22 Aug 2013
by Asif J. Mir
in 21st Century Corporate Strategy
Tags: activity, build, competence, critical, destroy, different, difficult, enhance, exist, firm, function, increment, knowledge, new, Newness, Organization, perform, property, radical, underpin
One critical property of the knowledge that underpins an activity is how new it is to the function or organization performing the activity. If it is very different from existing knowledge, it is said to be radical or competence destroying. If it builds on existing knowledge, it is said to be incremental or competence enhancing. The newer the knowledge, the more difficult it is for firms to perform the activities.
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 Sep 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Procurement Planning
Tags: buy, buyer, consideration, contract, control, cooperation, create, decide, decision, determine, element, entirely, factor, goods, implement, important, in-house, introduce, management, Organization, outside, outsource, perform, Planning, problem, procure, procurement, project, provide, require, result, risk, service, strategic, uncertain
Procurement planning is determining what to procure and when. The first contract management problem for the buyer is to decide which goods and services to provide or perform in-house and which to outsource. This make or buy decision requires consideration of many factors, some of which are strategically important. The decision to buy creates a project that will be implemented in cooperation with an outside organization that is not entirely within the buyer’s control. As a result, an element of uncertainty and risk will be introduced for the buyer.
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.
16 Aug 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Behavior and Organizational Strategies
Tags: accelerate, account, aid, appraisal, assessment, assumption, average, base, basis, Behavior, build, change, characteristic, communicate, competency, condition, cost, critical, culture, customize, demand, determine, develop, difference, different, differentiate, distinguish, effective, example, exemplary, exhibit, flexible, focus, follow, function, future, general, generic, Human, identify, incident, individual, information, initiative, innovation, input, internal, interview, issue, job, list, maintain, management, message, method, model, need, observation, off-the-shelf, Organization, output, outstanding, overall, overlay, People, perform, performer, place, principle, Product, production, Promotion, provide, purchase, reduce, reflect, relate, require, Resource, respect, Role, seek, selection, senior, service, specific, strategy, superior, support, system, teamwork, Tentative, Training, translate, validate, Value, various, workforce, written
A competency model can be an effective way of communicating to the workforce the values of the senior management and what people should focus on their own behavior. For example, a competency-based appraisal system helps to distinguish individuals with the characteristics that are required to build and maintain an organization’s values (teamwork, respect for individual innovation or initiative) from those who do not exhibit the behaviors that will support these values. In this way competency models can translate general messages about needed strategy and culture change into specifics. There are two principles that can be followed:
- Focus on the superior performers without making an assumption.
- Focus on what they do to perform the given role.
Following are various developed models that are used as a basis for selection, training, promotion and other issues related to human resources:
- Job Competence Assessment Method—this is developed using interviews and observations of outstanding and average performers to determine the competencies that differentiate between them in critical incidents.
- Modified Job Competence Assessment Method—this also identifies such behavioral differences, but to reduce costs, interviewees provide a written account of critical incidents.
- Generic Model Overlay Methods—organizations purchase an off-the-shelf generic competency model for a specific role or function.
- Customized Generic Model Methods—organizations use a tentative list of competencies that are identified internally to aid in their selection of a generic model and then validate it with the input of outstanding and average performers.
- Flexible Job Competency Model Methods—this seeks to identify the competencies that will be required to perform effectively under different conditions in the future.
- Systems Method—this demand reflecting on not only what exemplary performers do now, or what they do overall, but also behaviors that may be important in the future.
- Accelerated Competency Systems Method—this places the focus on the competencies that specifically support the production of output, such as an organization’s products, services or information.
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.
