Difference between revisions of "Effectiveness"
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According to [[Organizational Behavior by Robbins and Judge (17th edition)]], | According to [[Organizational Behavior by Robbins and Judge (17th edition)]], | ||
:[[Effectiveness]]. The degree to which an organization meets the needs of its clientele or customers. | :[[Effectiveness]]. The degree to which an organization meets the needs of its clientele or customers. | ||
+ | According to [[Cost Accounting by Horngren, Datar, Rajan (14th edition)]], | ||
+ | [[Effectiveness]]. The degree to which a predetermined objective or target is met. | ||
According to [[Management by Robbins and Coulter (14th edition)]], | According to [[Management by Robbins and Coulter (14th edition)]], | ||
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*[[Job Search Pivots]]. | *[[Job Search Pivots]]. | ||
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Revision as of 12:30, 10 July 2020
Effectiveness. The degree to which an enterprise does those activities that result in achieving its goals. In other words, effectiveness is the measure of how an enterprise meets the needs of its clientele or customers.
Definitions
According to Organizational Behavior by Robbins and Judge (17th edition),
- Effectiveness. The degree to which an organization meets the needs of its clientele or customers.
According to Cost Accounting by Horngren, Datar, Rajan (14th edition), Effectiveness. The degree to which a predetermined objective or target is met.
According to Management by Robbins and Coulter (14th edition),
- Effectiveness. Doing the right things, or doing those work activities that will result in achieving goals.
Related concepts
- Performance. The end result of an activity.
- Efficiency is the degree to which an enterprise gets the most outputs from the least amount of inputs.
Efficiency is doing things right; effectiveness is doing the right things. -- Peter Drucker, management consultant