Competition, competitive, comprehensive, Consumer, continue, cost, Customer, decision, deflation, deliver, difficult, diminish, downward, draw, driven, drop, economy, emerge, enhance, especially, even, expect, expectation, experience, expertise, focus, force, forecast, form, genuine, good, include, increase, increment, interact, interaction, internal, keep, lower, marginal, market, Marketing, meaningful, opportunity, perceive, presence, pressure, price, Pricing, Product, psychology, put, raise, repeat, require, sale, seek, send, sensitivity, serve, service, shape, spiral, substitute, technology, time, understanding, Value
Pricing decisions draw on many areas of marketing expertise. It requires a comprehensive understanding of the forces that shape the market, including competitive interactions, technology and consumer psychology. Sometimes these forces interact and are likely to put downward pressure on prices, such as substitutes, technological advances, price-driven competition, customer experience, and changes in internal focus, such as sales forecasts. Customer makes it difficult to raise prices, as repeat customers’ ability to perceive incremental value of a company’s product or service diminishes over time, especially as substitute or competitive products emerge. Increased internal expectations in the form of expected sales increases or new budgets can send prices on a downward spiral. Customer price sensitivity may also serve to keep prices in check, especially in the presence of available competitive substitutes or among a company’s marginal customers.
Even in a deflationary economy, there are opportunities for keeping prices from dropping or even for raising prices. However, customers must perceive that these enhancements deliver a genuine, meaningful benefit, or they will continue to seek lower cost alternatives.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
27 Aug 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Productivity—the Japanese Way
Tags: adaptation, American, area, automobile, believe, better, business, competitive, concept, corporate, cultural, debunk, define, difficult, diverse, dominate, economist, else, employee, Europe, explain, face, facile, fact, factory, few, fright, gift, great, idea, implication, improve, improvement, incline, increase, industrial, industry, japanese, jump, lead, literal, living, load, manager, market, mean, method, need, North, order, outstrip, pace, Performance, pick, plant, point, potential, produce, Product, productive, productivity, prove, quick, reach, realize, reason, record, relate, run, semi-conductor, sense, standard, study, success, suggestion, superior, surprising, task, technical, tell, unique, valid, wash, way, worker, world
Economists are forever telling us that we need to increase productivity in order to improve our standard of living. Productivity is one of those concepts that are so loaded with meaning and implications that is very difficult to define, much less explain. Not surprisingly then, improving “it” is one of the most difficult tasks facing business. More to the point, the time for improvement is quickly running out. Industrial performance is being outstripped at a frightening pace by the Japanese. In fact, it has reached the point where their productivity performance is so superior that they can literally pick any product and any market and quickly come to dominate it.
The idea that Japanese are uniquely gifted in only a few related areas has been debunked by their proven successes in industries as diverse as automobiles and semi-conductors. As well, the facile suggestion that the Japanese are somehow culturally inclined to be productive doesn’t wash. Japanese managers have taken over factories in Europe and the US and greatly improved productivity records. Productivity has also been high in their North American plants.
If corporate managers believe that their workers can be as competitive as anyone else in the world, and technically, there’s no valid reason why they can’t be, then they must find better ways to help their employees realize their potential. In that sense, study of Japanese methods is a jumping-off point that can lead to adaptations that will produce unique ways of improving productivity.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
04 Jun 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in The Human Context of Management
Tags: above, addition, answer, asset, basic, Behavior, benefit, boost, common, company, context, contribution, contributor, cooperate, core, course, create, decision, decision-making, decline, develop, differ, direct, dramatic, element, employee, encourage, expect, expectation, grow, guide, Human, increase, inherent, jobs, labor, learn, live, major, management, manager, need, offer, ongoing, opportunity, Organization, part, participation, People, perspective, possible, problem, problem solving, process, productivity, purpose, question, Resource, return, reverse, right, satisfaction, setting, size, Skill, solve, step, Structure, trend, understand, valuable, vitalize, wage, work
In addition to understanding the ongoing behavioral processes inherent in their own jobs, managers must understand the basic human element of their work. Organizational behavior offers three major perspectives for understanding this context: people as organizations, people as resources, and people as people.
Above all, organizations are people, and without people there would be no organizations. All organizations differ from each other dramatically in size, purpose, and structure, they have one thing in common: people. Thus, if managers are to understand the organizations in which they work, they must first understand the people who make up the organizations.
As resources, people are one of an organization’s most valuable assets. People create the organization, guide and direct its course, and vitalize and revitalize it. People make its decisions, solve its problems, and answer its questions. People are at the core of many of the possible contributors to this trend. To reverse declining productivity, many organizations have taken steps to boost the contribution from their human resources. Some companies have encouraged management and labor to cooperate better; others have increased employee participation in decision-making and problem-solving.