11 Mar 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in The Aging Crisis
Tags: 21st Century, absence, accomplish, activity, adjust, aging, answer, appear, beat, bloat, bureaucratic, business, century, change, characteristic, clumsy, company, competitive, competitor, condition, Consumer, consumption, corporation, cost, crisis, customer-focused, deal, dedicate, deliver, design, different, disdain, dissatisfied, efficient, enough, exist, Flatten, flexible, fresh, growth, important, industrial, inefficient, inept, inflexibility, innovation, innovative, job, lack, lazy, leadership, lean, least, legacy, lie, lose, manage, management, managerial, market, matter, maximum, money, need, nimble, non-competitive, obsession, Organization, overhead, paralysis, pass, past, perform, present, price, problem, Product, profitable, proof, public, Quality, quick, record, responsive, rest, result, rigid, service, slow, sluggish, sudden, technological, turn, uncreative, unresponsiveness, wait, want, work, worker
Not a company exists whose management doesn’t say, at least for public consumption, that it wants an organization flexible enough to adjust quickly to changing market conditions, lean enough to beat any competitor’s price, innovative enough to keep its products and services technologically fresh, and dedicated enough to deliver maximum quality and consumer service.
So, if managements want companies that are lean, nimble, flexible, responsive, competitive, innovative, efficient, customer-focused, and profitable, why are so many. Companies are bloated, clumsy, rigid, sluggish, non-competitive, uncreative, inefficient, disdainful of customer needs, and losing money. The answers lie in how these companies do their work and why they do it that way.
Corporations do not perform badly because workers are lazy and managements are inept. Just the same, the record of industrial and technological accomplishment over the past century is proof enough that managements are not inept and workers do work.
Inflexibility, unresponsiveness, the absence of customer focus, an obsession with activity rather than result, bureaucratic paralysis, lack of innovation, high overhead—these are the legacies of industrial leadership. These characteristics are not new; they have not suddenly appeared. They have been present all along. If costs are high they can be passed on to customers. If customers are dissatisfied, they have nowhere else to turn. If new products are slow in coming, customers will wait. The important managerial job is to manage growth, and the rest doesn’t matter. Now that growth has flattened out, the rest matters a great deal.
The business problem is that in 21st century with companies designed during the nineteenth century to work well in the twentieth—we need something different.
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.
29 Feb 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Customers Criteria for Assessing Service
Tags: access, accurate, approachability, assess, believability, communication, competence, consideration, contact, Courtesy, credibility, Customer, danger, dependable, doubt, ease, evidence, freedom, friendliness, honesty, informed, keep, know, knowledge, listen, need, perform, Performance, Personnel, physical, politeness, promised, prompt, provide, readiness, reliability, responsiveness, risk, security, service, Skill, tangible, trustworthiness, understanding, willingness
Customers assess service by:
- Reliability – dependable and accurate performance of promised service
- Responsiveness – willingness/readiness to provide prompt service
- Competence – knowledge and skill to perform the service
- Access – approachability and ease of contact of service personnel
- Courtesy – politeness, consideration, and friendliness of service personnel
- Communication – keeping customers informed, listening to customers
- Credibility – trustworthiness, believability, honesty
- Security – freedom from danger, risk, or doubt
- Understanding/knowing customer – knowing customer’s needs
- Tangibles – physical evidence of service
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.
20 Jan 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Job Analysis
Tags: accountability, accurate, activity, Analysis, condition, define, description, duty, exploration, happen, identification, identify, involve, job, knowledge, necessary, perform, precise, procedure, require, responsibility, Skill, systematic, task, technical, under
A job analysis is a systematic exploration of the activities within a job. It is a technical procedure used to define the duties, responsibilities, and accountabilities of a job. This analysis involves the identification and description of what is happening on the job, accurately and precisely identifying the required tasks, the knowledge, and the skills necessary for performing them, and the conditions under which they must be performed.
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.
