Você está na página 1de 43

1

MANAGING BUSINESS
ACTIVITIES TO ACHIEVE
RESULTS
Name : Doan Minh Thanh
ID number: P1007208
Course: Managing Business Activities to Achieve Results
Module : Organizations and Behavior
Lecture : Shamima Hossain
Due date : April

, 2014
Group : 1A

2

TABLE OF CONTENTS
Interrelationships Between Organizational Process And Function Structure .............................. 4
Structure .............................................................................................................................................................. 4
Functions ............................................................................................................................................................. 6
Interrelationships between different functions: .................................................................................. 7
Process and Relationships between Objectives, Vision and Mission Statement ..................... 8
Methods for Mapping: ................................................................................................................................. 11
Identifying the Process Margins: ........................................................................................................ 11
Make the list of the functions and their process accordingly .................................................. 11
Make the Classification of Steps and Process ................................................................................ 11
Draw the Symbols to show Functions accordingly ..................................................................... 11
Evaluate the output of the Process and the Quality Gateways .................................................... 12
Customers Requirement ....................................................................................................................... 12
Gateway Process ....................................................................................................................................... 13
Business Process Measurement .......................................................................................................... 13
Develop Plans To Implement Operational Plan ..................................................................................... 15
Design plans which promote goals and objectives for own area of responsibility ............. 15
Trainings Goals and Objectives .......................................................................................................... 15
Plan for Promoting Goals and Objectives ........................................................................................ 16
Ethical and Regulatory Requirements.............................................................................................. 17
Write objectives, which are specific, measurable, achievable, realistic and time-based .. 18
Implement appropriate systems to achieve objectives in the most efficient way, on time,
to budget and meeting organisational standards of quality ......................................................... 18
Gantt Chart .................................................................................................................................................. 18
Risk Factors Analysis .............................................................................................................................. 19
Carry out work activities meeting the operational plan through effective monitoring and
control................................................................................................................................................................ 21
Primary activities ..................................................................................................................................... 21
Secondary activities ................................................................................................................................. 23
Six Sigma For Quality Management ................................................................................................... 24
3

Start-up Plan ........................................................................................ Error! Bookmark not defined.
Objectives .............................................................................................. Error! Bookmark not defined.
Mission ................................................................................................... Error! Bookmark not defined.
Planning, control and monitoring for the store operation . Error! Bookmark not defined.
Appropriate Systems to Improve The Orgnisational Performance ................................................ 26
Total Quality Management ........................................................................................................................ 26
Demonstrate a quality culture to ensure continuous monitoring, evaluation and
development of the process ...................................................................................................................... 28
Monitoring and Controlling Processes ............................................................................................. 28
Performance Management for Human Resource ......................................................................... 30
Performance Management for Organisation ................................................................................. 30
Building up Quality Culture .................................................................................................................. 32
Recommend improvements which align with the organisations objectives and goals and
which result in improvements ................................................................................................................. 33
Report on the wider implications of proposed changes within the organisation ................ 34
Health and Safety Management .................................................................................................................... 36
Risks assessment ........................................................................................................................................... 36
Legislation and Regulations ...................................................................................................................... 37
Health and Safety at Work ......................................................................................................................... 38
Practical Implication .................................................................................................................................... 39
References ............................................................................................................................................................ 40


4

INTERRELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN ORGANIZATIONAL
PROCESS AND FUNCTION STRUCTURE
STRUCTURE
The structure not only supports the organization in identifying the relationship and
reporting line, the process, monitoring, authorized controls and decision-making
procedure (Hitt, et al., 2011) but also has substantial effect in knowledge management;
hence, a failure in structural implementation can lead to the fatal flaw in strategic
adjustment (Johnson, et al., 2007). One of the most challenging issues of an international
company has to face is that the leaders have to plan for an effective management regarding
to the diversification of the products it offers to customers and the fluctuation of the
market it penetrates in once the business develops and expands (David, 2012) since the
very basic point is a company will divide the responsibility and profession once it grows
beyond the firming level of size and complexity (Johnson, et al., 2007). Therefore, a firm has
the goal to build up an effective structure to adapt with two main requirements: the
structure has to achieve the synergy to make the whole system can operate as an
intertwining body in a stable way; in the other hand, the structure also has to offer a range
of flexibility and authority to make good condition for business level units can implement
and adapt with customers requirement in a specific market accordingly (Wheelen &
Hunger, 2012). Therefore, understanding and applying the appropriate structure would
create an important strategic advantage for the company.
In the case of InterContinental Hotels Group (IHG), the company applies the
multidivisional structure concerning to dividing the geographic areas with four regions:
AMEA (Asia, Middle East, Africa), Americas, Europe, and Greater China (includes of Hong
Kong, Taiwan and China). Below is the sample organization chart of Americas in
Commercial Department:

5



6

FUNCTIONS
Look at the structure, the top of executive management level would be Chief
Executive Officer (CEO) Richard Solomons. The CEO will stay in IHG headquarter which is
based in Denham, United Kingdom. In order to support for CEO, a corporate central service
is established. The corporate central service will be responsible for planning and
implementing the strategy regarding to the corporate-level. The strategy is planned for the
whole organization. The functions of the corporate centre includes:
Business Reputation and Responsibility: it is responsible for championing and
protecting the reputation of IHG and all IHGs brands. The responsibility also
includes group legal services, risk management, corporate responsibility and public
affairs, internal audit and company secretariat.
Global Communications: it is responsible for building IHGs prestige as the provider
of Great Hotels Guests Love (IHGs motto) and assisting in the delivery of IHG's
longer term journey to become one of the world's great companies (IHG Vision).
Global Finance: it is responsible for planning the commercial finance, strategy and
corporate development, investor relations, procurement, monitoring the financial
reporting.
Global Sales and Marketing: it is responsible for the brand management, reservation
channels, relationship marketing, loyalty programmers, and global sales strategy.
Global Human Resources (HR): it is responsible for the development and
implementation of company-wide HR strategies, human capital management
programmers, policies and strategies in order to maintaining the HR retention. The
main focus would be leadership development, talent development, career service,
performance management and employees communication as well as engagement.
Global Technology: it is responsible for supporting the technical direction for the
whole organization and business objectives, providing and augmenting core
revenue-generating and user-facing systems, and integration of property
technologies, with additional focus on financial, corporate and human resources
applications.

