The 14 Must-Know Principles of Business Management

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Raghad Eid

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Raghad Eid is a content strategist at Vardot, a Drupal Diamond Certified Partner and Drupal AI Initiative Gold Sponsor. She writes on enterprise CMS architecture, headless Drupal, and digital experience platforms.

FAQs

Henri Fayol's 14 principles of management are: division of work, authority and responsibility, discipline, unity of command, unity of direction, subordination of individual interest, remuneration, centralization, scalar chain, order, equity, stability of tenure, initiative, and esprit de corps. He introduced them in his 1916 book General and Industrial Management as a practical framework for organizing work, authority, and cooperation.

Henri Fayol (1841-1925) was a French mining engineer and executive who spent his career observing and testing management techniques. He published his 14 principles in 1916 in Administration Industrielle et Générale, later translated into English as General and Industrial Management. His work is considered a foundation of modern administrative management theory.

Yes. Although Fayol introduced them more than a century ago, the 14 principles still apply because they address timeless needs—clear authority, streamlined processes, fairness, and teamwork. Modern organizations adapt them rather than discard them: unity of direction underpins agile and DevOps teams, and esprit de corps maps directly to today's focus on culture and engagement.

Alongside his 14 principles, Fayol defined five functions of management: planning, organizing, commanding (leading), coordinating, and controlling. The 14 principles describe the values a manager should apply; the five functions describe the activities a manager actually performs. Together they form Fayol's complete model of administrative management.

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