MGMT CH 2
What is the Organizational Environment?
The organizational environment is a set of forces and conditions that can affect the way the organization operates and the way managers engage in planning and organizing
Internal environment : forces operating within an organization and stemming from structure and climate
External environment : forces operating beyond boundaries of organization
Stakeholders : the persons, groups and institutions that are affected by internal and external environments
What is the Organizational Environment?
Set of forces and conditions that affect the way an organization operates and the way managers engage
Forces change over time and are made up of opportunities and threats:
Opportunities : openings for managers to strengthen their organization by making and selling more products, obtaining more resources and capital or opening markets
Threats : issues that can devastate an organization if managers are unable to sell products and revenues/profits plunge
Forces in the Organizational Environment
External Organizational Environment
Industry-specific or task environment:
Set of external forces that affects organization’s ability to obtain inputs and dispose of outputs
Immediate and direct impact on managers
General environment:
Political, economic, socio-cultural, technological and international (global) forces
Affecting industry and hence organization
Managers must constantly analyze forces
The Task Environment
Suppliers:
Provide input resources (raw materials, labour, financing)
Managers must ensure reliable suppliers in a global economy
Tasked with finding reliable overseas suppliers offering lowest-prices and highest-quality products
Supply chain management is complicated due to shortages, unions, lack of substitutes and need to coordinate suppliers
Managers often prefer to have many, similar suppliers of each item
The Task Environment
Distributors:
Organizations that help others to sell goods or services to customers
Changing nature of distributors and distribution methods brings threats and opportunities for managers
Large distributors are so powerful they can control customer’s access to an organization’s goods and services.
Power of distributors can be weakened if there are too many options for manufacturers and wholesalers
Selling directly online weakens the power of distributors.
The Task Environment
Customers:
Individuals and groups that buy the goods and services an organization produces
Changing customer types, tastes and needs result in opportunities and threats
Example: Consumer demand for spring fashion difficult to predict one year earlier when purchasing product lines
The Task Environment
Competitors:
Organizations that produce goods or services that are similar to a particular organization’s goods or services
Rivalry between competitors can be most threatening force facing managers
High levels of rivalry often results in price competition
Reduces access to resources and causes profits to decrease
Potential competitors : organizations not currently in a task environment but with resources to enter
Barriers to Entry
Factors that make it difficult and costly for a company to enter a particular task environment
Three main sources:
Economies of scale : cost advantages associated with large operations such as buying raw material in bulk
Brand loyalty : customers’ preference for the products or organizations currently in the task environment
Government regulations : national and global policies can prevent entry at both industry and country levels
Barriers to Entry and Competition
The General Environment
Consists of broader forces including: political, economic, socio-cultural, technological and international (PESTI)
Managers usually cannot impact or control these
Managers must constantly analyze the forces impacting the general environment in order to manage effectively
The General Environment
Political forces:
Outcomes of changes in laws and regulations, resulting from political and legal developments within a nation/region/world
Strong trends:
Deregulation : opening industries previously controlled by the state to free market competition
Privatization : organizations once controlled by the state are sold to individuals or corporations
Increased emphasis on employee safety, environmental protection and preservation
The General Environment
Political forces (continued):
Competition Act (1986) provides legislation on how companies may operate
Competition Bureau acts to maintain and encourage competition within Canada
Political integration of countries during the last several decades.
Political unions to allow free exchange of resources and capital, e.g., the European Union (EU)
The General Environment
Economic forces:
Affect general health and well-being of a nation or regional economy of an organization
Includes interest rates, inflation, unemployment, economic growth.
The General Environment
Economic forces (continued):
Strong economic conditions:
People have more money to spend, thus organizations have opportunity to sell more goods and services
Resources become easier to acquire
Poor economic conditions:
Limit managers’ ability to gain necessary resources
Fewer customers for goods and services
Creates uncertainty, complexity and risk for managers
The General Environment
Socio-cultural forces:
Pressures coming from the social structure of a country or society or from the national culture
Social structure : the arrangement of individuals or groups in a society
National culture : the set of values that a society considers important and the norms of behaviour that are acceptable in society
The General Environment
Socio-cultural forces (continued):
Social structure and national culture differ across societies and also change within societies over time
Effective managers:
Are sensitive to differences in the social structures and national cultures of all countries in which they operate (and adjust their behaviours accordingly)
Respond to changing behavourial and consumer trends within a society
Realize that management practices effective in Canada might not work elsewhere
National culture
Individualism vs collectivism: Are individual freedoms and self-expression more important than contribution to the group?
