Organizational Management:: An Introduction To Managing People Book ^hot^

| | Key Steps / Tools Covered | |-------------|-------------------------------| | Recruitment & Selection | Job analysis, competency-based interviewing, assessment centers, onboarding | | Performance Management | SMART objectives, 360-degree feedback, performance appraisal pitfalls | | Learning & Development | 70-20-10 model (experiential, social, formal), ROI of training | | Discipline & Grievance | Procedural fairness, investigatory meetings, ACAS (UK) guidelines | | Managing Attendance | Trigger mechanisms, return-to-work interviews, wellness programs |

1. Executive Summary This report provides a comprehensive analysis of the core textbook Organizational Management: An Introduction to Managing People . The book serves as a foundational text bridging classical organizational theory with modern human-centric management practices. It argues that effective organizational management is not merely about structures or processes but fundamentally about the strategic alignment of human potential with organizational goals. The report dissects the book’s key themes: motivation, leadership, team dynamics, culture, performance management, and the impact of digital transformation on people management. 2. Book Context & Target Audience | Aspect | Details | |------------|--------------| | Typical Author Profile | Academic-practitioners (e.g., senior lecturers in HRM/OB with industry consulting experience) | | Primary Audience | Undergraduate business students, early-career managers, HR trainees | | Secondary Audience | Non-HR managers in operations, project leads, entrepreneurs | | Pedagogical Style | Conceptual frameworks + case studies + reflective exercises + end-of-chapter problem sets | | Common Editions | Often published by Pearson, Cengage, or Sage (e.g., “Managing People” by Torrington, Hall, Taylor) | | | Key Steps / Tools Covered |

For educators: the book works best as the core text for a 12-week module, supplemented with contemporary case studies (e.g., remote work at GitLab, DEI at Salesforce) and a simulation or live project. It argues that effective organizational management is not

For learners: read actively—apply each framework to a real team or past work experience. Management is not learned; it is practiced. Author, A. A. (Year). Organizational management: An introduction to managing people (X ed.). Publisher. Book Context & Target Audience | Aspect |