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Managing Organizations ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN FOR STRATEGIC COMPETENCY (OD = THE CONSTRUCTION OR CHANGING OF AN ORGANIZATION’S STRUCTURE) Objectives: 1. DESCRIBE AND EXPLAIN THE ORGANIZATION DESIGN OPTIONS 2. IDENTIFY THE PRINCIPLES OF ORGANIZATION DESIGN (THE CLASSICAL OR THE „OLD MODEL“ OF ORGANIZATION) 3. CONTRAST MECHANISTIC VERSUS ORGANIC ORGANIZATIONS 4. EXERCISE – ORGANIZING (XYZ paper company) © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007 Organization Design Options ORGANIZING AS A MANAGERIAL FUNCTION (P, O, L, C) DEALS WITH ORGANIZATION STRUCTURES Organization structure definitions OS IS A FORMAL SYSTEM OF WORKING RELATIONSHIP THAT BOTH SEPARATES AND INTEGRATES TASKS OS ENABLES EMP-ees TO WORK TOGETHER EFFECTIVELY BY: 1. ALLOCATING PEOPLE AND RESOURCES TO TASKS 2. CLARIFYING RESPONSIBILITIES THROUGH JOB DESCRIPTIONS, ORGANIZATIONS CHARTS & LINES OF AUTHORITY 3. LETTING EMPLOYEES KNOW WHAT IS EXPECTED OF THEM BY ESTABLISHING RULES, REGULATIONS, OPERATING PROCEDURES & PERFORMANCE STANDARDS 4. CREATING CONDITIONS FOR COLLECTING AND EVALUATING INFORMATION TO HELP MANAGERS MAKE DECISIONS AND SOLVE PROBLEMS © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007 Basic Elements of OS SPECIALIZATION: The process of identifying specialized tasks and assigning them to individuals or work groups who have been trained specifically to do them STANDARDIZATION: Developing the procedures an organization uses to ensure that employees perform their jobs in a uniform and consistent manner. Standardization promotes predictable behaviors COORDINATION: The formal and informal procedures that integrate both managerial and employee activities AUTHORITY: The right to make decisions and take actions COMPLEXITY: Considers how much differentiation (division of labor, number of vertical levels, etc.) there is in the organization FORMALIZATION: The degree to which an organization relies on rules and procedures to direct the behavior of employees CENTRALIZATION: The concentration of decision-making authority in upper management. © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007 Organization Chart DESCRIBES FIVE (5) MAJOR POINTS ABOUT AN ORGANIZATION STRUCTURE: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. TASKS SUBDIVISIONS TYPE OF WORK LEVEL OF MANAGEMENT LINES OF AUTHORITY © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007 Basic Principles of Organization Design 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. DIVISION OF LABOR UNITY OF COMMAND AUTHORITY AND RESPONSIBILITY SPAN OF CONTROL DEPARTMENTALIZATION © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007 Basic Principles of Organization Design Division of Labor: INDIVIDUALS SPECIALIZE IN DOING PART OF AN ACTIVITY RATHER THAN THE ENTIRE ACTIVITY © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007 Basic Principles of Organization Design Unity of Command: NO PERSON SHOULD REPORT TO TWO OR MORE BOSSES This is the classical view – when organizations were comparatively simple. Strict adherence to this principle creates a degree of inflexibility, and then lower efficiency © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007 Basic Principles of Organization Design Authority & Responsibility: AUTHORITY IS A RIGHT, THE LEGITIMACY WHICH IS BASED ON THE PERSON’S POSITION IN THE ORGANIZATION (Legitimate power) POWER – AN INDIVIDUAL’S CAPACITY INFLUENCE DECISIONS (Other people) TO RESPONSIBILITY - AN OBLIGATION TO PERFORM © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007 Basic Principles of Organization Design Span of Control: A NUMBER OF SUBORDINATES A MANAGER CAN DIRECT EFFECTIVELY AND EFFICIENTLY © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007 Basic Principles of Organization Design Departmentalization: THE WAY HOW ACTIVITIES SHOULD BE GROUPED INTO DEPARTMENTS THERE ARE FIVE WAYS: · FUNCTIONAL · PRODUCT · CUSTOMER · GEOGRAPHIC · PROCESS © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007 Organization Design Concepts THERE ARE TWO BASIC DESIGN CONCEPTS TODAY: 1. 2. ORGANIZATION MECHANISTIC ORGANIZATION ORGANIC ORGANIZATION © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007 Mechanistic Organization (Bureaucracy) STRUCTURE CREATED BY APPLICATION OF THE CLASSICAL PRINCIPLES. THIS STRUCTURE SCORES HIGH ON: Complexity Formalization Centralization © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007 Organic Organization (Adhocracy) IS A DIRECT CONTRAST TO THE MECHANISTIC FORM THIS STRUCTURE SCORES LOW ON: Complexity Formalization Centralization (DECENTRALIZED) © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007 Mechanistic vs. Organic Concept KEY CONTINGENCIES (factors that influence the decision what form of the structure is best suitable in certain conditions): · · · · ORGANIZATION’S STRATEGY SIZE OF AN ORGANIZATION USED TECHNOLOGY ENVIRONMENT © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007 Mechanistic Design Options FUNCTIONAL structure DIVISIONAL structure IS A DESIGN THAT GROUPS SIMILAR OR RELATED OCCUPATIONAL SPECIALITIES TOGETHER CREATES SELFCONTAINED, AUTONOMOUS UNITS THAT ARE USUALLY ORGANIZED ALONG MECHANIC LINES Each unit / division is generally autonomous, with a division manager responsible for performance and holding complete strategic and operating decision-making authority © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007 Divisional Structure: Major Advantage / Disadvantage Focus on results Frees HQ staff from operating details Duplication of activities & resources © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007 Divisional Structure: Example Divisional Organization Structure Company Ex Executive Vice-President Buick Oldsmobile Cadillac Chevrolet Pontiac Trucks Busses Buick Division Chevrolet Motor Division Truck & Bus Operation Oldsmobile Division Pontiac Motor Division Truck & Bus Engineering Cadillac Division © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007 Organic Design Options · · · · · SIMPLE STRUCTURE MATRIX STRUCTURE NETWORK STRUCTURE TASK FORCE STRUCTURE COMMITTEE STRUCTURE © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007 Organization Design Options (Summary) Design Strengths Functional Economies through specialization Divisional High accountability for results Simple Speed, economy, flexibility Matrix Economies through specialization & accountability for product results Network Speed, economy, flexibility Task Force Flexibility Committee Flexibility © J. Rudy, Organizational Behavior, FMCU, Fall 2007