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The Management Process
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28 September 2009

(Originally Published in 1963 by R.D. Irwin)
The Management Process presents new and traditional subject matter in a diff erent context because it is felt that greater emphasis should be given to the interaction of the management functions. All managers plan, organize, and control the work of others, but not in a simple, sequential pattern. Managing is a continuous operation or process involving the interaction of these functions. Managers must plan for organizing activity, organize for it, and control it, and they must perform these same functions for control. It is felt that practicing managers do, in eff ect, think in these terms. Consequently, an analysis of traditional and other materials in this context should not only be more realistic but also more meaningful to the student or practitioner. Reference to the chapter headings in the Table of Contents will illustrate the way in which this interaction approach provides a basic framework for the organization of this book. As a text this book is intended for a fi rst course in management, or a more advanced course, depending upon the characteristics of the curriculum in which it is used. No specifi c course preparation, however, need be regarded as prerequisite to its use.
Chapter 1. Introduction to the Study of Management
Section I. Planning for Managing
Chapter 2. Planning for Planning
Chapter 3. Organization Planning: Part I
Chapter 4. Organization Planning: Part II
Chapter 5. Planning for Organizing (Part I: Procurement of Factors)
Chapter 6. Planning for Organizing (Part II: Establishment of Interrelationships among Factors and Development of Factors)
Chapter 7. Planning for Control
Chapter 8. Planning for Control: Supervision
Section II. Organization for Managing
Chapter 9. Organization for Planning
Chapter 10. Organization for Organizing
Chapter 11. Organization for Control
Chapter 12. Organization for Control: Decentralization at General Motors
Section II. Control of Managing
Chapter 13. Control of Planning
Chapter 14. Control of Organizing
Chapter 15. Control of Control