Case 14-Company Men

Submit your answers to these questions as a file (DOC) attachment below:What justification does Salinger give for the layoffs at GTX?What does McClary suggest GTX could do besides downsize?Do you agree more with Salinger or McClary regarding these layoffs? Why?How might McClary have benefitted from these layoffs?What are some of the potential long-term costs to GTX of these layoffs?What impact are these layoffs having on surviving employees?Were you surprised that McClary was fired? Why or why not?What would you want GTX to do if you were a shareholder, not an employee?Click here to watch clips from “The Company Men”(Links to an external site.)Cast:Craig T. Nelson (Links to an external site.)as James SalingerTommy Lee Jones (Links to an external site.)as Gene McClaryChris Cooper (Links to an external site.)as Phil WoodwardMaria Bello (Links to an external site.)as Sally WilcoxPlot:When the publicly heldshipbuilding (Links to an external site.)corporation Global Transportation Systems, or GTX, is downsized many employees are fired. Chief Financial Officer Gene McClary (Tommy Lee Jones (Links to an external site.)) challenges GTX CEO James Salinger (Craig T. Nelson (Links to an external site.))’s strategy of employee cutbacks and questions the ethics of spending money to build new corporate headquarters while laying off employees. Salinger asserts that the deep cuts are necessary to increase profits, to increase the stock price and discourage a rumored hostile takeover of the company.Later, it is determined that an additional round of lay-offs is necessary. Senior manager Phil Woodward (Chris Cooper (Links to an external site.)), who, over the course of 30 years, had risen from the factory floor to the corporate offices) is also fired. When McClary demands that seniorHR (Links to an external site.)manager Sally Wilcox (Maria Bello (Links to an external site.)) rehire Woodward immediately, she tells him that he, too, is being fired.Scenes in this clip:McClary finds out about the downsizingMcClary confronts SalingerMcClary meets with his staff to discuss their increased workloadThe Board discusses the stock and the future of the companyMcClary confronts Salinger againHR decides whom to fireMcClary is downsized

HUM 5100-5.2

the problem identified at a human/social service organization. The organization selected can be one in which you are currently employed, an agency that they have interest in, or where they intend to someday seek employment. The reflects the measures required in submitting proposals “in house” within an organization where the evaluation of programs, modification of programs, and/or development of programs is part of your job description or to a grant-awarding agency.Examples of grant-awarding agencies include: Corporation for National and Community Service, Department of Health and Human Services, National Institute of Health, Housing and Community Facilities Programs, Homeland Security, Special Delinquency Prevention Program, and Centers for Disease Control Prevention.the following sections and sub-sections:Introduction and BackgroundStatement of the problemSignificance of the problemPopulations servedProposed solutionResearch questionsMethodologyConceptual frameworkMethodDesignRationalePlanning strategyEthical Considerations and ConcernsManagement PlanProposed timelineFeasibilityAnticipated challengesReferencesSelect an existing or hypothetical Human Services organization/agency program.Compile a proposal that develops, evaluates, or modifies the hypothetical implementation of this change in a real-world setting.Describe in detail the process for determining the need for the new program, the evaluation, or the modification of this program.Explain the proposed solution to the problem, gap, or need for this hypothetical proposal.Select a qualitative, quantitative, or mixed methods design for the proposal.Explain in detail as to why this methodology and design is most appropriate for the proposed change (i.e., develop, evaluate, or modify a program).Create a hypothetical research proposal to a grant funding organization or an organization where the evaluation of programs is part of your job description.Address the problem that was identified including the evidence that supports this problem.Must be eight to ten double-spaced in lengthMust include an introduction and conclusion introduction needs to end with a clear thesis statement that indicates the purposeMust use at least eight scholarly, peer-reviewed, and credible sources in addition to the course text

Organizational Culture

Based on your reading of the textbook chapter, describe and give an example of an assumption in your organization. This should be a belief that is “taken for granted”, about “the way we do things here”.In responding to question 2 this week, be careful not to confuse assumptions in the contemporary sense with the anthropological meaning as it is ascribed to it in culture studies. In the contemporary definition, an assumption is a belief that something is true or accepted as true, often without proof. For example, “In my company, people assume that you can leave early on Friday” or “An assumption is that if you work hard you will be recognized”.In organizational culture, as described by Schein, basic assumptions are much deeper than that. Basic assumptions are generally around the nature of something.For example, a basic assumption around the nature of humans:”Humans are inherently evil. They will tend to cheat or lie if they can get away with it”.Or, a basic assumption around the locus of control:”Nature controls us. So it doesn’t matter what I do, whatever will happen, will happen.”Read the explanation carefully before responding:Schein describes some assumptions around core problems organizations face:1. External adaptation and Internal IntegrationThis are the core problem groups and organizations are faced with : survival in and adaptation to the external environment and integration of the internal processes to ensure the capacity to continue to survive and adapt.Do we control our environment or does the environment control us?All groups develop norms around these categories and if these norms get external tasks done while leaving the group reasonably free of anxiety, the norms become critical genetic elements of the culture DNA.2. Reality and TruthAll kinds of society are based on deeper assumptions on general abstract issues.This is how people relates to reality and truth, time and space, human nature and how people should relate to each other. Reaching consensus for instance is a process of building a shared social reality. There are many different criteria for determining truth, from belief and morality (pure dogma and right / wrong dichotomy) to pragmatism (scientific method).Is there an actual truth? Is reality objective or subjective?3. Time and SpaceAnthropologists have noted that every culture make assumption about time. Schein identifies three types of organization depending on their time orientation : past, present and future.Is time monochronic and polychronic?Monochronic is a view of linear time that can be split, wasted, spent etc … This is typical of the western rational cultures. Some culture in Southern Europe or Middle East view time as polychronic, a kind of medium defined more by what is accomplished than by a clock, within which several things can be done simultaneously.  In polychronic cultures, relationships are viewed as more important than short-run efficiency and may leave monochronic managers frustrated and impatient.Space has both a physical and a social meaning and feeling about distance have biological roots. This ends up in different levels of distance (intimacy, personal, social, public) whose length may differ depending on the culture. Also space includes a symbolic value through different allocations (executives at the top of the building, managers with dedicated office etc …). This is one of the reason why the introduction of new communication technologies (email, collaborative spaces, social networks)  causes anxiety : it forces to the surface assumptions that have been taken for granted in terms of relation to space.4. Human nature, activity and relationshipsAre humans inherently good or evil?Douglas Mc Gregor has well known framework on this subject known as Theory X (managers believe people are lazy and must be motivated and controlled) and Theory Y (people are basically self-motivated and need to be channeled and challenged). The latter assume it is possible to design organizations that enable employee needs to be congruent with organizational needs. This is the dimension of organizations seeking to grow and to dominate their market.Do we control nature or does nature control us?There is the Doing orientation whereby nature can be controlled and manipulated, there is a pragmatic orientation toward the nature of reality and a belief in human perfectibility. On the other hand, the Being orientation where nature is powerful and human is subservient to it, an orientation that implies fatalism and enjoying what we have, here and now. This is the orientation of organizations looking for a niche, trying to adapt to external realities rather than creating markets.In between both there is the Being-In-Becoming organization where the focus is on development rather than on a static condition. It is more on what the person is and can become rather than what the person can accomplish.Referenceshttps://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/orpc/vol4/iss4/3/https://thehypertextual.com/2013/01/17/edgar-schein-organizational-culture-and-leadership/https://learn.umgc.edu/d2l/le/content/510657/viewContent/19033531/ViewN/B……….Pls stick to the references