7

Beside the corporate central service, there are also heads of the regional
departments of Europe, Americas, AMEA and Greater China. These top regional
departments have the responsibility in collaborating with the corporate centre in order to
gain the acknowledgement and implementation of the strategy. Then they will be
authorized to plan the appropriate business policies for their own regions accordingly.
INTERRELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN DIFFERENT FUNCTIONS:
The corporate centre functions will have the interdependent relationship with each
other together. The Global Human Resources (HR) will be responsible for the whole
organisation internal policy. For the selection, they give out the Competencies Based
Interview, job analysis and job descriptions in order to help the hotels have the guidelines
to select the right employees for other departments. Moreover, the HR is also responsible
for planning the policy, regulations and other employees programs. The two important
procedures from HR are training and performance management. While training especially
the orientation training helps the employees feel confident when starting the job and
encourage the harmonic collaboration among departments, the performance management
will help the department head to catch up with the performance of the employees and help
them in doing the personal development plan. For example, in IHG, there is a sales
standards so-called IHG Great Ways of Sales with the Key Performance Indicators (KPI)
that help the managers to assess the performance of staffs. After that, they will discuss
together about the Personal development plan (PDP) to enhance and improve the
performance. HR will be responsible for manage these PDPs.
Therefore, in order to have a smooth management toward the organisation policies
and other HR documents as well as files, the Technology function will be responsible for
maintaining the business support programs. For HR, it would be Cadena HRM Series
software. For Sales & Marketing, it would be Delphi and especially for Finance & Revenue
Management, it would be Holidex, Opera and Fidelio. Especially with Holidex, this one is
the worldwide reservation system of IHG and the very first hotel reservation management
system all over the world. The Holidex helps the IHG hotels in managing the revenue as
well as the room rates in order to make the appropriate forecast and budget. Therefore,
Technology will help the Sales and Marketing department in giving out the rate, managing
8

the occupancy and analyse the revenue status. For HR, with Cadena HRM Series, the hotels
can manage which training programs have been made, how the other departments conduct
the internal training programs and manage the continuous quality improvements within
IHG.
PROCESS AND RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN OBJECTIVES, VISION AND MISSION
STATEMENT
IHG is the largest hotel company measured by total number of rooms. It has 4653
hotels worldwide and 679,050 rooms. Therefore, in order to make the whole system
operates appropriately, IHG has to create a common scope culture for employees to
share and behave together. Hence, the cultural process of IHG is born. Regarding to
Johnson, Scholes, & Whittington (2007), the cultural process is related to the firms culture
and norms standardisation; the control of this process is indirect and internalised as the
employees become part of the culture. The cultural process of IHG relates to the IHG Vision
which is illustrated in the image below:

The IHG vision combines four main aspects:
1. Unique resources: the resources include the brands that IHG owns and people
that work in these brands.
2. IHG Culture: in order to take advantage of human resources appropriately, IHG
creates the cultural values for the employees to share together. It is so-called
IHG Winning Ways, it includes of five philosophies: Do The Right Thing
Celebrate Difference Work Better Together Aim Higher Show We Care. The
9

performance, working attitudes of the employees will be reviewed and based on
these Winning Ways. The performance review will be conducted per half year.
3. Quality measurement: in order to have a common measurement for a large
amount of IHG hotels portfolio, IHG creates a balance scorecard so-called IHG
Steering Wheels includes four quadrants which are related to each other: Our
People Guests Experience Responsible Business Financial Returns. In each
quadrant, there are factors that are used to evaluate the performance:

These factors are called key success factors or key performance indicators (KPI).
These KPIs are measured in both qualitative and quantitative proportions.
4. Objectives and mission statement: the vision of IHG is Become one of the
worlds great companies and the mission statement is Great Hotels Guests
Love with four statements:
a) Guests love to stay with us
b) People love to work here
c) Owners love our brands
d) Investors love our performance
10

In summary, the IHG process can be summarized in this process map:


Performance and Quality Measurement
IHG Winning Ways and IHG Steering Wheel
IHG Regional Areas directors will collaborate with the corporate central service in order to
acknowledge about the policy.
AMEA AMERICAS EUROPE
GREATER
CHINA
The corporate centre will plan the strategy, vision and policy
IHG Corporate Central Service
Business
Reputation and
Responsibility
Global
Communication
Global Finance
Global Sales
and Marketing
Global Human
Resources
Global
Technology
11

METHODS FOR MAPPING:
In order to conduct the mapping of the process, there would be some steps need to
be taken:
Identifying the Process Margins:
In order to carry out this step, the whole process must be analyzed through the
secondary data research of the organisation and answer these questions:
(1) What is the starting point of the process?
(2) What is it going through in each step?
(3) What is the boundaries of each function in the whole process?
Make the list of the functions and their process accordingly
In this step, the organisation and flow charts would be made to show the reporting
line, the information flow, decision making process and the given tasks accordingly.
Make the Classification of Steps and Process
Using the arrows and the line to show the flow of the information in the whole
process
Draw the Symbols to show Functions accordingly
Using the square shape to show the specific functions
Using the line to show the flow of the information
Using the arrow to show the starting point and ending point of the flow
Using different colors to show the different levels of the function
12

EVALUATE THE OUTPUT OF THE PROCESS AND THE QUALITY GATEWAYS
The quality gateway is the point of organization in which all requirements have to
pass in order to avoid the incorrect requirements from getting through the design and
implementation stages (Robertson & Robertson, 2006). The quality gateway are set up
with one or two staffs that are authorised to make decision whether requirements be able
to pass or not. In order to achieve good quality regarding to requirements, a process would
be:
Elicitation: identifying the customers requirements and expectations through
discussion with stakeholders.
Analysis: firming set of requirements and clarifying conflicts, missing,
ambiguous, overlapping and unrealistic requirements.
Representation: the requirement must be filed accurately, unambiguously and
understandably.
Validation: checking whether the requirements follow the quality standards.
In another hand, the measures of the business process in order to identify critical
success factors (CSF) in order to strengthen the operation process.
In the case of IHG, for example, here is a typical process in order to carry out a
convention or event in a five-stars hotel:
Customers Requirement
The clients contact the hotel and is directed to an Event Sales Executive. The
salesperson will take complete details the requirement of customers include of:
1. Clients name. For example: Mr. Michael John
2. Clients purpose of the convention or event. For example: ASEAN Clean Water
Conference.
3. Clients requirements detail for the convention. For example: the clients want to
have a Full Day Meeting on 28 August 2014 for 180 pax; inclusive of 02 coffee
breaks (03 types of canaps); 01 buffet lunch; the ballroom set up in classroom;
stage 3.6 x 7.2 meters; podium with microphone, 02 standby wireless
microphones.
13

