Ch 4 - Organisational Structure and Design
Organisational structure: the formal arrangement of jobs within an organisation
Organisation design: a process involving decision about six key elements:
- Work specialisation
- Departmentalisation
- Chain of command
- Span of control
- Centralisation and decentralisation
- Formalisation
Purpose of Organising:
Divides work into specific jobs and departments
Assigns tasks and responsibilities
Coordinates diverse organisational tasks
Clusters jobs into units
Establishes relationships among individuals, groups and departments
Establishes line of authority Allocates and deployed organisational resources
Organisation Structure:
Work Specialisation: When tasks in the organisation are divided into separate jobs with each step completed by a different person
→ Over-specialisation can result in human diseconomies from boredom, fatigue, stress, high turnover…
Departmentalisation: Grouping different tasks based on different criteria
Functional: grouping jobs by functions performed
→ Advantages: efficient, coordination within functional area
→ Disadvantages: poor communication, limited view of organisational goals
Process: grouping jobs based on the product or customer flow
→ Adv: more efficient flow of work activities
→ Disadv: can only be used with certain products
Product: grouping by product line
→ Adv: allows specialisation in particular products and services, Managers can become experts in their industry, closer to customers
→ Disadv: duplication of functions, limited view of organisational goals
Customer: grouping by type of customer and needs
→ Adv: customers’ needs and problems can be met by specialists
→ Disadv: duplication of functions, Limited view of organisational goals
Geographical: grouping based on territory or geography
→ Adv: more effective and efficient handling of specific regional issues that arise
→ Disadv: isolation from other organisational areas, duplication of functions
Chain of Command: Continuous line of authority that extends from upper levels of an organisation to the lowest levels of the organisation to the lowest levels of the organisation and clarifies who reports to who
→ Authority: rights inherent in a managerial position to tell people what to do and to expect them to do it →Responsibility: obligation or expectation to perform
→Unity of Command: concept that a person should have one boss and should report only to that person
Span of Control: Number of employees who can be effectively and efficiently supervised by a manager → Affected by: skills & abilities of the manager, employee characteristics, similarity of tasks, complexity of tasks, physical proximity of tasks
Centralization: The degree to which decision-making is concentrated at a single point in the organisations Top managers make all the decisions and lower level employees carry out these orders
→ Stable environment
→ Large company
→ Effective implementation of company strategies
Decentralisation: Organisations in which decision-making is pushed down to the managers who are closest to the action
→Complex environment
→ Decisions are significant
→Lower level managers have a voice in decisions
→ Company is geographically dispersed
→ Effective implementation of company strategies
Formalisation: Degree to which jobs within the organisation are standardised and the extent to which employee behaviour is guided by rules and procedures.
→ Highly formalised jobs offer little discretion over what is to be done
→Low formalisation = fewer constraints on how employees do their work
Employee Empowerment: Increasing the decision making authority of employees
Organisational Design Decisions:
Mechanistic Organisation: a rigid and tightly controlled structure (usually for large businesses)
High specialisation
Rigid departmentalisation
Narrow spans of control
High formalisation
Limited information network
Low decision participation
Organic Organisation: highly flexible and adaptable structure (usually for small businesses)
Non-standardized jobs
Fluid team based structure
Little direct structure
Minimal formal rules
Open communication network Empowered employees
Contingency Factors: Structural decisions are influenced by: Overall strategy of the organisation: organisational structure follows strategy
→ Size of the organisation: firms change from organic to mechanistic organisation as they grow in size →Technology used by the organisation: firms adapt their structure to the technology they use
→ Degree of environmental uncertainty: dynamic environments require organic structures; mechanistic structures need stable environments
Strategy Frameworks:
Innovation: pursuing competitive advantage through meaningful and unique innovations favours an organic structuring
Cost minimization: focusing on tightly controlling costs requires a mechanistic structure for the organisation
Imitation: minimising risks and maximising profitability by copying market leaders requires both organic and mechanistic elements in the organisation’s structure
Strategy and structure: achievement of strategic goals is facilitated by changed in organisational structure that accommodate and support change
Size and structure: as an organisation grows larger, its structure tends to change from organic to mechanistic with increased specialisation, departmentalisation, centralisation, and rules and regulations
Technology and Structure: organisations adapt their structures to their technology Organisations adapt their structures to their technology
Classification of firms:
Unit production: of single units or small batches
Mass production: of large batches of outputs
Process production: continuous process of outputs
Routine technology: mechanistic organisations Non-routine technology: organic organisations