Power difference: are inequalities in power due to difference in capabilities and heritage?
Achievement vs nurturing: Is success or quality of life more important?
Uncertainty avoidance: How much tolerance is there for individual beliefs and actions.
Orientation: is it long-term or short-term? Is it better to save or spend?
The General Environment
Socio-cultural forces (continued):
Demographic forces : outcomes of changes in the characteristics of a population
Such as age, gender, ethnic origin, race, sexual orientation, and social class
Many industrial countries have an aging population
Creates opportunities for organizations catering to older people
Decline in the number of young people joining labour force
The General Environment
Technological forces:
Results from changes in technology that managers use to design, produce and distribute goods and services
Profound implications for managers and organizations:
Can make established products obsolete overnight
Information technology is constantly changing the nature of work itself within the organization and the manager’s job
Managers must move quickly to respond to technological changes
The General Environment
International/global forces:
Result from changes in international relationships, changes in nations’ economic, political, and legal systems, and changes in technology
Increasing economic integration of countries around world
Free-trade agreements (NAFTA, EU) designed to lower barriers to the free flow of goods and services between nations
Managers view the global environment as open – companies are free to buy from, or sell to, whichever companies and countries they choose
The Global Environment
Globalization:
The set of specific and general forces that work together to integrate and connect economic, political, and social systems across countries, cultures, or geographic regions.
Nations and peoples, as well as world’s markets and businesses become increasingly interdependent
Shaped by the ebb and flow of capital, seeking investments which can earn the greatest returns
Capital flow among countries
Four principal forms of capital flow between countries:
Human capital
Financial capital
Resource capital
Political capital
Declining Barriers to
Trade and Investment
Historically (1920s – 1930s): high tariffs : tax that government imposes on goods imported into one country from another
Results in series of retaliatory moves as countries raise tariff barriers against each other
Example: 2017 NAFTA negotiations
COVID increased protectionism, e.g. the manufacture of PPE
GATT and The Rise of Free Trade
After WWII countries committed to removing trade barriers
Free-trade doctrine : if each country specializes in the production of goods and services that it can produce most efficiently, this will make best use of global resources
International treaty:
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
Declining Barriers of Distance and Culture
Historically, managers were focused on domestic markets due to barriers of distance and culture
Barriers being reduced by:
Advances in communications, including satellites, digital technology, the Internet, global computer networks, video teleconferencing, etc..
Innovations in transportation technology, including commercial jet travel
Development of global communication networks and media
Regional Trade Agreements
Growth of regional trade agreements:
European Free Trade Agreement (EFTA)
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
Canada-US-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA)
Free-trade areas creates opportunities for manufacturing organizations to reduce costs
Can expose organization based in one member country to increased competition from companies based in the other member countries
Recent trade wars
Protectionism: tariffs or quotas on imported goods to bolster domestic production of manufactured goods
Often leads to retaliatory actions
Consequences unknown
Managing the External Environment
Managers must analyze threats and opportunities by measuring:
Level of complexity in the environment
Rate at which the environment is changing
Environmental complexity:
Depends on the number and potential impact of the forces
Managers must pay closer attention to forces with larger impact
Generally, the larger the organization, the greater the number of environmental forces managers must respond to
Uncertainty in the Environment and Managerial Action
Managing the External Environment
Environmental change:
Refers to the degree to which forces in the task and general environments change and evolve over time
Managers must anticipate future and decide on actions to ensure continued organizational success
Example: MacDonald’s
Managing the External Environment
All managers must find ways to reduce the number and impact of forces in external environment
CEO and top-management : devise strategies
Middle managers : collect relevant information:
Future intentions of competitors
Identity of new customers
Identity of new suppliers
First-line managers : use resources more efficiently and customer service
Responsibilities for Managing the Forces in the Organization’s Environment
Managers as Agents of Change
Change in the environment is a two-way process:
Environmental change direct consequence of actions taken by managers
Organization is an open system
Ability to predict events is determined by rate of change and complexity of the environment
Managers make decisions under conditions of:
Uncertainty : state of environmental forces that is so dynamic managers cannot predict the probable outcomes of actions
Certainty : state of environmental forces that is stable enough to predict possible outcomes of decisions
Tips for managers to reduce uncertainty
Scenario planning to imagine multiple different futures.
Adaptable strategies
Identifying societal needs, benefits, and harms that are or could be embodied in the firm’s products.
Analyzing underserved markets
Exploring societal needs to discover new opportunities
Adopting technology to enhance resource utilization, process efficiency, and quality.
Uncertainty Matrix
Challenges for Management in a Global Environment
Building a competitive advantage while maintaining ethical standards;
Utilizing new kinds of technologies based on artificial intelligence and machine learning; and
Embracing and overcoming differences in national cultures to curb racism and discrimination.
Creating shared value
Movement away from “shareholder capitalism” toward “stakeholder capitalism.”
“Policies and operating practices that enhance the competitiveness of a company while simultaneously advancing the economic and social conditions in the communities in which it operates.
Identifying and expanding the connections between societal and economic progress”
Building Blocks of Competitive Advantage
Increasing Efficiency
Reduce the quantity of resources (such as people and raw materials) they use to produce goods or services
Training workers in new skills and techniques
New technological solutions to project management
Creating alliances and partnerships
Increasing Quality
Global competition has increased pressure on companies to improve the quality of goods and services delivered.
Techniques known as total quality management (TQM).
Employees supported to find new and better ways to perform their jobs
Reducing their environmental footprint
Monitoring and evaluating the quality of the goods they produce.
Increasing Innovation
The process of creating new goods and services that customers want or need, or developing better ways to produce or provide goods and services
Creating an organizational culture to support innovation
Rewarding risk-taking
Among the most difficult managerial tasks.
Increasing Responsiveness
Adapting to changing customers needs and interests
Re-evaluating traditional markets
Identifying underserved markets
Training employees
Maintaining Ethical Standards
Pressure to improve performance can be healthy vs. harmful:
Healthy - encourages managers to question operations and to find new and better ways to plan, organize, lead and control
Harmful - may induce managers to behave unethically
Important that all members of an organization behave ethically as they pursue organizational goals
Incudes environmental, social, and governance (ESG) goals and diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) goals
Utilizing Artificial Intelligence and New Information Technologies
Using machines to automate functions usually performed by people
Information processing is at the heart of the next transformation of work and managing organizations
Changing how managers get and utilize resources to achieve organizational goals.
The Importance of National Culture
Differences in values, norms, and attitudes
Shapes individual behaviour by specifying appropriate and inappropriate behaviour and interaction with others
Management practices must be tailored to the cultural contexts within which an organization operates
Diversity adds value
Cultural intelligence—an appreciation of how national cultures differ
What is the Organizational Environment?
The organizational environment is a set of forces and conditions that can affect the way the organization operates and the way managers engage in planning and organizing
Internal environment : forces operating within an organization and stemming from structure and climate
External environment : forces operating beyond boundaries of organization
Stakeholders : the persons, groups and institutions that are affected by internal and external environments
What is the Organizational Environment?
Set of forces and conditions that affect the way an organization operates and the way managers engage
Forces change over time and are made up of opportunities and threats:
Opportunities : openings for managers to strengthen their organization by making and selling more products, obtaining more resources and capital or opening markets
Threats : issues that can devastate an organization if managers are unable to sell products and revenues/profits plunge
Forces in the Organizational Environment
External Organizational Environment
Industry-specific or task environment:
Set of external forces that affects organization’s ability to obtain inputs and dispose of outputs
Immediate and direct impact on managers
General environment:
Political, economic, socio-cultural, technological and international (global) forces
Affecting industry and hence organization
Managers must constantly analyze forces
The Task Environment
Suppliers:
Provide input resources (raw materials, labour, financing)
Managers must ensure reliable suppliers in a global economy
Tasked with finding reliable overseas suppliers offering lowest-prices and highest-quality products
Supply chain management is complicated due to shortages, unions, lack of substitutes and need to coordinate suppliers
Managers often prefer to have many, similar suppliers of each item
The Task Environment
Distributors:
Organizations that help others to sell goods or services to customers
Changing nature of distributors and distribution methods brings threats and opportunities for managers
Large distributors are so powerful they can control customer’s access to an organization’s goods and services.
Power of distributors can be weakened if there are too many options for manufacturers and wholesalers
Selling directly online weakens the power of distributors.
The Task Environment
Customers:
Individuals and groups that buy the goods and services an organization produces
Changing customer types, tastes and needs result in opportunities and threats
Example: Consumer demand for spring fashion difficult to predict one year earlier when purchasing product lines
The Task Environment
Competitors:
Organizations that produce goods or services that are similar to a particular organization’s goods or services
Rivalry between competitors can be most threatening force facing managers
High levels of rivalry often results in price competition
Reduces access to resources and causes profits to decrease
Potential competitors : organizations not currently in a task environment but with resources to enter
Barriers to Entry
Factors that make it difficult and costly for a company to enter a particular task environment
Three main sources:
Economies of scale : cost advantages associated with large operations such as buying raw material in bulk
Brand loyalty : customers’ preference for the products or organizations currently in the task environment
Government regulations : national and global policies can prevent entry at both industry and country levels
Barriers to Entry and Competition
The General Environment
Consists of broader forces including: political, economic, socio-cultural, technological and international (PESTI)
Managers usually cannot impact or control these
Managers must constantly analyze the forces impacting the general environment in order to manage effectively
The General Environment
Political forces:
Outcomes of changes in laws and regulations, resulting from political and legal developments within a nation/region/world
Strong trends:
Deregulation : opening industries previously controlled by the state to free market competition
Privatization : organizations once controlled by the state are sold to individuals or corporations
Increased emphasis on employee safety, environmental protection and preservation
The General Environment
Political forces (continued):
Competition Act (1986) provides legislation on how companies may operate
Competition Bureau acts to maintain and encourage competition within Canada
Political integration of countries during the last several decades.
Political unions to allow free exchange of resources and capital, e.g., the European Union (EU)
The General Environment
Economic forces:
Affect general health and well-being of a nation or regional economy of an organization
Includes interest rates, inflation, unemployment, economic growth.
The General Environment
Economic forces (continued):
Strong economic conditions:
People have more money to spend, thus organizations have opportunity to sell more goods and services
Resources become easier to acquire
Poor economic conditions:
Limit managers’ ability to gain necessary resources
Fewer customers for goods and services
Creates uncertainty, complexity and risk for managers
The General Environment
Socio-cultural forces:
Pressures coming from the social structure of a country or society or from the national culture
Social structure : the arrangement of individuals or groups in a society
National culture : the set of values that a society considers important and the norms of behaviour that are acceptable in society
The General Environment
Socio-cultural forces (continued):
Social structure and national culture differ across societies and also change within societies over time
Effective managers:
Are sensitive to differences in the social structures and national cultures of all countries in which they operate (and adjust their behaviours accordingly)
Respond to changing behavourial and consumer trends within a society
Realize that management practices effective in Canada might not work elsewhere
National culture
Individualism vs collectivism: Are individual freedoms and self-expression more important than contribution to the group?
Power difference: are inequalities in power due to difference in capabilities and heritage?
Achievement vs nurturing: Is success or quality of life more important?
Uncertainty avoidance: How much tolerance is there for individual beliefs and actions.
Orientation: is it long-term or short-term? Is it better to save or spend?
The General Environment
Socio-cultural forces (continued):
Demographic forces : outcomes of changes in the characteristics of a population
Such as age, gender, ethnic origin, race, sexual orientation, and social class
Many industrial countries have an aging population
Creates opportunities for organizations catering to older people
Decline in the number of young people joining labour force
The General Environment
Technological forces:
Results from changes in technology that managers use to design, produce and distribute goods and services
Profound implications for managers and organizations:
Can make established products obsolete overnight
Information technology is constantly changing the nature of work itself within the organization and the manager’s job
Managers must move quickly to respond to technological changes
The General Environment
International/global forces:
Result from changes in international relationships, changes in nations’ economic, political, and legal systems, and changes in technology
Increasing economic integration of countries around world
Free-trade agreements (NAFTA, EU) designed to lower barriers to the free flow of goods and services between nations
Managers view the global environment as open – companies are free to buy from, or sell to, whichever companies and countries they choose
The Global Environment
Globalization:
The set of specific and general forces that work together to integrate and connect economic, political, and social systems across countries, cultures, or geographic regions.
Nations and peoples, as well as world’s markets and businesses become increasingly interdependent
Shaped by the ebb and flow of capital, seeking investments which can earn the greatest returns
Capital flow among countries
Four principal forms of capital flow between countries:
Human capital
Financial capital
Resource capital
Political capital
Declining Barriers to
Trade and Investment
Historically (1920s – 1930s): high tariffs : tax that government imposes on goods imported into one country from another
Results in series of retaliatory moves as countries raise tariff barriers against each other
Example: 2017 NAFTA negotiations
COVID increased protectionism, e.g. the manufacture of PPE
GATT and The Rise of Free Trade
After WWII countries committed to removing trade barriers
Free-trade doctrine : if each country specializes in the production of goods and services that it can produce most efficiently, this will make best use of global resources
International treaty:
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
Declining Barriers of Distance and Culture
Historically, managers were focused on domestic markets due to barriers of distance and culture
Barriers being reduced by:
Advances in communications, including satellites, digital technology, the Internet, global computer networks, video teleconferencing, etc..
