Professional Documents
Culture Documents
The elements of a given mind map are arranged intuitively according to the importance of
the concepts, and are classified into groupings, branches, or areas, with the goal of
representing semantic or other connections between portions of information. Mind maps
may also aid recall of existing memories.
Mind maps are, by definition, a graphical method of taking notes. The visual basis of
them helps one to distinguish words or ideas, often with colors and symbols. They
generally take a hierarchical or tree branch format, with ideas branching into their
subsections. Mind maps allow for greater creativity when recording ideas and
information, as well as allowing the note-taker to associate words with visual
representations. Mind maps and concept maps are different in that mind maps focus on
only one word or idea, whereas Concept maps connect multiple words or ideas.
Manage less: "We are constantly amazed by how much people will do when they are
not told what to do by management." In the new knowledge-based economy, people
should make their own decision. Managing less is managing better. Close supervision,
control and bureaucracy kill the competitive spirit of the company. "Weak managers are
the killers of business; they are the job killers. So a manager can't manage self-
confidence into people."
Articulate own vision: "Leaders inspire people with clear visions of how things can be
done better." The best leader does not provide a step-by-step instruction manual for
workers. The best leaders are those who come up with new idea, and articulate a vision
that inspires others to act.
Simplify: Keeping things simple is one of the keys to business. "Simple messages travel
faster, simpler designs reach the market faster and the elimination of clutter allows faster
decision making."
1
Get less formal: "A manager must realize now how important it is to maintain the kind
of corporate informality that encourages a training class to comfortably challenge the
boss's pet ideas."
Energies other: Genuine leadership comes from the quality of a manager’s own vision
and his ability to spark others to extraordinary performance.
Face reality: Face reality, and then act decisively. Most mistakes that leaders make arise
from not being willing to face reality and then acting on it. Facing reality often means
saying and doing things that are not popular, but only by coming to grips with reality
would things get better.
Get Good Ideas from Everywhere: New ideas are the lifeblood of business. "The
operative assumption today is that someone, somewhere, has a better idea; and the
operative compulsion is to find out who has that better idea, learn it, and put it into
action - fast."
Follow up: Follow up on everything. Follow-up is one key measure of success for a
business. A manger must follow-up business strategy will pave the way for your success.
Make Everybody a Team Player: Managers should learn to become team players.
Middle managers have to be team members and coaches. Take steps against those
managers who wouldn't learn to become team players.
Stretch: Stretch targets energize. "It has been found that by reaching for what appears
to be the impossible, we often actually do the impossible; and even when we don't quite
make it, we inevitably wind up doing much better than we would have done."
2
Have Fun: Fun must be a big element in a manager’s business strategy. No one should
have a job they don't enjoy. If a manger doesn’t wake up energized and excited about
tackling a new set of challenges, then the manager might be in the wrong job.
Never allow company to take itself too seriously. Celebrate success. “Business is ideas
and fun and excitement and celebrations, and all those things.” Business has to be fun.
For too many people, it's "just a job". Celebration is also a great way to energize an
organization. A CEO `s job is to make sure that his/her team is having fun – while
they're being productive.
Get Rid of Bureaucracy: The way to harness the power of people of organization is "to
turn them loose, and get the management layers off their backs, the bureaucratic shackles
off their feet and the functional barriers out of their way."
Eliminate Boundaries: In order to make sure that people are free to reach for the
impossible, a manger must remove anything that gets in their way. "Boundarylessness"
describes an open organization free of bureaucracy and anything else that prevents the
free flow of ideas, people, decisions, etc. Informality, fun and speed are the qualities
found in a boundary less organization.
Put Values First: Don't focus too much on the numbers. "Numbers aren't the vision;
numbers are the products." Focus more on the softer values of building a team, sharing
ideas, exciting others.
Cultivate Leaders: Cultivate leaders who have the four E's of leadership: Energy,
Energize, Edge, and Execution; leader who share values of your company and deliver
on commitments.
Create a Learning Culture: A manager have to turn your company into a learning
organization to spark free flow of communication and exchange of ideas. "The desire,
and the ability, of an organization to continuously learn from any source, anywhere - and
to rapidly convert this learning into action – is its ultimate competitive advantage."