Environmental Uncertainty and Structure: mechanistic organisational structures tend to be the most effective in stable and simple environments The flexibility of organic organisational structures is better suited for dynamic and complex environments
Common organisational Design Traditional design
Simple structure: low departmentalisation, wide spans of control, centralised authority, little formalisation
Functional structure: departmentalisation by function
→ Operations, finance, human resources, and product research and development
Divisional structure: composed of separate business units or divisions with limited autonomy under the coordination and control with parent corporation
Contemporary Organisational Designs
Team structures: the entire organisation is made up of work groups or self managed teams of empowered employees
Matrix and project structures: Specialists from different functional departments are assigned to work on projects led by project managers
→ Have two managers
→ Employees work continuously on projects
Boundaryless Organisation: A flexible and unstructured organisational design that is intended to break down external barriers between the organisation and its customers and suppliers Removes internal (horizontal) organisation:
eliminates the chain of command
has limitless spans of control
uses empowered teams rather than departments - Eliminates external boundaries: uses virtual, network, and modular organisational structures to get closer to stakeholders
Removing External Boundaries:
Virtual organisation: an organisation that consists of small core of full-time employees and that temporarily hires specialists to work on opportunities that arise
Network organisation: small core organisation that outsources its major business functions in order to concentrate what it does best
Modular organisation: a manufacturing organisation that uses outside suppliers to provide product components for its final assembly operations
The Leading Organisation: An organisation that has developed the capacity to continuously learn, adapt, and change through the practice of knowledge management by employees
→ Characteristics of a learning organisation:
Open team-based organisation design that empowers employees
Extensive and open information sharing
Leadership that provides a shared vision of the organisation’s future, support, and encouragement
A strong culture of shared values, trust, openness, and a sense of community
Organisational structure: the formal arrangement of jobs within an organisation
Organisation design: a process involving decision about six key elements:
- Work specialisation
- Departmentalisation
- Chain of command
- Span of control
- Centralisation and decentralisation
- Formalisation
Purpose of Organising:
Divides work into specific jobs and departments
Assigns tasks and responsibilities
Coordinates diverse organisational tasks
Clusters jobs into units
Establishes relationships among individuals, groups and departments
Establishes line of authority Allocates and deployed organisational resources
Organisation Structure:
Work Specialisation: When tasks in the organisation are divided into separate jobs with each step completed by a different person
→ Over-specialisation can result in human diseconomies from boredom, fatigue, stress, high turnover…
Departmentalisation: Grouping different tasks based on different criteria
Functional: grouping jobs by functions performed
→ Advantages: efficient, coordination within functional area
→ Disadvantages: poor communication, limited view of organisational goals
Process: grouping jobs based on the product or customer flow
→ Adv: more efficient flow of work activities
→ Disadv: can only be used with certain products
Product: grouping by product line
→ Adv: allows specialisation in particular products and services, Managers can become experts in their industry, closer to customers
→ Disadv: duplication of functions, limited view of organisational goals
Customer: grouping by type of customer and needs
→ Adv: customers’ needs and problems can be met by specialists
→ Disadv: duplication of functions, Limited view of organisational goals
Geographical: grouping based on territory or geography
→ Adv: more effective and efficient handling of specific regional issues that arise
→ Disadv: isolation from other organisational areas, duplication of functions
Chain of Command: Continuous line of authority that extends from upper levels of an organisation to the lowest levels of the organisation to the lowest levels of the organisation and clarifies who reports to who
→ Authority: rights inherent in a managerial position to tell people what to do and to expect them to do it →Responsibility: obligation or expectation to perform
→Unity of Command: concept that a person should have one boss and should report only to that person
Span of Control: Number of employees who can be effectively and efficiently supervised by a manager → Affected by: skills & abilities of the manager, employee characteristics, similarity of tasks, complexity of tasks, physical proximity of tasks
Centralization: The degree to which decision-making is concentrated at a single point in the organisations Top managers make all the decisions and lower level employees carry out these orders
→ Stable environment
→ Large company
→ Effective implementation of company strategies
Decentralisation: Organisations in which decision-making is pushed down to the managers who are closest to the action
→Complex environment
→ Decisions are significant
→Lower level managers have a voice in decisions
→ Company is geographically dispersed
→ Effective implementation of company strategies
Formalisation: Degree to which jobs within the organisation are standardised and the extent to which employee behaviour is guided by rules and procedures.