4. The salesman then ask for the clients contact details such as phone number, e-
mail in order to follow up this sale lead.
After exchanging the information and details, the salesman closed the deal and the
conference will be conducted. The salesman will then create Banquet Event Order (BEO) to
sent for Banquet Manager the quality gateway of Banquet team before sending the BEO to
customers for confirmation.
Gateway Process
The Banquet Manager will have a look toward and check the BEO to see whether all
of requirements can be done by Banquet team and discuss with sale department for any
implementation if needed. For example, for above requirements of customers, Banquet
Manager will want the salesperson to gather more information:
Should classroom set up be in chevron or fishbone?
Is the table cloth color should be black or white?
Does the customer need the flower on podium?
Does the customer need any specific instruction regarding to the coffee breaks
(vegetarian, Halal food, so on)?
The maximum capacity of buffet restaurant is 120 persons. How can the hotel
organise seats for 180 persons for buffet lunch?
Is the revenue breakdown appropriate? For example, if the cost of buffet lunch
and coffee break are 30++ (++ means excluding service charge and VAT);
however, the salesperson only charged the customers 35++. Is there any
approach that can make change with customers requirements?
The salesperson will contact with the customers to discuss further with the details
and collaborate with Banquet Manager to adjust.
Business Process Measurement
In the case of IHG, the business process will be measured on the basis of customer
satisfaction surveys. For illustration, regarding to the conference above, the customer will
14

rate the satisfaction by questionnaire on the basis of SERVQUAL philosophy (Buttle, 1996)
of RATERS (reliability, assurance, tangles, empathy and responsiveness):
1. Reliability: it is the ability of the organisation to perform the promised service
dependably and accurately.
2. Assurance: in this aspect, it rates the staffs knowledge and courtesy as well as
their abilities to carry out trust and confidence.
3. Tangibles: it is the appearance of the tangible facilities, human resources, and
communication materials.
4. Empathy: it is used to rate whether the employees deliver the caring spirit,
individualized attention to customers.
5. Responsiveness: it is used to rate the degree that employees are willing to
support customers in a professional manner and with prompt service.
15


Figure 1. A sample of guest satisfaction results of IHG (IHG, 2012)
DEVELOP PLANS TO IMPLEMENT OPERATIONAL PLAN
In order to make an appropriate implementation for Admiral-Dendi Clothes and
Accessories business operation, a plan is carried out.
DESIGN PLANS WHICH PROMOTE GOALS AND OBJECTIVES FOR OWN AREA OF
RESPONSIBILITY
Trainings Goals and Objectives
The goals and objectives of training and development responsibility would be
include in three aspects:
16

Orientation: the employees will be carried out the orientation training program
in order to have an overview regarding to the company and the products as well
as services provided.
Products Information: this is the basic training in order to help the employees to
acknowledge regarding to the products of Admiral-Dendi Clothes and
Accessories.
Selling Skills and Attitudes: the employees will be trained with higher level
regarding to the sales skills and services to the customers.
Plan for Promoting Goals and Objectives
The training plan will be conducted in order to make implementation concerning to
those goals above. The planning process is made in the reference of Decision-making
process of Robbins & Coulter (2012):
Step 1 Identifying the problem: the problem that the store can encounter is the
employees may not get along with the companys procedure in the first time. Therefore,
they would need to be delivered with traning sessions in order to be confident with the
companys process.
Step 2 Developing alternatives: the employees can be trained in the store or they
will be applied in sales skills classes in other facilities.
Step 3 Selecting the best alternatives: the employees can be only trained in the
store by the supervisor. No budget is allocated for sending the employees to classes.
Step 4 Implementing the alternative: the training sessions will be conducted right
after recruiting the store supervisor.
Step 5 Monitor and control: the store supervisor will make the supervision in the
store regarding to the skills and service attitudes of the employees.
Training Subjects Description
Orientation Training Basic information regarding to the store as well as the
service theme.
17

Product and Service Training Basic knowledge regarding to the products and services
that the store provide to customers.
The employees are required to understand clearly
concerning to the products, prices, and other
characteristics of accessories.
Sales Skills and Attitudes The employees will be trained with the store training
program so-called Be My Guest. This training subject will
base on the employees knowledge and experiences in
serving the customers.
Training Monitor and Audit The store supervisor will audit during the process of
employees working routine. The assessment review will
be made monthly to rate the performance of the
employees
Support Training This is the re-training sessions for the employees to
communicate with the about the services and products
provided and enhance their skills in selling and delivering
the services.



Ethical and Regulatory Requirements
One of the difficult challenges that the store has to face is that the revenue would
have chance not to meet the requirement and goals. Therefore, the store will have the duty
to meet the ethical standards with below actions:
Ensuring the standard working hours for the employees, no forcing of overtime
working without paying extra salary and bonus.
Ensuring all of employees can be provided with the same level of training. No
discrimination or exploitation of employees. For instance, forcing the employees
18

to work without training and after a while, providing bad feedback in the aspect
of their attitude.
Providing appropriate equipment for the employees to conduct their daily tasks.
The recruitment department must ensure there is no discrimination during the
recruitment and selection process.
No recruitment of child labour.
Ensuring the fire, life safety and other dangerous protection equipment for the
employees.
WRITE OBJECTIVES, WHICH ARE SPECIFIC, MEASURABLE, ACHIEVABLE,
REALISTIC AND TIME-BASED
S.M.A.R.T (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic, Time Bounded) Milestones:
Earn 10% market share within the first year of operation.
Achieving high brand recognition within London in 6-months.
Achieving the net profit of 20,000 in the first year of operation, the second year
would be 45,000 and the third year would be 80,000.
Reducing the cost of goods sold by 4% in the second year.
Reducing the inventory cost by 3.5% in the second year of operation.
Supporting the local community by dealing with suppliers who provide the
environmental friendly solutions in customizing the products.
IMPLEMENT APPROPRIATE SYSTEMS TO ACHIEVE OBJECTIVES IN THE MOST
EFFICIENT WAY, ON TIME, TO BUDGET AND MEETING ORGANISATIONAL
STANDARDS OF QUALITY
The management will control the plan through the Gantt Chart and Risk Factor
Analysis in order to help Admiral-Dendi Clothing and Accessories to achieve the objectives:
Gantt Chart
19


Regarding to the Gantt Chart above, the management would require the total of 93
days in order to make the plan to be operated in process to achieve the objectives.
Risk Factors Analysis
Regarding to Project Management Institute (2013), the risk analysis includes the
processes of conducting risk management planning, identification, analysis, response
planning, and controlling risk on a project. Below is the risk analysis for Admiral-Dendi
Clothing and Stores:

20

Description Risk Scale
(1: lowest;
5: highest)
Action
Financial budget situation leads
to the shortage of cash or
financial supply during the
project operation.
5 The financial situation is very important for
the implementation of the project. The
management needs to plan very carefully
regarding to the allocated resources and
financial budget in order to avoid the cash-
trap.
Wrong understanding of
customers trend
4 The wrong view toward the market can lead
to the products do not meet the
requirements or expectations of the clients.
The negative outcome of this can lead the
store to over-order the inventory and large
amount of wasteful supplies. In order to
avoid this, the management must carry out
the market research carefully to catch up
with the customers trend of clothing and
accessories.
Wrong assessment of tasks
delegation
2 The wrong delegated tasks to management
can make the monitor and control of the
process would encounter the fault in the
operation. However, it can be implemented
by assigning proper tasks for other
members of management.
Failure in recruitment of
qualified staffs
4 The unqualified staffs can lead to the poor
performance of the store. Therefore, the
human resource management must be
appropriate in the first place.
Risk of employees attitude and
skills in providing the products
and services.
2 This can be implemented easily with the
internal training programs.



21

CARRY OUT WORK ACTIVITIES MEETING THE OPERATIONAL PLAN THROUGH
EFFECTIVE MONITORING AND CONTROL
Monitoring is defined as collecting the project performance data in comparison to a
plan, carry out the performance measure, report and distribute performance information
(Project Management Institute, 2013). In order to have better monitoring, the value chain
helps the firms in clarifying the activities within and around an organisation that play a role
in the procedure of creating products or services (Johnson, et al., 2007). Porter in a book by
Wheelen (2012) stated that the value chain involving of primary activities and secondary
activities. Bygrave & Zacharakis (2011) claimed that organizations need to conduct the
analysis of activities within the value chain since there is no existence of ready reliable
source.

Figure 2. Value Chain (Johnson, et al., 2007)
Primary activities
Inbound Logistics
Supplier: the clothes will be placed order through the supplier so-called Medieval
Collectibles (http://www.medievalcollectibles.com/). There would be an acquirement of
license for the cosplay accessories imports.
22

Location: London, in the central business district of Regent Street and Oxford Street.


Operation
Store supervisor would be assessed the skills in handling guest requirements,
transaction issues, leading staffs and giving the solutions for other issues arose within the
store, responsible for the information interchanged among staffs concering to shifts swap,
supervising the store fulfilment.
Cashier would be responsible for the right pricing during the transaction process,
providing finance information for the accountant and other cashier in the shifts swap.
Accountant is responsible for the accounting balance in the end of the day.
Security staff is responsible for the safety and anti-thieves within the store, fire life
safetey and other health risk factors.
Sale staff will do the selling and consulting for customers, guiding the customers to
the cashiers, recording the customers feedback and providing the products information for
customers.
Outbound Logistics
After the supervisor check the quality of the supplied products, the clothing stuffs
will be put out for exhibition right in the only distribution channel the store.
Marketing and Sales
Enhancing the relationship marketing through the applying the customers loyalty
programmes and sales promotions for the out-date products, enlarging the customers
database.
Encouraging the sales revenue and creative ideas of the customers through the
clothing and accessories design contest.
Promoting the new website to encourage the e-commerce sales.
23

Managing the quality efficiently through the surveys on website and store for both
users and non-users.


Services
The store will be decorated with the Medieval and Dungeon & Dragons theme with
swords, cuirass and lanterns. The main color tone would be olive gold and brown.
Secondary activities
Firms Infrastructures
Point-of-Sale (POS) system will be equipped for the staffs in order to help them keep
track with customers products requirements. Moreover, the POS system also helps them to
manage the sales situation of each item within the store for easy budgeting and planning.
At the store, there will be fingerprint machine in order to control the shifting of the
staffs and the cameras to help the security staffs in effective anti-thieves operation. The
store is also equipped with the fire extinguisher for fire life safety, a first-aid kit in case
there are health risks happening.
Human Resources Management
Creating a personnel management plan to indicate the necessary positions to
operate the stores: store supervisor, cashier, accountant, security staff, and sale staff.
The interviews will be conducted to make appropriate selection regarding to the
persons who are responsible for the allocated positions. After the interview, the selected
staffs will be signed the labour contracts with complete information about the rights, duties
and benefits and be informed about the start day.
The selected staffs will be equipped with the stores uniforms taken from the
stores clothes models in order to not only guarantee the integrity and professional looking
but also helping to promote the stores products.
24

All staffs will be provided with the training documents, rules and regulations, shift
allocation form, the store fulfilment records and the handling guest complaints form, the
products description to gain the products knowledge, the SOP (standard operation
procedures) to ensure the smooth transaction and consultation toward customers.
Conducting the orientation training for all staffs. After the training programmes, the
staffs are ready to work.
Technology Development
Training the sales software for the staffs to ensure they will key the right numbers
of price, quantity, products code into the system. This system will be connected online to
the main system in the headquarter to keep track with the daily sale revenue. The staffs are
also introduced to the store and inventory management system in order to keep track with
the warehouse fulfilment daily. The store supervisor will be trained with the human
resources system to allocate the daily shifts of the staffs. Accountant will be trained in
order to use the electronic accounting system in the right way to manage the account
figures. The sale staff will have extra training program with the specific sale and consulting
skills.
Procurement
A system so-called material requirement planning (MRP) will be applied. The MRP
can help the store supervisor to make the prompt implementation or adjustment regarding
to the customers requirement. The careful material planning can help the store to avoid
shortage or surplus of stock.
Six Sigma For Quality Management
In order to ensure the smooth service and quality to adapt with customers
satisfactions. Admiral-Dendi Clothes and Accessories will apply the Six Sigma quality
management method. Six Sigma includes the stages of DMAIC (Define Measuring
Analyse Improve Control) to help the management to control the process and quality
(Gale, 2009):
25

(D) Define: the management will clarify areas or processes that need improvement.
Then, the management will have the objectives or goals to implement and adjust together
with the financial calculation to ensure the positive effect.
(M) Measuring: aspects of key critical factors will be measured and the management
also collected the relevant information. The management will be measured in this stage as
well.
(A) Analyse: the management will apply some approaches of analysis such as SPC
(statistical process control), hypothesis testing, or pareto analysis in order to identify the
problems or defects within the processes.
(I) Improvement: corrective actions will be undertaken so as to reach the desired
level of improvement.
(C) Control: Admiral-Dendi Clothing and Accessories will make the implementation
in order to manage the process continuously.

26

APPROPRIATE SYSTEMS TO IMPROVE THE ORGNISATIONAL
PERFORMANCE
TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT
Quality is when the products or services that are produced and provided by the
organizations and firms can reliably satisfy the expectation of the customers (Knowles,
2011). Through many years with evolution, the quality management from the traditional
methods of inspection and assurance has evolved and become Total Quality Management
(TQM). TQM is considered as managing the production process with the main goal to be
able to provide the outstanding products or services to meet and maybe exceed the
customers requirements (Gale, 2009). The core concepts of TQM has developed from 14
points of Edwards Deming (Gale, 2009). The 14 points are:
1. The TQM is creating the constancy of purpose towards improvement of products
and services
2. Adopting the new philosophy in production process this means that the
implementation of new philosophy must be conducted in the both management
and employees, it is not just only the managers expect the employees to apply.
3. Terminating the dependence on inspection: this means that the organizations
should avoid inspecting the large quantities of defective products by doing the
quality management in the very beginning stage of production process.
4. Working with single supplier for one item. The more suppliers come, the more
variation will appear in the stock.
5. Making the improvement constantly and forever to improve the quality and
reduce the cost.
6. On the job training in the organizations. This means that if the employees are not
trained carefully, they cannot catch up with the complicated quality
management processes and policies.
7. Establishing the proper leadership. Leadership is totally different with
management in the definition of Deming. Leadership here will help the
27

implementation in vision, objectives and strategy, production motivation instead
of quota-based focus.
8. Driving out the fear. The management by fear will be a counter-productive
method because the employees will lose their interest in contributing to the
organizations performance.
9. Breaking down the barriers among departments. Every department includes of
R&D, marketing, sales, designing must work better together in order to
recognize the trends of the customers, forecast the issues may occur during the
production process and the implementation plan to enhance the experience of
the customers.
10. Slogans and mottos elimination. Demings philosophy is that not the people who
makes the defect products but the production process. Therefore, it is a counter-
productive action if putting the slogan to encourage the people to always
produce conforming products.
11. Management by objectives should be eliminated. The production target pressure
is one of the reasons for bad products encouragement.
12. Removing the barriers to the pride of workmanship.
13. Encourage the education and self-improvement.
14. The transformation is everyones job.
The recent development of quality management was the appearance of ISO 9000.
ISO 9000 is a series of international quality management standards which were built up by
the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). The ISO set the standard
guidelines for production processes in order to ensure that the products satisfy the
customers requirements (Robbins & Coulter, 2012). The ISO 9000 standards have become
the recognized standards all over the world for firms evaluation and comparison and
achieving the ISO 9000 would be a certificate for the production quality of the company.
For the case of RUS Plc, in order to make the implementation to the TQM to the high
quality servicer for discerning guests, there must be the good collaboration among the
departments. First of all, the management levels must show the leadership competencies
they must make the initiatives and drive the process within the organisation. A quality
28

management committee must be established with the representatives from all
departments, an internal audit committee is also established to do the auditing and
checking the process. Adjusting the reporting line, drafting the report form, editing and re-
checking are the main actions.
For the personnel management, the Human Resources must collaborate with other
departments to build up the professional job description and standard operation procedure
(SOP) so the current staffs can have the standards for behavior and job responsibilities.
Moreover, HR will need to build up the competency based-interview in order to have a
proper selection process. The performance management process would also need to be
professionalized and conducted in a suitable timeframe maybe per annual or per half
year.
DEMONSTRATE A QUALITY CULTURE TO ENSURE CONTINUOUS MONITORING,
EVALUATION AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PROCESS
Monitoring and Controlling Processes
Regarding to Portny (2010), five major processes of project management include of:
Initiating processes: identifying the requirement of business, making clear the
expectations of high-level positions as well as resources, and starting to
identifying the audiences taking part in the project.
Planning processes: making clear of projects scope, projects time-frame,
allocated resources as well as risks or any dilemma, planned methods for
communicating project and quality, purchasing management.
Executing processes: forming and taking management regarding to the project
team, communicating as well as managing the projects audiences, making
implementation to the project plan.
Monitoring and controlling processes: project performances tracking and taking
any necessary actions or adjustments in order to make sure project plans are
successfully implemented and the desired results are achieved.
Closing processes: ending all of projects activity.

29


Figure 3. Monitoring and controlling processes of project (Portny, 2010)
As a result, regarding to Portny (2010), the processes of controlling and monitoring
are applied in each of the project stages in order to help ensure that work is being
performed concerning to plans. Therefore, monitoring plays an essential part for the whole
process. The monitor and control process is concerned with (Project Management Institute,
2013):
Making comparison between the project performance with the management
plan;
Rating the performance in order to make corrective or preventive actions or
changes that are necessary;
Monitoring the risks
Monitoring accurate and timely detail in the aspect of projects product and
associated documentation through project completion;
Monitoring data for supporting the status report; measuring the progress and
making forecast;
Monitoring and providing the forecast information regarding to current cost and
schedule.
Monitoring the adjustment of approved changes;
30

Providing appropriate report concerning to the project progress and status.
Performance Management for Human Resource
Keeping a stable pool of human resource has become an essential matter for
organisation to maintain the competitive advantage as well as sustainability; hence, it is
necessary to give performance management in order to help employees enhancing their
ability in work. The performance appraisal has evolved from the traditional carrot and
stick method to the performance management. One of performance appraisal backwards is
that the employees have to wait until the official review time which occurs once or twice
per annum to be identified about the scale of their performance (Dessler, 2012). Therefore,
performance management was born as a continuous process with the flexibility that
includes both managers or supervisors and employees to discuss how they can work better
together and make the continuous improvement overtime (Armstrong, 2009). Performance
management, therefore, is a continuous process of clarifying, measuring and developing the
employees performance and aligning their performance with the objectives of the firms
(Dessler, 2012). Hence, the performance management would likely focus on the
performance planning in the future and continuous improvement and the employees
personal development instead of the old and outdate past oriented performance appraisals
(Armstrong, 2009). There are three main different points that help the managers can
identify the performance management and performance appraisals (Dessler, 2012):
1. The performance management is conducted in a continuous way, daily, weekly
or monthly in order to enhance the managers and employees interaction to
create condition for the continuous improvement.
2. The performance management focuses in achieving the goals and objectives.
3. Performance management leads to the continuous improvement and re-
evaluation; therefore, it can help employees and managers to modify and
implement if necessary to get jobs done in the right way.
Performance Management for Organisation
Organisational performance is defined as the accumulated results of all the
organizations work activities (Robbins & Coulter, 2012). In order to make assessment
31