3
That's not the same if it is (managers) number four, and that's his only businesses. Then
he has to find strategic ways to get stronger."
Live Quality: "A manager need to change the competitive landscape by being not just
better than his competitors, but by taking quality to a whole new level. He needs to make
his quality so special, so valuable to his customers, so important to their success that our
products become the only real value choice."
Constantly Focus on Innovation: "A manager have just got to constantly focus on
innovation and more competitors. A manager got to constantly produce more for less
through intellectual capital. Shun the incremental, and look for the quantum leap." Now
the fundamentals have got to be more education. More information knowledge, faster
speeds, more technology across the board.
Behave Like a Small Company: Small companies have huge competitive advantages.
They "are uncluttered, simple, and informal. They thrive on passion and ridicule
bureaucracy. Small companies grow on good ideas - regardless of their source. They
need everyone, involve everyone, and reward or remove people based on their
contribution to winning. Small companies dream big dreams and set the bar high -
increments and fractions don't interest them."
4
Corporate Social Responsibility
The Corporate Social Responsibility is a “business’ commitment to contribute to
sustainable economic development, working with employees, their families, the local
community, and society at large to improve their quality of life”. Under this point of
view, the Corporate Social Responsibility rests on the fundamental pillars of both the
economic growth and the quality of life as an engine for “sustainable” development.
The classical view: The classical view holds that management’s only social
responsibility is to maximize profits. The most outspoken advocate of this approach is
economist and Nobel laureate Milton Friedman. He argues that manager’s primary
responsibility is to operate the business in the best interests of the stockholders ( the true
owners of a corporation). Friedman contends that stockholders have a single concern:
financial return. He also argues that anytime managers decide on their own to spent their
organization’s resources for the “social good” they are adding to the costs of doing
business. These costs have to be passed on to consumers either through higher prices or
absorbed by stockholders through a smaller profit returned as dividends. Do note that
Friedman is not saying that organizations should not be socially responsible; he thinks
they should. But the extent of that responsibility is to maximize organizational profits for
stockholders.
The Socioeconomic View: The socioeconomic view is the view that management’s
social responsibility goes beyond making profits to include protecting and improving
society’s welfare. This position is based on the belief that society’s expectations of
business have changed. Corporations are not independent entities responsible only to
stockholders. They also have a responsibility to the larger society that endorses their
creation through various laws and regulations and supports them by purchasing their
products and services. In addition, proponents of the socioeconomic view believe that
business organizations are not just merely economic institutions. Society accepts and
even encourages business to become involved in social, political and legal issues. For
instance, proponents of the socioeconomic view would say that Avon products Inc. was
being socially responsible when it initiated it’s Breast Cancer Awareness Crusade . More
and more organizations around the world are taking their social responsibilities seriously.
5
In fact, a survey of business owners reported that 68 percent would continue socially
responsible practices even if they found that the activities were cutting into profits.
The Environment: One critical area of social responsibility is the natural environment.
In days gone by, many businesses indiscriminately dumped sewage, waste products, and
trash into streams and rivers, the air, vacant lots, and anywhere else they could think of.
Now, laws regulate such activities, and companies themselves, in many instances, have
6
seen the error of their ways and have become more socially responsible. As a result, most
forms of air and water pollution have been reduced. Nevertheless, much remains to be
done. Current concerns center on business contributions to the problems of acid rain,
depletion of the ozone layer, global warming, sewage disposal, ocean dumping,
hazardous wastes, and the disposal of ordinary garbage.
General Social Welfare: Some people believe that organizations should be involved in
promoting the general social welfare. Examples of such practices include making
contributions to charities, philanthropic organizations, and not-for-profit foundations and
associations; supporting museums, symphonies, and public radio and television; and
being more involved in health and education.
Some people also believe that business should be taking a greater role in correcting some
of the political wrongs that exist. A prominent illustration of this feeling is the argument
that businesses should withdraw their operations from South Africa to protest that
nation's policies of apartheid. Kodak and IBM have responded to these concerns by
shutting down their operations in South Africa.