→ Highly formalised jobs offer little discretion over what is to be done
→Low formalisation = fewer constraints on how employees do their work
Employee Empowerment: Increasing the decision making authority of employees
Organisational Design Decisions:
Mechanistic Organisation: a rigid and tightly controlled structure (usually for large businesses)
High specialisation
Rigid departmentalisation
Narrow spans of control
High formalisation
Limited information network
Low decision participation
Organic Organisation: highly flexible and adaptable structure (usually for small businesses)
Non-standardized jobs
Fluid team based structure
Little direct structure
Minimal formal rules
Open communication network Empowered employees
Contingency Factors: Structural decisions are influenced by: Overall strategy of the organisation: organisational structure follows strategy
→ Size of the organisation: firms change from organic to mechanistic organisation as they grow in size →Technology used by the organisation: firms adapt their structure to the technology they use
→ Degree of environmental uncertainty: dynamic environments require organic structures; mechanistic structures need stable environments
Strategy Frameworks:
Innovation: pursuing competitive advantage through meaningful and unique innovations favours an organic structuring
Cost minimization: focusing on tightly controlling costs requires a mechanistic structure for the organisation
Imitation: minimising risks and maximising profitability by copying market leaders requires both organic and mechanistic elements in the organisation’s structure
Strategy and structure: achievement of strategic goals is facilitated by changed in organisational structure that accommodate and support change
Size and structure: as an organisation grows larger, its structure tends to change from organic to mechanistic with increased specialisation, departmentalisation, centralisation, and rules and regulations
Technology and Structure: organisations adapt their structures to their technology Organisations adapt their structures to their technology
Classification of firms:
Unit production: of single units or small batches
Mass production: of large batches of outputs
Process production: continuous process of outputs
Routine technology: mechanistic organisations Non-routine technology: organic organisations
Environmental Uncertainty and Structure: mechanistic organisational structures tend to be the most effective in stable and simple environments The flexibility of organic organisational structures is better suited for dynamic and complex environments
Common organisational Design Traditional design
Simple structure: low departmentalisation, wide spans of control, centralised authority, little formalisation
Functional structure: departmentalisation by function
→ Operations, finance, human resources, and product research and development
Divisional structure: composed of separate business units or divisions with limited autonomy under the coordination and control with parent corporation
Contemporary Organisational Designs
Team structures: the entire organisation is made up of work groups or self managed teams of empowered employees
Matrix and project structures: Specialists from different functional departments are assigned to work on projects led by project managers
→ Have two managers
→ Employees work continuously on projects
Boundaryless Organisation: A flexible and unstructured organisational design that is intended to break down external barriers between the organisation and its customers and suppliers Removes internal (horizontal) organisation:
eliminates the chain of command
has limitless spans of control
uses empowered teams rather than departments - Eliminates external boundaries: uses virtual, network, and modular organisational structures to get closer to stakeholders
Removing External Boundaries:
Virtual organisation: an organisation that consists of small core of full-time employees and that temporarily hires specialists to work on opportunities that arise
Network organisation: small core organisation that outsources its major business functions in order to concentrate what it does best
Modular organisation: a manufacturing organisation that uses outside suppliers to provide product components for its final assembly operations
The Leading Organisation: An organisation that has developed the capacity to continuously learn, adapt, and change through the practice of knowledge management by employees
→ Characteristics of a learning organisation:
Open team-based organisation design that empowers employees
Extensive and open information sharing
Leadership that provides a shared vision of the organisation’s future, support, and encouragement
A strong culture of shared values, trust, openness, and a sense of community