People Flashcards

1
Q

Organisational chart

A

A diagram that represents the job titles and formal structure of authority and responsibility in an organisation

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2
Q

Organisational structure

A

The way that the roles and responsibilities within an organisation are structured

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3
Q

Levels of hierarchy

A

The number of layers of authority within an organisation. That is, how many levels exist between the chief executive and a shop-floor employee

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4
Q

Tall hierarchy

A

An organisation with many layers of hierarchy (tends to have narrower spans of control)

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5
Q

Flat hierarchy

A

An organisation with fewer layers of hierarchy (tends to have wider spans of control)

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6
Q

Chain of Command

A

The line of communication and authority existing within a business. Thus, a shop floor worker reports to a supervisor, who is responsible to a departmental manager, and so on.

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7
Q

Communication Flows (vertical v horizontal)

A

This is the exchange of information between two or more parties. In an organisation, can flow up and down or across.

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8
Q

Accountability

A

Where an employee is responsible for the success or failure of a project, investment or policy

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9
Q

Authority v responsibility

A

It is possible for a manager to delegate authority to a subordinate. However, responsibility must remain with the manager

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10
Q

Delegation

A

Is the passing of authority (but not responsibility) down the organisational structure. E.g, a junior manager might be given the authority to conduct a market research campaign, but responsibility for the overall success of the campaign remains with the senior employee.

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11
Q

Workload/job allocation

A

How much work a person can take on/ what jobs they are expected to do within their role

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12
Q

Span of control (think narrow span of control v

wide span of control)

A

The number of subordinates directly responsible to a manager. The wider the span of control, the more subordinates there are. (TAKE NOTE, an organisation with a wide span of control with have relatively few levels of hierarchy – ie it will be a ‘flat’ organisation rather than a ‘tall’ organisation

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13
Q

Centralised structure

A

A business where the majority of decisions are taken by senior managers at the top or centre) of the business. Can provide for rapid decision-making, as few people are consulted.

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14
Q

Decentralised structure

A

A decentralised structure will give greater authority to employees lower down the organisational structure

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15
Q

Director

A

The role of directors is largely strategic – they set and oversee the achievement of long-term goals of the business. Directors can be executive or non-executive. They may sometimes have responsibility for a specific function of the business, such as marketing.

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16
Q

Manager

A

Managers carry out a range of duties, including planning, organising, motivating and controlling. Managers normally have authority over a number of junior employees and plan and monitor short- and medium-term strategies for the business

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17
Q

Supervisor

A

Supervisors represent a link between managers and the business’s shop-floor workers. They are the first rung of management and are delegated some authority by managers to take decisions on day-t-day issues such as staffing

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18
Q

Shop Floor worker

A

These are the workers who work at the lowest level in an organisational structure. For example, in retail they would be the shop assistants.

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19
Q

Team leaders

A

Team leaders carry out many of the same functions in organisations as supervisors. However, they tend to make less use of authority than supervisors and are used in a role that supports shop-floor employees. Their role is to facilitate the work of more junior employees and to help them to attain the business’s objectives.

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20
Q

Labour productivity

A

This measures the relationship between the amount of labour used in production and the quantity of outputs of goods or services produced.
CALCULATION: Labour productivity = output per period/number of employees at work

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21
Q

Labour turnover

A

This is the percentage of a business’s employees who leave the business over a period of time (usually a year).
CALCULATION: (number of staff leaving during the year/average number of staff) x 100

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22
Q

Motivation

A

This describes the factors within individuals that arouse, maintain and channel behaviour towards a goal. More simply, it is the will to work

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23
Q

Productivity

A

This measures the relationship between the resources put into an activity and the resulting output. (TAKE NOTE, IT IS NOT THE SAME AS LABOUR PRODUCTIVITY, WHICH IS SPECIFIC TO LABOUR!!) CALCULATION: (output per period/resources put in)

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24
Q

Schools of Thought

A

These are individual and groups who hold similar views on a particular matter – in this case, on what motivates employees

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25
Q

School of Scientific Management

A

This School of Thought on the financial aspects of motivation, and that the workforce required close supervision.

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26
Q

Taylor and his theory of motivation

A

Taylor believed that people were motivated solely by money. He introduced work-studies, timing people; he decided upon ‘normal times’ for a given task; he ensured employees were provided with the right equipment, and he implemented a system of piece-rate pay

27
Q

Division of Labour

A

This is the breaking down of production into a series of small tasks carried out repetitively by relatively unskilled employees

28
Q

Time and Motion Studies

A

These measure and analyse the ways in which jobs are completed, with a view to improving these methods. The technique is also sometimes call ‘work-study’

29
Q

Piece-rate pay

A

This is where employees are paid directly according to the number of items that they produce.

30
Q

Human Relations School of Thought

A

This School of Thought concentrated on the sociological aspects of work – it recognises social environments at work and informal working groups as having a positive influence upon productivity

31
Q

Mayo and his theory of motivation

A

Mayo conducted experiments at the Hawthorne plant. From these it became apparent that employees were responding to the level of attention they were receiving as part of the investigations and because they were working together as a group. This became known as the ‘Hawthorne Effect’.

32
Q

Neo-Human Relations School of Thought

A

The School of Thought considered the psychological aspects of employment. It argued that motivation lies within each individual employee – managers merely need the key to unlock the motivation force. It saw employees as individuals, with different needs and aspirations. This meant that effective motivational techniques will vary between individuals.