regarding to the organisational performance, Robbins & Coulter (2012) used three
measures include of organisational productivity, organisational effectiveness and industry
rankings.
Organisational productivity: this is the amount of products or services produced
divided by the inputs needed to generate the output.
Organisational effectiveness: this is the degree to which the organisation
achieves the goals, or being successful in accomplishing what the organisation
tries to do (Daft, 2010).
Industry and company rankings: this is a popular way for managers to measure
organizations performance.
Monitoring and controlling process would need the information regarding to the
organisational performance; therefore, Robbins & Coulter (2012) also recommends these
tools below in order to help measuring the performance and collecting the information for
monitoring and controlling process:
Feedforward/Concurrent/Feedback Controls: these three tools help the
managers to implement the control before an activity begins, during the time
that organizations activities are going on or after they completed.
Financial Controls: Managers always need control the financial status of the
company. The financial ratios, debt level or asset calculation would need to be
counted in order to ensure the process is productive. Budgets, in another hand,
are the tools of planning and controlling when they help the managers to clarify
which work activities are essential and what type or how much resources need
to be allocated to achieve those activities.
Balanced Scorecard: A balanced scorecard helps the managers to look at four
areas of the company: financial, customers, internal processes and
people/innovation or growth assets.
Information Control: the managers would need the right information at the right
time in order to monitor organisational activities and performances for making
32

appropriate and corrective actions. A management information system is
needed.
Benchmarking of Best Practices: The benefits of benchmarking is searching for
the best practices among competitors or non-competitors that lead to the
superior performance.
Building up Quality Culture
Demings PDCA
In order to apply the continuous monitoring in project performance, RUS Plc needs
to apply the PDCA model of Deming to repeat the solving process until the defect becoming
zero.
1. Plan (P): through the monitor process, RUS Plc collects the data regarding to the
defect that being made in daily routine. Then, RUS Plc establishes the corrective
actions that can help employees to improve the defects.
2. Do (D): RUS Plc tests on a small proportion of operation. Regarding on the
collected result after the test, RUS Plc can make the change to improve the plan
and enhance the process.
3. Check (C): RUS Plc checks the results of the change.
4. Act (A): in case the results are positive, RUS Plc then can expand the action to
larger proportion of operation.
Repeating the Step 1 for other new defects.
Slacks recommendation regarding to implementation
Like Deming, Slack et al. (2013) recommended 03 areas which are also related to
the organizations leadership level need to take notice in order to build up the quality
culture of continuous monitor and evaluation for improvement:
1. Top-management Support: Slack et al. (2013) stated that the support of
management goes far beyond the allocation of resources to the project.
Therefore, for RUS Plc, in order to make the appropriate implementation toward
the project, the top-management should:
33

a. Understand and believe the benefits of the improvement approaches;
b. Communicate the principle and techniques of the improvement
monitoring and controlling;
c. Participate in the process;
d. Formulate and maintain the clear strategy for the process.
2. Senior management must understand the process approaches: the monitor and
controlling as well as continuous improvement regarding to the project would
require complicated technical matters or models. Therefore, it is required the
senior managers have to master and completely understand these matters.
3. Avoid excessive Hype: some managers can become victims of the process when
they have new ideas popping up and may replace the whatever went before. This
will destroy the ability to accumulate the experience from experimenting with
each one.
RECOMMEND IMPROVEMENTS WHICH ALIGN WITH THE ORGANIZATIONS
OBJECTIVES AND GOALS AND WHICH RESULT IN IMPROVEMENTS
In order to have the appropriate implementation of the TQM and the performance
management, the information flow, the handling situation process must be re-evaluated
and adjusted. Therefore, the RUS Plc can make the Business Process Reengineering (BPR)
in order to re-adjust the business process. BPR is defined as the fundamental rethinking
and radical redesign of business processes to achieve dramatic improvements in critical,
contemporary measures of performance; for instance, cost, quality, service and speed.
(Slack, et al., 2013). The BPR helps the RUS Plc focuses in analyzing and re-design the
workflows as well as business process and rethink about how the company can operate in
order to cut the operational cost, enhance the customer service, redesign the distribution
channels and generate more revenue. According to Slack et al. (2013), the principles of BPR
include of:
1. Remapping the business processes concerning to cross-functional manner which
help organizing work around the natural flow of information (or maybe
materials or customers)
34

2. Attempt for improving dramatically in performance by rethinking and
redesigning process radically.
3. To have people who use the output from a process perform the process. Doing a
check in order to see whether all internal customers can be own suppliers rather
than depending on another function in the business to supply them that can
take longer and separate out the stage in the process.
4. Making decision points in which the work is performed. Do not separate those
who do the work from those who control and manage the work.
For RUS Plc, since the firm wants to change the quality of the product that aim to
provide a high-quality service, it must adjust some of the departments especially to the
operation departments like Housekeeping, Food and Beverage, and Front Office. RUS Plc
must plan the organizational charts with specific positions and the report line to identify
who are responsible for particular tasks. For example, in Sales & Marketing department,
before, maybe it did not have any special hospitality industry management system; hence,
in order to readjust the process, the leaders must implement with a reservation system
which is responsible for the room rate management, occupancy, average daily rate (ADR)
and RevPAR (Revenue per available room) to update with the trend of the market and give
out precise budget forecast. Moreover, the tasks in the Sales team must also be specialized;
there must be staff that is responsible for leisure and travel, a salesperson who is
responsible for transient, and so on. In another hand, by applying the BPR, RUS Plc can
redesign the process within the Sales & Marketing department can bring up some benefit:
The Corporate sales team will connect closely with the reservation department in order to
bring up best contracts for corporate customers. The Convention and Event team now will
work closely with Food and Beverage department in order to ensure the Banquet team can
fulfil the clients requirements regarding to the conference perspective. The Leisure team
now will be close with front office, concierge in order to ensure the proper welcome of
leisure customers.
REPORT ON THE WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF PROPOSED CHANGES WITHIN THE
ORGANISATION
35