There is another perspective—people as people. People spend a large part of their lives in organizational settings, mostly as employees. They have a right to expect something in return beyond wages and employee benefits. Employees seek satisfaction, and many want the opportunity to grow and develop and to learn new skills. An understanding of organizational behavior can help managers better appreciate these needs and expectations.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
18 Apr 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Employee Demand
Tags: adoption, boom, calculate, change, combination, Consumer, cycle, decrease, demand, Development, easy, economic, employee, employment, extreme, factor, improvement, include, increase, link, new, practice, problematic, Product, productivity, recession, requirement, seem, Skill, superficial, supply, technology, time, turbulence, variable, worker
Demand for workers is linked to the economic cycle increasing in boom times and decreasing in recession. Other factors include the adoption of new technology, productivity, improvements and changing skill requirements. Superficially, calculating employment supply and demand seems easy. In practice, the combination of variable consumer demand, development of new products and technology, and economic turbulence make it extremely problematic.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
25 Feb 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in An Organizational Challenge
Tags: attention, Behavior, belief, business, cause, challenge, clean, concept, contribute, contribution, culture, distinct, employee, environment, ethic, expect, focus, forth, function, group, headline, importance, important, increase, individual, leadership, manage, norm, obligation, Organization, pollution, process, protect, recent, relate, relevant, renew, respond, responsibility, right, scandal, significance, social, world, wrong
An organizational challenge that has taken on renewed importance relates to ethics and social responsibility. An individual’s ethics are his or her beliefs about what is right and wrong or good and bad. Social responsibility is the organization’s obligation to protect and/or contribute to the social environment in which it functions. Thus, while the two concepts are related, they are also distinct from each other.
Both ethics and social responsibility have taken on new significance in recent years. Scandals in organizations have made the headlines around the world. From the social responsibility, increasing attention has been focused on pollution and business’s obligation to help clean up our environment, business contributions to social causes, and so forth.
Leadership, organization culture, and group norms—all important organizational behavior concepts—are relevant in managing these processes. And because employees know the organizational culture so well that they know they would be expected to respond.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
17 Feb 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Compliance and Integrity
Tags: add, advocacy, affect, anti, application, area, array, balance, base, best, beyond, boundary, bribery, broaden, center, challenge, change, characterize, child, citizenship, common, community, company, compliance, concern, consequence, consider, consistency, continue, corporate, corporation, corruption, culture, decision, definition, descriptor, desire, develop, diverse, earliest, embrace, emerge, environment, especially, ethic, expand, expansion, face, focus, following, fundamental, global, governance, group, holistic, Human, increase, integrity, labor, latest, law, litigation, little, local, logical, manager, market, mature, mean, media, minimize, model, multinational, narrow, need, notion, obligation, office, officer, Organization, personal, perspective, practice, preparation, program, question, rank, reach, regard, reshape, respect, responsibility, right, risk, rule of law, safety, scrutiny, select, shift, social, sophistication, special, stage, stakeholder, standard, supplier, surrounding, tradition, Value, view, whole
In the earliest stages, organizational ethics centered on the narrow perspective of ethics—the notion of compliance. Are we following the laws? Are we at risk from litigation? If so, how do we minimize that risk?
Ethics programs matured and ethics officers, most of whom are selected from the managerial ranks with little, if any, special preparation, developed increased sophistication regarding the challenges facing their organizations. Both the ethics officers and their organizations began to embrace personal and corporate values in decision making (value-based decision making) as the logical expansion of the definition of what it means to be ethical. What has emerged is what many ethics officers today characterize as the “best practices” model of the ethics office and of a values-based corporation.
But change continues. What is emerging today is a more holistic definition of what it means to be a “good” corporation. This new, global view will again help to reshape the responsibilities and focus of the ethics officer.
The shift to a global perspective means another broadening of the definition of ethics. “Global Integrity” is the latest descriptor, and it embraces both compliance and ethics. It also adds concern for rule of law, human rights, good governance, labor/child labor concerns, anti-corruption/anti-bribery, concern for the environment, safety, social responsibility, good corporate citizenship, and respect for the whole diverse array of local cultures to the definition. This increases the organization’s obligation to reach beyond traditional company boundaries to consider how decisions would affect the surrounding community. One consequence of this new global definition of the organizational ethics is increased scrutiny by stakeholders, especially advocacy groups and the media.
Corporate ethics officers, especially those in multinational corporations and/or corporations with global suppliers/markets, are being challenged with fundamental questions in this expanded integrity area. Perhaps the most common, and most challenging, is how the corporation will balance the desire for global standards (consistency) against the need for local application of standards.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
09 Feb 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in 21st Century Competition
Tags: 21st Century, adopt, advantage, Advertising, boundary, budget, business, challenge, change, characteristic, company, compete, Competition, competitive, condition, consequence, constant, conventional, determine, economy, effective, enormous, evolve, failure, firm, flexibility, fundamental, global, grocery, huge, increase, industry, innovation, integration, investment, landscape, lead, manager, managerial, mindset, nature, noteworthy, pace, perilous, phone, place, relentless, require, result, scale, sector, severe, source, speed, stable, strategic, traditional, Value, world
The fundamental nature of competition in many of the world’s industries is changing. The pace of this change is relentless and increasing. Even determining the boundaries of an industry has become challenging. The companies compete not only among themselves, but also with companies in other sectors. The pace of change among once-stable phone companies is as relentless as it is in the “traditional” grocery industry.
Still other characteristics of the 21st century competition are noteworthy. Conventional sources of competitive advantage such as economies of scale and huge advertising budgets, are not as effective in the 21st century competition.
The traditional managerial mindset cannot lead a firm to strategic competitiveness in the competitive landscape. In its place, managers must adopt a new mindset—one that values flexibility, speed, innovation, integration, and the challenges that evolve from constantly changing conditions. The conditions of the competition result in a perilous business world, one where investments required to compete on a global scale are enormous and the consequences of failure are severe.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
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