33
Q

Maslow and his Hierarchy of Needs

A

Maslow believed that employees have a series of needs they seek to fulfil at work. Once a lower level need is satisfied, individuals strive to satisfy needs further up the hierarchy. His needs were: physiological, security, social, esteem and self-actualisation.

34
Q

Herzberg and his two factor theory

A

Herzberg believed that you needed to distinguish between the environment of the job (his dissatisfiers or hygiene factors) and those factors with the ability to motivate – his motivators. He believed that dissatisfiers do not lead to motivation, but without them employees become dissatisfied. Key to this is that PAY was a dissatisfier.

35
Q

Herzberg’s Motivators

A

Herzberg’s motivators (INTRINSIC FACTORS) were: responsibility, Interest in the job, growth, achievement and recognition.

36
Q

Dissatisfiers/Hygiene factors

A

PAY, Company policies, supervision, working conditions and relationship with fellow workers at the same level

37
Q

Intrinsic factors

A

Intrinsic factors are factors that motivate from WITHIN (e.g. a sense of pride, responsibility etc)

38
Q

Extrinsic factors

A

Extrinsic factors are factors that motivate from WITHOUT (e.g. pay, social scene, working conditions etc)

39
Q

Costs per unit

A

The amount it costs a business to produce one unit

40
Q

Fringe benefits

A

These are rewards received by employees in addition to their wages or salary. Common examples include company cars and private healthcare.

41
Q

Salary

A

A salary is a form of periodic payment from an employer to an employee, which may be specified in an employment contract. It is a fixed amount of money or compensation paid to an employee by an employer in return for work performed. Salary is commonly paid in fixed intervals, for example, monthly payments of one-twelfth of the annual salary. It is generally viewed as a fixed cost.

42
Q

Wage

A

A wage is monetary compensation (or remuneration) paid by an employer to an employee in exchange for work done. Payment may be calculated as a fixed amount for each task completed or at an hourly or daily rate, or based on an easily measured quantity of work done. It can be a fixed or variable cost.

43
Q

PRP (Performance Related Pay)

A

This exists where some part of an employee’s pay is linked to the achievement of targets at work. These targets might include sales figures or achieving certain grades I his or her annual appraisal.

44
Q

Share ownership

A

The ownership of shares of the business. Some businesses pay their employees a share of the profits in the form of company shares. It can be a development of a profit sharing scheme. It can take the form of share options – where employees can buy shares at an agreed date in the future at the current share price.

45
Q

Profit Sharing

A

This is a system whereby employees receive some of the business’s profits. It is a type of performance-related pay, but one that may not discriminate between the performances of individual members of staff.

46
Q

Commission

A

The payment of commission as remuneration for services rendered or products sold is a common way to reward sales people. Payments often will be calculated on the basis of a percentage of the goods sold. This is a way for firms to try to realign employees’ interests with those of the firm.

47
Q

Employee Appraisal Schemes

A

These assess and evaluate the performance of workers over a period of time with the intention of improving their performance.

48
Q

Job enrichment (‘vertical loading’)

A

This occurs when employees’ jobs are redesigned to provide them with more challenging and complex tasks

49
Q

Job enlargement (‘horizontal loading’)

A

This entails giving employees more duties of a similar level of complexity

50
Q

Employee empowerment

A

This involves redesigning employees’ jobs to allow them greater control over their working lives. It gives them the opportunity to decide how to carry out their duties and how to organise their work.

51
Q

Teamworking

A

This exists when an organisation breaks down its production processes into large units instead of relying upon the use of the division of labour. Teams are then given responsibility for completing the large unit of work. Team members carry out a variety of duties including planning, problem solving and target setting.

52
Q

Workforce plan (incl the key information you would include in it)

A

This is the process that identifies what the labour requirements of a business are – how many people; what skills and experience they need to have; where they are located etc. It will use things like sales forecasts, labour turnover, expected wage rises, productivity levels/changes and technological developments.

53
Q

Recruitment and Selection

A

This is the process of filling an organisations’ job vacancies by appointing new staff. (TAKE NOTE – it can be INTERNAL or EXTERNAL – this is KEY to remember when answering questions on recruitment)

54
Q

Job description

A

These list the duties and responsibilities associated with a particular job

55
Q

Person specification

A

This outlines the skills, knowledge and experience necessary to fill a given position successfully. These are also termed job specifications

56
Q

Internal recruitment

A

This takes place when a business looks to fill a vacancy from within the existing workforce

57
Q

External recruitment

A

This occurs when a business invites applications for vacant posts from any suitably qualified candidates

58
Q

Training

A

Is the process whereby an individual acquires job related skills and knowledge

59
Q

On the job training

A

This does not require the employee to leave the workplace. He or she learns from experienced employees through observation and work shadowing. The trainee may work through instruction manuals or receive guidance from senior employees.

60
Q

Off the job training

A

This involves training outside the workplace, either at a college, university or some other training agency. External courses may take the form of lectures and seminars, self-study or open learning.

61
Q

Interviews

A

This is part of the recruitment process where a candidate is met face to face

62
Q

Psychometric Tests

A

These are designed to reveal the personality of a candidate. Questions are used to assess candidates honesty, commitment or ability to fulfil a particular role.

63
Q

Employer Branding

A

This can be defined as creating a perception of the business as a really good place in which to work in the minds of current employees and key stakeholders such as customers and shareholders. It can be used as a USP.