Regarding to Daft (2010), there would be some wider implications when RUS Plc
take some actions regarding to the organisational change based on the BPRs redesign of
process:
Structural implications: the redesign of the process within RUS Plc will require
the departments have to make communication together in order to make rapid
decision. For instance, the Convention Sales Executive now can ask directly to
Executive Chef in order to have appropriate price for conference buffet lunch to
make quotation to customers.
Performance measurements: the performance measurement now can
concentrate on the last outcome rather than the activity. For example, with the
new redesign and allocation of department, the Revenue Meeting of
Management Board will need to focus only in RevPAR and other indication
relating to the budgeting revenue, room rate and actual figures.
Empowerment implication: the Sales Executives now can have more power and
authorize in order to make quotation to the customers because the performance
now will be rated mainly on the end results of revenue or room rate, guest
satisfaction figures and so on. Therefore, they will have to put more effort in
order to deal the best rate and deliver best service.
Focus-on-customers implication: since the performance measurement would
concentrate on the end result, the customers satisfaction figures can be
considered as a measurement tool for employees performance through the
customers surveys or feedback.
The attitude of management: managers now have to involve in the daily work
routine more than before in order to keep track with the performance and
operation process. They now will provide more training and monitoring the
process to make prompt implementation.
36

HEALTH AND SAFETY MANAGEMENT
RISKS ASSESSMENT
Risk assessment is a careful examination in workplace or in daily work routine of
what can cause harm or damage to people; therefore, the staffs can have appropriate
actions in order to give the precautions or prevent the harm. All of the workers, colleagues
and other staffs have the right to be protected from harm, especially if the company has the
ability to take reasonable control and management.
The affect from the accidents, harms and other health risks factors can lead to the
business operation, causing the financial, health and even live loss. The company lost the
machines and other working tools, important people in management position cannot
continue working can cause a loss in leadership trait, insurance cost and other legislation
cost. Therefore, the company owner has the responsibility in amending the working safety
condition to minimize the harm toward the employees.
There are five steps in assessing the risk within the organisation:
1. Identifying the hazards
2. Deciding who would might likely be harm and which way that they are harm
3. Make the risk evaluation and precaution
4. Recording the findings and make the implementation if needed
5. Review the assessment
The detail of the employers responsibilities to ensure the safety of the working
environment includes:
Make the assessment for the risks that can occur for all employees work for
them.
The employers must be proactive in measuring all risk and identify the
preventive methods for them.
Appointing an internal manager or employee and this person will be responsible
for the preventive and protective methods for those assessed risks.
37

Making announcement to employees for the risks they may face during the
working routine and make the appropriate training for these employees to have
a clear understanding about those risks such as using the fire extinguisher
appropriately in fire life safety training.
Moreover, there are some ways in order to monitor the risks assessment: the
company can conduct the continuous inspection action to check the department or any
place in the company that easily causes the harm. For example, in the case of the ABC, the
coarse warehouse would be a place that can easily cause the fire, therefore, it would be
needed to check frequently. The company can do the internal audit with the test in order to
check the knowledge of the employees about the safety procedures.
LEGISLATION AND REGULATIONS
For the legislation, concerning to the ABC Construction Company, there is Health
and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 with the details and guiding about how to ensure the
safety in workplace. Because ABC is a construction company, therefore, the staffs would
need to have knowledge about their rights of legislation concerning to the safety. This Act
can provide ABC Construction Company the framework for the process of managing health
and safety regulations and policies which are applied on all employees in daily work
operation. The Act also states that the organizations must ensure the health and safety for
any reasonable one who would likely be influenced by their work actions.
Hereby is the detail of the section 37, Act 1974 about Health and Safety at Work:
(1) Where an offence under any of the relevant statutory provisions committed by a
body corporate is proved to have been committed with the consent or connivance of, or to
have been attributable to any neglect on the part of, any director, manager, secretary or other
similar officer of the body corporate or a person who was purporting to act in any such
capacity, he as well as the body corporate shall be guilty of that offence and shall be liable to
be proceeded against and punished accordingly.
(2) Where the affairs of a body corporate are managed by its members, the preceding
subsection shall apply in relation to the acts and defaults of a member in connection with his
functions of management as if he were a director of the body corporate.
38

There are some more important regulations that relate to the work health & safety
that can be applicable in the case of ABC Construction company:
Management of Health and Safety at work Regulations 1999: this regulation can
help the employees to acknowledge their rights regarding to dangerous work
protection as well as being informed concerning to the risk assessment relating
to the daily work operation. This regulation also stated that the employers have
the duty to provide not only necessary equipment but also training,
collaboration for the employees. With a construction company for ABC,
Management of Health and Safety at work Regulations 1999 can help them to
build up the plan or guideline that is ethical and regulatory for the workers.
Working Time Regulations: since the workers of ABC Construction have to deal
with heavy workload or dangerous construction process; therefore, Working
Time Regulations will help the employees to acknowledge their rights regarding
to the weekly work hours, overtime policy, time-off details and so-on in order to
avoid the exploitation from the company. The company also has to take
reference to this regulation and has the duty to inform the employees regarding
to their rights.
The Health and Safety (Safety Signs and Signals) Regulations 1996: ABC
Construction Company has to take reference regarding to this regulation in
order to provide the appropriate safety signals and signs during and after the
construction process such as Fire Life Safety signals or Exit signs in case of
emergency situations.
HEALTH AND SAFETY AT WORK
For the case of ABC Construction Company, there are steps to implement
successfully the health and safety:
1. The company must set up and plan the policy and process of the health and
safety
2. The company must set up the staffs who are responsible for the program and
policy that company arranged.
39

3. The company must plan and set up the standards for health and safety
4. The company must have the performance measurement management.
5. The company must have frequent audit, inspection and review to the policy.
Those steps above can be considered as a Plan-Do-Check-Act system. By taking the
systematic method for the health and safety management, the operation of the company
would be more easier and effective because the managers now have the standards and
policy to follow with potential scenarios for risks, so they can implement and make the
appropriate actions in a smooth way.
The consistent approach and training can reduce the mistakes in hazard handling
situations. In hazard management, the more mistakes the solvers make, the more serious
issues can happen.
It can help the company understand the legislation and regulation and protect the
owners from costly implementation from not applying the appropriate standards such as
the court fees, etc.
PRACTICAL IMPLICATION
The ABC construction company will have such items below that can cause the harm
to the employees:
1. The warehouse with coarse woods, wallpapers, painting and other materials that
can cause fire and explosion.
2. The painting and other chemical substances that are used in the construction can
cause the bio-hazard and other biological allergies, diseases toward workers.
3. The potential threats from the machinery, drills, and other construction vehicles
and devices can cause physical damage or explosion or injury in case the
employees do not know how to use them in the right way.
In order to prevent for those damages, the employees must be equipped with the
helmets and other protection suits, and equipment such as mask, gloves and boots. They
must be provided the detailed manuals for controlling and handling the devices as well as
the materials.
40