05 Dec 2011
by Asif J. Mir
in Organization Health
Tags: adapt, adaption, awareness, basis, change, character, concept, conflict, continuity, contribute, control, cooperative, criteria, dimension, direct, Distribution, dynamic, economic, effectiveness, evaluate, exercise, explicit, framework, function, general, handle, health, help, hold, implicit, important, incentive, insufficient, involve, job, judge, lack, manager, managerial, measure, member, morale, name, need, Organization, organize, per se, perform, Performance, presentation, pressure, problem, profit, rather, represent, security, specific, stability, survival, system, term, total, understand, understanding, view
Implicit is a concept towards organizations that needs to be made explicit; namely, that we are viewing organizations as dynamic cooperative systems. Their survival involves change and adaption, as well as, economic performance and the distribution of incentives to members.
The presentation is organized to help the exercise understand the dimensions of his job in contributing to organizational survival. We hold that the manager should have awareness of how organizations in general function, as well as, an understanding of the character of his specific organization. The organization is thus seen as a system with needs for its own security, stability, and continuity. Managers perform the functions of organizing, directing, and controlling within the system.
The criteria for judging managers (i.e., organizational health or effectiveness) are not measures such as performance, morale, lack of conflict, or profit per se. These are important but insufficient criteria. Rather, we have to evaluate managers in terms of the total dynamic system represented by the organization. In this framework, it is more important to judge managerial effectiveness upon the basis of how the organization handles its problems (i.e., adapts and changes to pressures), rather than whether or not it has problems.
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.
07 Nov 2011
by Asif J. Mir
in Demand for Labor
Tags: Analysis, assessment, complex, comprehensive, consider, cover, current, demand, determine, develop, direction, diverse, effect, employee, future, Human, inventory, job, labor, level, Mix, necessary, need, obvious, Organization, People, perfect, perform, pro-forma, proposition, require, Resource, result, significant, situation, specify, substitute, type, usual, year
Once an assessment of the organization’s current human resources situation has been made and the future direction of the organization has been considered, a proposition of future human resource needs can be developed. It will be necessary to perform a year-by-year analysis for every significant job level and type. In effect, the result is a human resource inventory covering specified years into the future. These pro-forma inventories obviously must be comprehensive and therefore complex. Organizations usually require a diverse mix of people. That’s because employees are not perfectly substitutable for one another within an organization.
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.
22 Sep 2011
by Asif J. Mir
in Uncategorized
Tags: ability, activity, affect, create, discrimination, employee, employment, environment, gain, general, harassment, hostile, individual, involve, issue, job, member, nature, occur, offensive, opposite, Organization, perform, problem, problematic, protect, recent, recognition, sex, sexual, undermine, unpleasant, unwanted, work
Sexual harassment is any unwanted activity of sexual nature that affects an individual’s employment. It can occur between members of the opposite or of the same sex, between employees of the organization, involve an employee and a non-employee. Although such an activity is generally protected under sex discrimination, in recent years this problem has gained more recognition.
Sexual harassment creates an unpleasant work environment for organization members and undermines that ability to perform their job. For many organizations, it’s the offensive or hostile environment issue that is 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.
31 Aug 2011
by Asif J. Mir
in Employees Who Exceed Expectations
Tags: accomplish, assign, available, base, basic, beneath, business, capability, consistently, due, duty, employee, establish, eventual, exceed, expect, expectation, general, high, higher, immediate, include, incumbent, individual, job, level, normal, objective, opening, overall, past, perform, Performance, plan, position, potential, progress, Promotion, Quality, quantity, question, rate, responsibility, seem, set, Skill, specific, subcategory, typical
- Immediate promotion potential: These individuals consistently perform their jobs at such high levels of quality and quantity that a promotion seems to be past due. They also accomplish specific objectives established for the job from the overall business plan. These individuals may be working at a job that is beneath their basic set of skills and general capabilities, perhaps because no promotional openings have been available. Without question they could perform the responsibilities of a higher position.
- Eventual promotion potential: The performance of employees in this subcategory has been progressing at a rate that is normal for the job and typical for an incumbent who is expected to progress to the next higher-level job within a year or two. Their performance includes normal duties as well as objectives assigned based on the overall business plan.
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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