- Do more with less
- Listen to your customers
- Take literature and apply to setting
- Focus on quality service
- Measure your performance
Management by objectives (MBO)
- Four basic management functions
- Set objectives
- Organize
- Around objective
- Measure
- Whether objectives are met
- Develop people
- Take risks
- Make strategic decisions
- Build a team
- Management should collaborate
- Communicate quickly and clearly
- See the role of the unit in the context of the organization as a whole
- Manage by walking around
Crainer, Stuart. The Ultimate Business Library: 110 Thinkers Who Really Make a Difference. New York: AMACOM, 1998, p. 53.
Total quality management
- Based on the writings of W. Edward Deming
- Roots in the Japanese concept of quality circles
- Emphasis is on achieving customer satisfaction, continuous improvement of organizational processes and on the production of high quality products and services
PDCA cycle
- The Plan-Do-Check-Act Cycle
- Plan carefully what needs to be done
- Do it, i.e., carry out the plan
- Check on progress and results
- Act on both positive and negative results
- Start the cycle again with a revised plan
Customer
- The next person who gets your work
- Not necessarily the public. Could be a department within the library, e.g., Acquisitions, Cataloguing
- You must know the requirements of your customer
- Set key indicators and targets
- Strive for effectiveness and efficiency
- Effectiveness: doing the right things
- Efficiency: doing things right
- Based on
- Customer focus
- Process improvement
- How can libraries continually improve? E.g. interlibrary loan - type four part form, send/receive by mail, then fax machine, e-mail, Internet, Arial scanning
- Employment empowerment
- More libraries are allowing employees to make decisions with perhaps not applying rules
- Theory by Peter Senge
- Need to tap people’s commitment and capacity to learn
- “Learning is about changing individuals so that they produce results they care about, accomplish things, that are important to them”
Crainer, Stuart. The Ultimate Business Library: 50 Books that Shaped Management Thinking. New York: AMACOM, 1997, p. 237.
Leadership
What makes a leader?
Visible | Listening skills |
Inspiring | Motivated |
Enthusiastic | Passionate |
Authority | Allows feedback for own improvement |
Consistent decision making | Willing decision making |
Observes/utilizes strengths/weaknesses | Can draw individuals group/delegate |
Balance between taking charge/backing off | Inner confidence |
Willing to admit defeat/responsibility for own vision | Vision |
Integrity | Decisiveness |
Dependability | Ability to communicate |
Examples of good leaders:
- Donald Trump, risk taker
- Bill Clinton, charismatic
- Winston Churchill, inspiring
- Adolf Hitler, enigmatic
- Lee Iacocoa, vision, innovative, motivate
- Mother Theresa/Ghandi, lead by nature
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