7
Legal Compliance: Legal compliance is the extent to which the organization complies
with local, state, federal, and international laws. The management of this compliance is
generally diffused to the appropriate managers. For example, the organization's top
human resource executive is generally responsible for ensuring compliance with
regulations concerning recruiting, selection, pay, and so forth. Likewise, the top finance
executive generally oversees compliance with securities and banking regulations. The
organization's legal department is likely to be involved in this area as well, providing
general oversight and also answering queries from managers about the appropriate
interpretation of various laws and regulations.
Ethical compliance: Ethical Compliance is the extent to which the firm and its members
follow basic ethical standards of behavior. Organizations have started doing more in this
area, providing training in ethics and developing guidelines and codes of conduct. Such
activities serve to enhance ethical compliance. Many organizations have established
formal ethics committees, which may be asked to review proposals for new projects, help
evaluate new hiring strategies, and assess a new environmental protection plan. Ethics
committees might also serve as a peer review panel to help evaluate alleged ethical
misconduct by an employee.
In addition to those formal mechanisms for managing social responsibility, there are also
informal mechanisms. Two extremely important ones are:
• The organization's culture,
• The practice of whistle-blowing.
Organization Culture: The basic culture and leadership practices of an organization can
go a long way toward defining the social responsibility stance adopted by an organization
and its members.
For example, for years and years, Johnson & Johnson executives provided a clear and
consistent message to employees. Customers, employees, communities where the
company does business, and shareholders were all important but the order of importance
was as just listed. Thus, when packages of poisoned Tylenol showed up on shelves a few
years ago, Johnson & Johnson employees knew exactly how to respond before they
received orders from headquarters. They pulled all the packages from the shelve before
other customers could buy them. Such actions stand in star contrast to the messages sent
to Ashland Oil employees by the action of their top managers.
8
Whistle-blowers may have to proceed through a number of channels if they are to be
heard. They may also choose to stop before going too far, or they may be fired for their
efforts. Many organizations, however, welcome the contributions. The starting point is
usually a report of the incident I the individual's boss. If nothing is done, the whistle-
blower may go to the higher-level managers or to an ethics committee (if one exists).
Eventually, the person may have to go to a regulatory agency or even to the media in
order to be heard.
There are four basic stances that an organization can take vis-à-vis its environment and
obligations to society:
• Social Opposition
• Social Obligation
• Social Response
• Social Contribution
Social Opposition: A few organizations take what might be called a social opposition
approach to social responsibility. These firms usually do as little as possible in the social
responsibility arena. When they cross the ethical or legal line that separates acceptable
from unacceptable behavior, their response is to deny or cover up what they did.
We noted Beech-Nut's problems with its apple juice. As its top managers became aware
of their problem, they in turn denied it, tried to hide it, and eventually attempted to cover
up the truth.
Social Obligation: One step removed from social opposition is social obligation—a
stance that the organization will do everything that is required of it legally but nothing
more. This is the view most consistent with the basic arguments used against social
responsibility. Managers in such organizations take the position that their job is to
generate profits. A firm with this position would install whatever pollution control
equipment was dictated by law but would not install higher-quality equipment even
though it might better limit pollution. They would only do what they were required to do.
As an example, Tobacco companies like Philip Morris take this position regarding their
international marketing efforts. In the United States and EU-countries, tobacco
companies are legally required to include warnings to smokers on their products and to
limit their advertising to prescribed media, and they follow these rules to the letter of the
law. Many other countries have no such rules, however; so the cigarette makers use
stronger methods. In many African countries, cigarettes are heavily promoted, some
cigarettes contain higher levels of tar and nicotine than those sold in the United States
and the EU-countries, and few cigarette packs contain health warning labels.
9
Social Response: A firm that adopts the social response position meets its basic legal
and ethical obligations and will also go beyond purely social obligation on a selective
basis. Such firms voluntarily agree to participate in certain limited programs, but they
often have to be sold on their benefits first.
For example, both Exxon and IBM will match contributions made by their employees to
charitable causes, and many organizations will respond to requests for donations to Little
League, Girl Scouts, and so forth. The point, however, is that someone has to knock on
the door and ask.
Social Contribution: The highest degree of social responsibility that a firm can exhibit is
the social contribution approach. Firms that take the social contribution approach take to
heart the arguments in favor of social responsibility. They view themselves as citizens in
a society and, as a result, proactively seek opportunities to contribute to that society.
At the same time, an owner of the organization should see Corporate Social
Responsibility as part of a continuing process of building long-term value. Everything he
does should help improve his reputation and encourage customers and other stakeholders
to stay involved with him. A business that buys recycled paper - but exploits its
customers and ignores the community - has missed the point.
Effective Corporate Social Responsibility like this helps a owner continue to differentiate
yourself. Even with dozens of competitors, a real commitment to Corporate Social
Responsibility lets him stand out. As an example, John Lewis department stores are well
known as a business owned by its employees. Its commitment to Corporate Social
Responsibility feeds through into customer service, sales and profits. As well as affecting
the way you behave, Corporate Social Responsibility can lead to new products and
10
services that reflect owner’s values and those of his stakeholders. Over time, it can all
add up to a powerful brand - and a winning business.
• Since business creates many of the problems that social responsibility causes
usually address, it should play a major role in solving them. This would especially
be the case in areas like pollution and toxic waste cleanup. It is also argued that
corporations are legally defined entities with most of the same obligations and
privileges as private citizens. Logically, then, they should play a citizenship role.
• Business often has the resources to help solve social problems. Government
organizations may already have their budgets stretched to the limit, and private
contributions may be at an upper limit as well. Many large businesses, however,
often have surplus revenues that could be used for the benefit of all.
• Business is a partner in society in conjunction with the government and the
general population; and as a partner, it should do its fair share to help the others.
• Famed economist Milton Friedman, argue that social responsibility detracts from
the basic mission of business as defined by American culture - to earn profits for
owners.
For example, every dollar that Chevron or General Electric spend on social programs or
give to charity is one less dollar that can be distributed to owners as a dividend.
• Corporations already wield enormous power. Promoting their active involvement
in social programs gives them even more, and in the absence of a system of
checks and balances, the chances for abuse of power increase as well.
• Conflicts of interest. Suppose that a manager is in charge of deciding which
charity is to receive a large grant from her business. Administrators of various
charities may try to convince her that their organization is most deserving.
Political leaders might get involved as well by advocating their pet causes.
• Business lacks the expertise to understand how to assess and make decisions
about social programs.
11
For example, a company might give its money to support the local symphony when there
are much greater needs elsewhere. People who hold this position point to what they see as
the alarming trend on the part of business to tie products to social causes. The trend
started in 1983, when American Express said that it would donate 1 cent to the Statue of
Liberty restoration project each time one of its credit cards was used. Since then, Procter
& Gamble and MasterCard have jumped on the bandwagon. Critics warn that companies
may start exerting too much influence over the charitable causes they become associated
with and the charities may start serving as marketers to help firms sell products.
Social
Responsibilit
3. Business often has the y 3. There is potential for
resources necessary to solve conflicts of interest.
problem.
12
Government Regulation of Business: The government regulates business activities in
many different areas. Some of this regulation is direct, while the rest is indirect.
Direct Regulation: The government most often attempts to influence business through
regulation - the establishment of laws and rules that dictate what businesses can and
cannot do in prescribed areas. In terms of social responsibility, most regulation of
business focuses on the environment, customers, employees, and investors. To implement
legislation, the government has tended to create special agencies to monitor and control
certain aspects of business activity.
Indirect Regulation: Other forms of regulation are indirect. For example, the
government can indirectly influence the social responsibility of business through its tax
codes. In effect, the government can influence how businesses spend their social
responsibility dollars by providing greater or lesser tax incentives. Suppose that the
government wanted business to spend more on training the hard-core unemployed.
Congress could pass laws that provided tax incentives to companies who opened new
training facilities; and as a result, more businesses would do so.
Mobil recently pulled out of South Africa because of a change in the IRS tax codes that
make operations in that country less profitable. Some critics argue that regulation is bad
and perhaps already excessive. Instead, they argue that a free market system would
eventually accomplish the same goals as regulation with lower costs to both business and
the government.
13
Reference:
Books:
Web Site:
http://www.mindmapingstrategies.com
http://www.mapio.com/mindmap
http://www.biz.co.uk/human_resource_management
http://www.12manage.com/mind_map
http://www.quickbusiness.com
http://www.mba4u.com
http://www.wikipedia.com/management_social_responcibility
14