Saturday 24 February 2007

Management Style

My previous post about Team Learning put requirements on the management. How can one manage people that know the job better than you or even work in their own way.

Management style is often influenced by organisational structure and reflects in what way the workers are coordinated. On the note of managing people Drucker (1999) mentions “that one does not ’manage’ people, but the task is to lead people.” And the goal is to make the specific strengths and knowledge productive of each individual. The more skilled and proficient a worker is in his work, the harder it is to manage this activity according to traditional management methods. A direct supervision approach requires that the supervisor have more knowledge or is more skilled than the worker to be able to know what the worker is supposed to be doing to get the wanted result. Due to the mentioned change towards more knowledge work in organisations today, Drucker claim that one does not need supervisors(13), but a leader –or put in terms of today- a coach(14).

Both Drucker (1999) and Wenger (2004) describes that their view of knowledge management begins with managing oneself as a knowledge worker. Take an active role towards your own learning and increase of knowledge. Peter Senge (1992) sees managing oneself as personal mastery, and by this meaning to developing one’s own proficiency. “Personal mastery is likened to be a lifelong journey with no ultimate destination.” He tells us that such a journey consists of processes whereby “a person continually clarifies and deepens personal vision, focuses energy on it, develops patience in seeking it, and in this way apparently increasingly views reality objectively.” This ownership and involvement leads people to do positive things towards achieving personal vision. Further personal vision is described as a calling of intrinsic desires, not a purpose to pursue. Senge claims as result, “People hold a sacred view of work because work now is valued for itself, rather than posing a chore that needs to be done as a means to some other end.“

People with high personal mastery “tend to be committed and exude initiative, have a broader and deeper sense of responsibility” in their work, and as Senge claims of key importance, they learn faster. This gives strength to the belief that answers to organisational inefficiencies lies not only in technology. Technology has often been seen as solution to efficiency and automation of traditional repetitive tasks. Furthermore information technology has enabled new ways of communicating and changed many of the traditional crafts and professions.

*13: Mintzberg (1983) claim that direct supervision requires close personal contact between manager and the worker, with the result that there is some limit to the number workers any one manager can supervise.
*14: Coaching has been used in sports and has become increasingly used as a management style in business the recent years. More on coaching see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coaching

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