Organizational Behavior
Organizational Behavior
18th Edition
ISBN: 9780134729756
Author: Stephen P. Robbins; Timothy A. Judge
Publisher: Pearson Education (US)
bartleby

Videos

Question
Book Icon
Chapter CC, Problem 1CC
Summary Introduction

Case summary:

Morgan-Moe is a major player in the retail industry and has hundreds of store in the upper mid-west. Due to the sharp decline in the manufacturing economy due to which Morgan-Moe has to change its focus to low margin commodities rather than high margin impulse buy. Also there were rumors among the employee and insecurity, which led to the decline in productivity and the motivational factor were lacking.

The Vice president for human relation wanted to introduce a motivational program to re-energize the company’s work force. The major areas to focus were

  1. Changing nature of work
  2. Diversity and age
  3. Goal setting
  4. Organizational downsizing
  5. Organizational justice

To tackle the situation it came up with 5 options for management system.

Program 1: Traditional Management

Program 2: Share absence and sick leave

Program 3: Share sales and inventory

Program 4: Share information and brain storm

Program 5: Brain storm without sharing information

Based on this program they wanted to analyzed which stores opted for which program and why, the average turnover, weekly profit per month and the staff time cost due to the program.

Characters in the case:

Jean Masterson CEO of the company.

Jim Clauseen, vice president for human relation

Victor author of Man’s Search for Meaning.

Adequate information:

The sharp decline in the manufacturing economy due to which Morgan-Moe has to change its focus to low margin commodities rather than high margin impulse buys.

The five program option for management system.

Program 1: Traditional Management

Program 2: Share absence and sick leave

Program 3: Share sales and inventory

Program 4: Share information and brain storm

Program 5: Brain storm without sharing information

To determine:

The five management system as variables in the experiment. Also to identify the independent and dependent variables and how they are related.

Expert Solution & Answer
Check Mark

Explanation of Solution

Variables are characteristics or numbers that change as per the situation. There are basically two variables independent and dependent variables. Independent variables as the name suggest are independent and cannot be changes whereas dependent variable changes in response to the independent variable.

So the five management systems which can consider as variable are:

  1. Number of stores
  2. Wages of the employee
  3. Turnover of the company
  4. Location of the store
  5. The five program option for management system

Out of the five variables above Number of stores, Wages of the employee, Location of the store are independent variables, whereas turnover of the company and the five program option for management system are dependent variables.

Number of stores, Wages of the employee and Location of the store is all decided in the strategic level and once fixed it cannot be changes. Turnover of the company depends on all the factors involved in running the organization. The success of the five program option for management system depends on Number so of the stores and wages of the employee. We can see that 89 stores that are old and were the working age group is older have gone for Program 1. As they have chosen Program 1 the monthly staff time cost is none.

Whereas Program 4, the monthly staff time cost is $3420. This cost is dependent on the number of hours the employee spend working on the program and the wage of the employee.

Conclusion

We can see that the programs chosen by the stores have a pattern. Program 1 are preferred by the oldest and the most economically distress stores, Program 2 and 3 are preferred by the stores located in the urban areas and the work force is younger compared to other stores. Program 4 and 5 are preferred by stores in the rural areas and the work force is older in average.

Want to see more full solutions like this?

Subscribe now to access step-by-step solutions to millions of textbook problems written by subject matter experts!
Students have asked these similar questions
mutual friends. She enjoys listening to the opinions of others and seems to get along with most everyone, generally avoiding conflict rather than submitting to others. Dawn credits her ability to communicate well orally (she loves to talk and socialize), get along well with others, and build a consensus, in part, for her landing a position in sales at RelationshipsFirst. Prior to her meeting with Stewart Strong, Dawn asked Taylor if she could meet her for lunch to find out a little more about Stewart and Green Meadows. When Dawn finally arrived for lunch, late as usual, she wasn’t able to learn as much about Green Meadows as she would have liked, but she did learn the following about Stewart. Taylor indicated that Stewart was a good neighbor, but he certainly wasn’t a friendly, outgoing relationship builder such as Dawn. In fact, he tended to be rather cool, tough, and competitive when it came to relationships. He liked to be in charge of people and situations and was not willing to…
The author in “Life Isn’t Fair” writes in a direct tone and the reader feels that they should listen to him because of the way he sounds while getting his point across when making the article. The evidence that is shown: “Fair isn’t a standard to be imposed unless a leader is attempting to impose mediocrity”, sounds super straightforward.      does this sound good?
Discuss the possible change CRM will have in the next 3 years. Also, discuss 3 possible steps a company can take to avoid risks with CRM implementation.
Knowledge Booster
Background pattern image
Management
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, management and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.
Similar questions
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
Recommended textbooks for you
Text book image
Understanding Business
Management
ISBN:9781259929434
Author:William Nickels
Publisher:McGraw-Hill Education
Text book image
Management (14th Edition)
Management
ISBN:9780134527604
Author:Stephen P. Robbins, Mary A. Coulter
Publisher:PEARSON
Text book image
Spreadsheet Modeling & Decision Analysis: A Pract...
Management
ISBN:9781305947412
Author:Cliff Ragsdale
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Text book image
Management Information Systems: Managing The Digi...
Management
ISBN:9780135191798
Author:Kenneth C. Laudon, Jane P. Laudon
Publisher:PEARSON
Text book image
Business Essentials (12th Edition) (What's New in...
Management
ISBN:9780134728391
Author:Ronald J. Ebert, Ricky W. Griffin
Publisher:PEARSON
Text book image
Fundamentals of Management (10th Edition)
Management
ISBN:9780134237473
Author:Stephen P. Robbins, Mary A. Coulter, David A. De Cenzo
Publisher:PEARSON
Process selection and facility layout; Author: Dr. Bharatendra Rai;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wjxS79880MM;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY