Weaknesses in Ngura’s style of Management and ways to improve them.
• Ngura is not very cooperative with staff in other departments: As a head of research and development, he must learn that for an organization to succeed, all departments must work together. He must acknowledge the interdependence of the various departments and begin to co-operate with staff in other departments.
• Ngura over delegates to his subordinates because he is incapable of handling tasks involved in the higher job: Even though delegation is an inherent part of the management process, the manner in which work is delegated directly affects the overall effectiveness of an organization in attaining its desired goals. Ngura is very justified in passing authority to subordinates but he should not give more authority than they are capable of exercising.
If subordinates are more capable at handling Ngura’s tasks as a manager, then he deserves to be demoted. Ngura must delegate but should be competent in these tasks himself so that he remains in control.
Ngura must begin to look for ways of being competent in the higher job e.g. training. He must also avoid using delegation as an excuse for making subordinates cover up for his incompetencies.
• Ngura’s assistants do not complete work to the satisfaction of management. He retorts that they know what is expected of them and they are paid to work:
• The assistants’ failure is Ngura’s failure as a manager. He is the one who should inspect the work and ensure that it satisfies management’s requirements. They cannot know what is expected unless he clarifies to them. Ngura must clearly define the expectations of the various jobs in his department. He must work himself to show the assistants what standard is expected of them.
Even though the assistants are paid for their work, Ngura must not use this as an excuse for his lack of control over them. He is accountable for their performance; their salaries are not accountable. Besides, satisfaction and work well done is a greater reward to employees than just basic pay.
All in all Ngura is an incompetent departmental head who does not deserve his position. He must now be trained on how to be a competent worker, how to run a department and how to manage subordinates.
Ngura must know that delegation does not make him less responsible to his superiors. He must not abdicate his responsibility since a delegating manager still retains the responsibility for the accomplishment of tasks. He still must answer why the job was not done and he remains responsible for the mistakes of subordinates to whom he has delegated.