AbstractsEngineering

A case study of the effect on personnel managements productivity in an engineering packaging company

by Muvhango Reginald Mphotwana




Institution: University of Johannesburg
Department:
Year: 2015
Keywords: Personnel management
Record ID: 1442094
Full text PDF: http://hdl.handle.net/10210/13175


Abstract

Employee management plays an important role in the productivity of any organisation. The topic studies the aspects that create an environment conducive to good performance. The findings can assist organisational leaders in creating successful turnaround strategies and streamline their business processes. Although people management has been around for some time, many companies still experience personnel problems that affect productivity. The common problem for South Africa is a plague of strikes that hit us year after year. A question might be asked, why affected organisations have not come up with pre-emptive strategies. This research uses a case study in an engineering packaging company, SPZ, to Determine the reasons behind people’s behaviour at work, why they react in a certain way, and how they can be managed effectively. The case study also shows results of the interviews conducted on a group of 15 random sampled employees. This will uncover the human side that could cause a plant with good equipment to be unproductive. The case present information on the company and the problems it is facing. The case study method was better suited because it digs deeper into the problems and provides a snapshot on the relationship between workers and managers. This dissertation includes literature studies on the topics dealing with teamwork, leadership, communication, negotiation, and motivation. In addition, how they relate or affect productivity. The biggest challenge at SPZ is lack of effective formal communication in the organisation starting a chain reaction, fuelled by continental cultural differences, manifesting itself in the form of low productivity. There is management productivity problem; some foreign managers were not prepared enough to manage a South African workforce.