Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

29
Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com 1

Transcript of Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

Page 1: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 1

Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2Mark Fielding-Pritchard

Page 2: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 2

P7 Stakeholders Chapter 1

Directors

Customers

Suppliers

Lenders

Government

Public

Environmental

Page 3: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 3

Peter Drucker Objectives P10

Market standing

Innovation

Productivity

Resources

Profitability

Manager& staff performance

Social responsibility

Page 4: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 4

Objectives SMART

Specific

Measureable

Achievable

Relevant

Time bound

Page 5: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 5

What Is Management Chapter 2

Management is getting things done through other people

Planning Controlling Leading Organising

Page 6: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 6

Quinn P27 Culture

HR Open

Systems

Internal Process

Rational Goal

Flexibility

Outward

Control

Inward

External goals

Internal environment

stable

Well being of staff

External Requirement

s

Page 7: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 7

Marketing P30 Chapter 2

FMCGs

White

Brown

Soft

Services

Page 8: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 8

Marketing P31 Chapter 2 4Ps

Product

Price

Place

Promotion

- Advertising

- Sales promotion

- Public relations

- Direct marketing

- Personal selling

Page 9: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 9

Marketing Case Study

Housham Garden

Page 10: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 10

Operations Management P36

1. The 4 V’s OverviewAll operations processes have one thing in common, they all take their ‘inputs’ like, raw materials, knowledge, capital, equipment and time and transform them into outputs (goods and services).  They do this is different ways and the main four are known as the Four V’s, Volume, Variety, Variation and Visibility.

Volume- MacDonalds

Variety Taxi vs Bus

Variation Barratt vs One off

Visibility UPS

Page 11: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 11

Page 12: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 12

Page 13: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 13

Page 14: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 14

Page 15: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 15

The Harvard Model

Employee influence- DOA, power, influence Human resource flows – recruitment, selection,

promotion, termination Reward systems- salary, motivation Work systems design of work, alignment of people

This was developed into the 4cs

Page 16: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 16

HR Management p39

Commitment

Competence

Congruence

Cost effectiveness

Overall conclusion is that we judge all HR activities on 3 criteria, organization, individual, society

Page 17: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 17

McGregor P42

Page 18: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 18

P43

Page 19: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 19

Herzberg P44

Page 20: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 20

Tuckman, Group Action Stages

Page 21: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 21

Belbin P46 Team Roles

Page 22: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 22

Belbin Strengths

Page 23: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 23

Belbin P46 Team Roles 2

Page 24: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 24

Likert Leadership Styles P47

Page 25: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

Exploitative Authoritative System

In this type of management system the job of employees/subordinates is to abide by the decisions made by managers and those with a higher status than them in the organization.

The subordinates do not participate in the decision making.

The organization will use fear and threats to make sure employees complete the work set.

There is no teamwork involved.

Page 26: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

Benevolent authoritative System

Just as in an exploitive authoritative system, decisions are made by those at the top of the organization and management.

However employees are motivated through rewards rather than fear and threats.

Information may flow from subordinates to managers but it is restricted to “what management want to hear”.

Page 27: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

Consultative System

In this type of management system, subordinates are motivated by rewards and a degree of involvement in the decision making process.

Management will constructively use their subordinates ideas and opinions.

This theory is very closely related to the Human Relations theory.

Communication in this system flows both downward and upward, though upward is more limited.

This promotes a more positive effect on employee relationships and allows them to be more cooperative.

Page 28: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

Participative Group System

Management have complete confidence in their subordinates/employees.

There is lots of communication and subordinates are fully involved in the decision making process.

Subordinates comfortably express opinions and there is lots of teamwork.

Teams are linked together by people, who are members of more than one team.

Likert’s calls people in more than one group “linking pins”.

Page 29: Finance CFAB Chapters 1&2 Mark Fielding-Pritchard mefielding.com1.

mefielding.com 29

Delegation