COLLEGE OF EDUCATION AND EXTERNAL STUDIES
FACULTY OF EXTERNAL STUDIES
DEPARTMENT OF EXTRA-MURAL STUDIES
MASTERS IN PROJECT PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT
COURSE CODE: LDP 601
COURSE TITLE: FUNDAMENTALS OF MANAGEMENT
LECTURER: DR. HARRIET J. KIDOMBO
NAME: WAMBUGU SAMUEL MWANGI
REG. NUMBER: L50/68096/2011
DATE OF SUBMISSION: 18TH FEBRUARY, 2012
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction ………………………………………………………………………………….3
Managerial Roles …………………………………………………………………………….4
Importance of Management to an Organization …………………………………………..…7
Conclusion ……………………………………………………………………………………8
REFERENCES ………………………………………………………………………………9
ROLES AND IMPORTANCE OF MANAGEMENT AS A RESOURCE TO AN …show more content…
• First-level Management: this level is made up of supervisors who have been promoted from production or clerical positions into supervisory positions. Majority have low level of education which is technical-centred. Majority of employees are found in this level. Supervisors help shape the attitudes of new employees toward the firm. Newcomers who like and respect their first level manager tend to stay with the firm longer.
Different levels of managers will play different roles to a different extent. For instance, a front line (junior) supervisor will likely be a resource allocator and a disturbance handler to far greater extent than they will act as a figurehead. A chief executive likely will act as a spokesperson and perhaps an entrepreneur more than they will act as a monitor (Quinn, 2010: p12)
2. MANAGERIAL ROLES
A role, in the business context, is an expected set of activities or behaviours originating from a job. Essentially, the role of managers is to guide the organizations toward goal accomplishment. All organizations exist for certain purposes or goals, and managers are responsible for combining and using organizational resources to ensure that their organizations achieve their purposes. According to Dublin in his book Essentials of Management (2000) states that roles and functions are closely related (they are both activities carried out by managers). Borrowing from Mintzberg