The supervisors must ensure the proper training programmes occur for the
workers. The supervisors also have to consult continuously with the workers about the
potential risks that can happen if they do not follow the working process.
The company owners must ensure the factory or the warehouse or any place in the
company is equipped with the appropriate protection equipment such as the fire
extinguishers, the sparkling fire drill, etc. The company owners must also ensure that they
provide the insurance contract for the workers.
REFERENCES
1. Abdullah, M. M. B. & Tar, J. J., 2012. The Influence of Soft and Hard Quality
Management Practices on Performance. Asia Pacific Management Review, 17(2), pp.
177-193.
2. Armstrong, M., 2009. Handbook of Human Resource Management Practice. 11th ed.
s.l.:Kogan Page.
3. Buttle, F., 1996. SERVQUAL: Review, critique, research agenda. European Journal of
Marketing, 30(1), pp. 8-32.
4. Bygrave, W. D. & Zacharakis, A., 2011. Entrepreneurship 2nd Edition. New Jersey:
John Wiley & Sons, Inc..
5. Cateora, P. R., Gilly, M. C. & Graham, J. L., 2011. International Marketing. 15th ed.
New York: The McGraw-Hill.
6. Daft, R. L., 2010. Management. 9th ed. Mason: South-Western Cengage Learning.
7. David, F. R., 2012. Strategic Management: Concepts and Cases (13th Edition). New
Jersey: Pearson Prentice Hall.
8. Dessler, G., 2012. Fundamentals of Human Resource Management. 2nd ed.
s.l.:Pearson.
9. Duc Phat Bakery, 2014. Company History. [Online]
Available at: http://www.ducphat-
41

bakery.com/page/company_info/company_history
[Accessed 01 July 2014].
10. Forbes, 2014. Forbes Travel Guide. [Online]
Available at: http://www.forbestravelguide.com/about/awardwinners
[Accessed 16 February 2014].
11. Gale, 2009. Encyclopedia of Management. 6th ed. s.l.:Cengage Learning.
12. Ghosal, S. & Bartlett, C. A., 1995. Changing the Role of Top Management: Beyond
Structure to Process. Harvard Business Review, January-February, pp. 86-96.
13. Gomez-Mejia, L. R., Balkin, D. B. & Cardy, R. L., 2012. Managing Human Resources. 7th
ed. s.l.:Pearson.
14. Han, Y. . & Lee, J.-J. "., 2012. Strategic Actions, Structural Choices, and Performance
Implications. The Journal of Global Business Management, February, 8(1), pp. 148-
152.
15. Hartley, R. F., 2009. Marketing Mistakes and Successes. 11th ed. s.l.:John Wiley & Sons
Inc..
16. Hitt, M. A., Ireland, R. D. & Hoskisson, R. E., 2011. Strategic Management: Concepts
and Cases: Competitiveness and Globalization. 9th ed. s.l.:South-Western Cengage
Learning.
17. Hotel Business Review, 2011. IHG Reorganizes Regional Reporting Structure Effective
in February, 2012, s.l.: Hotel Business Review.
18. IHG, 2012. IHG launces first hotel brand designed for the Chinese consumer - Hualuxe
Hotels and Resorts, Coventry: M2 Presswire.
19. IHG, 2012. InterContinental Hanoi Westlake MSS Report, s.l.: IHG.
20. IHG, 2013. IHG Hotel and Room World Stats, s.l.: IHG.
21. IHG, 2013. InterContinental Hotels Group Plc. [Online]
Available at: http://www.ihgplc.com/
[Accessed 16 February 2014].
42

22. IHG, 2013. Overview of IHG. [Online]
Available at: http://www.ihgplc.com/index.asp?pageid=40
23. Johnson, G., Scholes, K. & Whittington, R., 2007. Exploring Corporate Strategy. 8th ed.
s.l.:Prentice Hall.
24. Knowles, G., 2011. Quality Management. s.l.:Bookboon.
25. Ladotea, 2014. Lam Dong Tea Joint Stock Company. [Online]
Available at: http://ladotea.com.vn/?php=html&basic=detail&id=7&lang=en
[Accessed 01 July 2014].
26. MarketLine, 2012. Company Profile: InterContinental Hotels Group Plc, s.l.:
MarketLine.
27. Mauch, P. D., 2010. Quality Management: Theory and Application. s.l.:Taylor and
Francis Group, LLC.
28. Mustapha, M. & Daud, N., 2013. Perceived Performance Appraisal Effectiveness And
Turnover Intention Of Knowledge Workers: A Conceptual Model. Interdisciplinary
Journal of Contemporary Research in Business, 5(7), pp. 11-38.
29. Portny, S. E., 2010. Project Management for Dummies. 3rd ed. s.l.:Wiley Publishing
Inc..
30. Project Management Institute, 2013. A Guide to the Project Management Body of
Knowledge: PMBOK(R) Guide. 5th ed. s.l.:Project Management Institute.
31. Robbins, S. P. & Coulter, M., 2012. Management. 11th ed. New Jersey: Prentice Hall.
32. Robertson, J. C. & Robertson, S., 2006. Mastering the Requirements Process. [Online]
Available at: http://www.informit.com/articles/article.aspx?p=467373&seqNum=9
33. Rowland, C. A. & Hall, R. D., 2012. Organizational Justic and Performance: is
appraisal fair?. EuroMed Journal of Business, 7(3), pp. 280-293.
34. Rushton, A., Croucher, P. & Baker, P., 2010. The Handbook of Logistics & Distribution
Management. 4th ed. s.l.:Kogan Page.
43

35. Slack, N., Brandon-Jones, A. & Johnston, R., 2013. Operations Management. 7th ed.
s.l.:Prentice Hall .
36. Wheelen, T. L. & Hunger, J. D., 2012. Strategic Management and Business Policy:
Toward Global Sustainability. 13th ed. New Jersey: Prentice Hall.

Você também pode gostar