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This Week’s Agenda Tuesday – Organizing Business Activities, Create Quizlet Wednesday – Assignment catch-up, review on your own, Kahoot Thursday – Review (10 min,) Test (Online) Friday – Shark Tank!
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Organizing Business Activities
Lesson 5-3
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Learning Goals Understand important principles in designing an effective organization Compare alternative organizational structures for businesses
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Effective Organization
Many new businesses fail in the first few years Some of the keys to success include: Good organization Skilled management Prepared and Motivated Employees Clear purpose and plan
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Setting Direction Every business needs a starting point, something to provide direction A mission statement is a short, specific written statement of why a business exists and what it wants to achieve Mission statements usually begin with “Company XYZ exists to provide…”
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Mission Statement Starbucks:
“To inspire and nurture the human spirit - one person, one cup and one neighborhood at a time.”
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Setting Direction After a mission statement is developed, a business sets goals. Goals are precise statements of results a business expects to achieve A well-written goal must be: Realistic Measurable Time-Specific Consistent with your mission statement
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Goals Starbucks: “Ensure 100% of our coffee is ethically sourced by 2015”
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Setting Direction After goals are in place, a company needs a plan to meet them Policies are guidelines used in making consistent decisions Procedures are descriptions of the way work is to be done Following policies and procedures should help a business meet its goals
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Policy & Procedures Starbucks: Standards of Business Conduct
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Organizational Duties
When several people work together, they must rely on each other Responsibility - the obligation to complete specific work “that part of the project is your job” Authority – the right to make decisions about how things should be done “this is how we’re going to do this” Accountability – taking responsibility for results “We’re counting on you for this”
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Organizational Duties
All employees and managers have a set of responsibilities Know who has authority to make decisions Know who will be rewarded/recognized for success Understand they are held accountable for failure
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Organizational Structure
If only 1 person works at a business, its pretty obvious who does what… When there are multiple employees, there must be an agreement on: What each person will do (responsibilities) Who is in charge of various activities (authority) How activities are structured
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Organizational Duties
Unity of Command: Clear reporting relationship for all staff of a business Need to know: who is the leader? Span of Command: Number of employees who are assigned to a particular work task and manager Large numbers of people working with little support from a manager is not good! Need to make sure there is a balance Starbucks Video: Working for Starbucks
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Organizational Duties
Organizational Chart: Diagram that shows the structure of an organization, classification of jobs, and relationships among the classifications Functional organization structure: Work is arranged within the main business functions (production, marketing, records, human resources, etc) Matrix organizational structure: Structure around specific projects, products, or customer groups; may be temporary or long-term Drawbacks of functional organization: little interaction with other functions of business and employees; become focused on specific function and forget about overall vision and goals of organization
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Organizational Chart An organizational chart is a good tool for visually displaying structure
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