Frank Barnaba has rescued people from human trafficking situations for decades and received an award from President Reagan for his work. Now retired, he has started the Barnaba Institute to continue his humanitarian mission. As its president, Frank is involved in providing direct services to victims of sex trafficking, often in dangerous urban environments in the Northeast. The Barnaba Institute not only provides necessities, such as clothing, to victims, but also education and training about the scope and dangers of human trafficking to other organizations and the general public. Contacts with many organizations, such as Covenant House, the largest nonprofit child services agency in the U.S., have provided a forum for Frank's outreach and rescue techniques. Barnaba Institute's executive director, however, is concerned not only with accomplishing the organization's mission, but with finding adequate resources. Having used up the "seed" funding during its first three years, the executive director must now review its choices for continuing into the future.
In 1969, Megalith centralized its financial and control functions. John Boyd, senior vice president for finance, hired four brilliant young managers to "bring the group out of the stone age." By 1975, this management team had created a near-perfect finance office of 630 employees. But two of the "young stars" have just quit, and Boyd is sure the constraints of salary ceilings are responsible. He talks with a compensation consultant (Hay Associates).
Growth in demands on the bank's "back office" required a totally new approach to management. New stress on systems orientation, objectives, measurement, process design and control has resulted in lower costs, fewer people, and higher quality. Also resulted in fear, suspicion, and alienation in middle management. How to get the benefits of change without the unanticipated consequences?
Growth in the banking field has produced new demands on the "back office." Traditional management practices in check processing and paper handling operations have resulted in ten years of cost increases and quality loss. New manager of the operating group faces an action question--can he turn the back office into a production-oriented factory?