Innovations in transportation technology, including commercial jet travel
Development of global communication networks and media
Regional Trade Agreements
Growth of regional trade agreements:
European Free Trade Agreement (EFTA)
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
Canada-US-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA)
Free-trade areas creates opportunities for manufacturing organizations to reduce costs
Can expose organization based in one member country to increased competition from companies based in the other member countries
Recent trade wars
Protectionism: tariffs or quotas on imported goods to bolster domestic production of manufactured goods
Often leads to retaliatory actions
Consequences unknown
Managing the External Environment
Managers must analyze threats and opportunities by measuring:
Level of complexity in the environment
Rate at which the environment is changing
Environmental complexity:
Depends on the number and potential impact of the forces
Managers must pay closer attention to forces with larger impact
Generally, the larger the organization, the greater the number of environmental forces managers must respond to
Uncertainty in the Environment and Managerial Action
Managing the External Environment
Environmental change:
Refers to the degree to which forces in the task and general environments change and evolve over time
Managers must anticipate future and decide on actions to ensure continued organizational success
Example: MacDonald’s
Managing the External Environment
All managers must find ways to reduce the number and impact of forces in external environment
CEO and top-management : devise strategies
Middle managers : collect relevant information:
Future intentions of competitors
Identity of new customers
Identity of new suppliers
First-line managers : use resources more efficiently and customer service
Responsibilities for Managing the Forces in the Organization’s Environment
Managers as Agents of Change
Change in the environment is a two-way process:
Environmental change direct consequence of actions taken by managers
Organization is an open system
Ability to predict events is determined by rate of change and complexity of the environment
Managers make decisions under conditions of:
Uncertainty : state of environmental forces that is so dynamic managers cannot predict the probable outcomes of actions
Certainty : state of environmental forces that is stable enough to predict possible outcomes of decisions
Tips for managers to reduce uncertainty
Scenario planning to imagine multiple different futures.
Adaptable strategies
Identifying societal needs, benefits, and harms that are or could be embodied in the firm’s products.
Analyzing underserved markets
Exploring societal needs to discover new opportunities
Adopting technology to enhance resource utilization, process efficiency, and quality.
Uncertainty Matrix
Challenges for Management in a Global Environment
Building a competitive advantage while maintaining ethical standards;
Utilizing new kinds of technologies based on artificial intelligence and machine learning; and
Embracing and overcoming differences in national cultures to curb racism and discrimination.
Creating shared value
Movement away from “shareholder capitalism” toward “stakeholder capitalism.”
“Policies and operating practices that enhance the competitiveness of a company while simultaneously advancing the economic and social conditions in the communities in which it operates.
Identifying and expanding the connections between societal and economic progress”
Building Blocks of Competitive Advantage
Increasing Efficiency
Reduce the quantity of resources (such as people and raw materials) they use to produce goods or services
Training workers in new skills and techniques
New technological solutions to project management
Creating alliances and partnerships
Increasing Quality
Global competition has increased pressure on companies to improve the quality of goods and services delivered.
Techniques known as total quality management (TQM).
Employees supported to find new and better ways to perform their jobs
Reducing their environmental footprint
Monitoring and evaluating the quality of the goods they produce.
Increasing Innovation
The process of creating new goods and services that customers want or need, or developing better ways to produce or provide goods and services
Creating an organizational culture to support innovation
Rewarding risk-taking
Among the most difficult managerial tasks.
Increasing Responsiveness
Adapting to changing customers needs and interests
Re-evaluating traditional markets
Identifying underserved markets
Training employees
Maintaining Ethical Standards
Pressure to improve performance can be healthy vs. harmful:
Healthy - encourages managers to question operations and to find new and better ways to plan, organize, lead and control
Harmful - may induce managers to behave unethically
Important that all members of an organization behave ethically as they pursue organizational goals
Incudes environmental, social, and governance (ESG) goals and diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) goals
Utilizing Artificial Intelligence and New Information Technologies
Using machines to automate functions usually performed by people
Information processing is at the heart of the next transformation of work and managing organizations
Changing how managers get and utilize resources to achieve organizational goals.
The Importance of National Culture
Differences in values, norms, and attitudes
Shapes individual behaviour by specifying appropriate and inappropriate behaviour and interaction with others
Management practices must be tailored to the cultural contexts within which an organization operates
Diversity adds value
Cultural intelligence—an appreciation of how national cultures differ