
- •Company. Human resources. Management
- •Lesson 1
- •Which word?
- •Company vs. Campaign
- •Which word?
- •Corporation vs. Company
- •Talking about Companies
- •Vocabulary Notes:
- •Task 17. In the text “Talking about Companies” (Task 12) find the words which can be tranlsted as:
- •Vocabulary and Cultural Notes:
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- •Lesson 2
- •Vocabulary building Starting a business
- •Vocabulary and Cultural Notes:
- •Vocabulary building Subsidiaries and groups of companies
- •Some of the World’s Oldest Companies
- •Vocabulary and Cultural Notes:
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- •Lesson 3
- •Which word?
- •Organizational Structure
- •Vocabulary Notes:
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- •Lesson 4
- •Vocabulary building colleagues and rivals
- •Vocabulary building Staff
- •Human Resources
- •Vocabulary Notes:
- •Which word?
- •Ensure vs. Insure
- •Vocabulary building Employing people
- •Vocabulary building Getting rid of employees
- •Vocabulary Notes:
- •Lesson 1
- •-Ability
- •Vocabulary building Words for Bosses
- •Management and Managers
- •Vocabulary Notes:
- •Which word?
- •Lesson 2
- •Levels and Patterns of Management
- •Vocabulary Notes:
- •Lesson 3
- •Which word?
- •Authoritarian / authoritative / autocratic / bossy
- •Leadership Styles
- •Vocabulary and Cultural Notes:
- •Which word?
- •Eeffective vs. Efficient
Lesson 2
Task 1. What is your idea of the ideal boss? Look at the adjectives below and choose five of them which best characterize the ideal manger. Explain your choice.
1. tidy; |
7. humorous; |
13. considerate; |
2. smart; |
8. high-flyer; |
14. family man; |
3. critical; |
9. supportive; |
15. experienced; |
4. sociable; |
10. diplomatic; |
16. independent; |
5. generous; |
11. far-sighted; |
17. authoritative; |
6. consistent; |
12. easy-going; |
18. hard-working. |
Task 2. Practice reading the following words.
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Task 3. Read the text.
Levels and Patterns of Management
Some basic characteristics seem to apply to managers in all types of organizations; they include hard work on a variety of activities, preference for active tasks, direct personal relationships. Almost everything a manager does, involves decisions. The reason for making a decision is that a problem exists. In decision-making there is always some uncertainty and risk.
Yet managers within an organization vary greatly in the things they do and the skills they need. The managerial staff usually consists of three levels. These three levels form a management hierarchy, a structure with a top, middle, and bottom:
Senior management (also “top management” or “upper management”);
Middle management;
Low-level management, such as supervisors or team-leaders;
Upper-level managers, or top management, have the most power and responsibility. Experience and continual life-long learning help to develop the conceptual skills to understand the “big picture” that is essential for managers at the top.
Middle managers, or middle management, have somewhat less power and responsibility and implement the broad goals set by top management.
Operating managers, or supervisory management, coordinate the work of those who are not managers. In general, they need technical and human skills and operate under more constraints than do upper-level managers, who require more conceptual skills and usually rely on their lower-level counterparts to carry out the technical details.
Foremen / lead hands have direct supervision over the working force in office, factory, sales field or other workgroup or areas of activity. The responsibilities of the persons belonging to the group of rank and file are even more restricted and more specific than those of the foreman.
Towards the end of the 20th century, business management came to consist of six separate branches, namely:
Human resource management;
Operations management or production management;
Strategic management;
Marketing management;
Financial management;
Informartion technology management responsible for management information systems.
In the 21st century observers find it increasingly difficult to subdivide management into functional categories in this way. More and more processes simultaneously involve several categories. Instead, one tends to think in terms of the various processes, tasks, and objects subject to management.
Though management is often described as “the art of getting things done through people” it is a very hard job. Managers must be good planners, organizers, coordinators, communicators, morale builders.
Public, private, and voluntary sectors place different demands on managers, but all must retain the faith of those who select them (if they wish to retain their jobs), retain the faith of those people that fund the organization, and retain the faith of those who work for the organization. If they fail to convince employees of the advantages of staying rather than leaving, they may tip the organization into a downward spiral of hiring, training, firing, and recruiting. Management also has the task of innovating and of improving the functioning of organizations.