What Management Is
Joan Magretta and Nan Stone (Free Press, May 2002)
Reviewed by John Parham Jr.
After reading the preface of What Management Is, by Joan Magretta, with
assistance from Nan Stone, my first thought was “Management for Dummies.” However,
this book is more interested in the various theories that drive management
than its processes and as such is not like those bold yellow memoirs to
simplicity, which seem to have inundated us in recent years.
Actually, this is a very good first book for those who are thoroughly confused
by the concept of management, whether they are beginners or seasoned veterans.
The writers themselves are quite clear on the notion that this book may
not provide profound lessons on management to anyone who has read other
volumes on the subject dating back to Peter Drucker and his The Practice
of Management.
Magretta and Stone have their own credentials, however, from editing
the Harvard Business Review, which is certainly a rather powerful vantage
point. They discuss management in very simple and clear terms, making
their material accessible even to someone completely unfamiliar with
management theory. Just as can one divide management itself, the
book is split into two parts: “Design” and “Execution.” Design
includes the concepts of value creation, business models, strategy, and
organization. Execution is comprised of numbers usage, missions and measures,
innovations, results, and people management. The elements of each principle
are illustrated using real world examples. These include:
- eBay’s successful business model.
- WalMart’s use of strategy
to outmaneuver Kmart.
- The Nature Conservancy’s use of business techniques.
- The organization
of Ford Motor Company and the equally successful reorganization of
General Motors.
- Innovations in soft drink packaging.
- Southwest Airlines’ management
of people.
These examples are the primary vehicle through which the everyday reader
is able to grasp the essence of the book, regardless of the complexity
of the topic discussed. Unlike many management consulting books that seem
only to stress positive examples, What Management
Is offsets the examples
of successful ventures (Eastman Kodak) with those not-so-successful
(the beginning of EuroDisney). It is also through the use of examples
that the reader is able to use the business practices of giants of
industry, such as General Electric’s Jack Welch and Dell Computer’s
Michael Dell, in their everyday lives inside and outside of the work
place.
This is possible because at their essence, the techniques that drive successful
organizational management are universal in their application, be it a Fortune
500 company, a mom and pop store, or the family (and maybe even a government
agency?). Lastly, these everyday examples assist the reader to comprehend
more complex management theories like the 80-20 rule, Total Quality Management
(TQM), and Six Sigma.
All in all, What Management Is will serve those who read it well, if for
nothing else as a guide to the basic principles of management. Magretta
and Stone accomplished what they set out to do, illustrate the basic frame-work
of management, easy enough even for a dummy to understand.
John Parham Jr. is a senior budget analyst with the office of budget
and planning in the Office of the Chief Financial Officer for the
Government of the District of Columbia.