foundation of organizational structure

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ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR

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Page 1: Foundation of Organizational Structure

ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR

Page 2: Foundation of Organizational Structure

After studying chapter 15 and listening to class lecture,you should be able to:

1. Identify the six key elements that define an organization’s structure.

2. Explain the characteristics of a bureaucracy.3. Describe a matrix organization.4. Explain the characteristics of a virtual organization.5. Summarize why managers want to create boundaryless

organizations.6. Contrast mechanistic and organic structural models.7. List the factors that favor different organizational

structures.8. Why do structures differ?

L E

A R

N I

N G

O

B J

E C

T I V

E S

Page 3: Foundation of Organizational Structure

What Is Organizational Structure?

Key Elements:

• Work specialization

• Departmentalization

• Chain of command

• Span of control

• Centralization and decentralization

• Formalization

Page 4: Foundation of Organizational Structure

What Determines What Determines Organizational Structure?Organizational Structure?

To what degree are tasks subdivided into separate jobs? On what basis will jobs be grouped together? To whom do individuals and groups report? How many individuals can a manager efficiently and effectively direct? Where does decision-making authority lie? To what degree will there be rules and regulations to direct employees

and managers?

Page 5: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Key Design Questions and Answers for Designing the Proper Organization Structure

Page 6: Foundation of Organizational Structure

StrategyStrategy

Why DoWhy DoStructuresStructures

Differ?Differ?

OrganizationOrganizationSizeSize

TechnologyTechnology EnvironmentEnvironment

Page 7: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Common Organization Designs

A Simple Structure:Jack Gold’s Men’s Store

Page 8: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Organizational Chart of a Manufacturing FirmBoard

memberBoard

memberBoard

memberBoard

member

ChiefExecutive

OfficerLegal

counsel

President

IndustrialProductsDirector-Human

Resources

ConsumerProductsDirector-Human

Resources

WesternRegion

IndustrialProducts

SalesManager

EasternRegion

IndustrialProducts

SalesManager

WesternRegion

ConsumerProducts

SalesManager

EasternRegion

ConsumerProducts

SalesManager

etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc.

IndustrialProductsDirector-

Production

ConsumerProductsDirector-

Production

IndustrialProductsDirector-

R&D

ConsumerProductsDirector-

R&D

V.P Researchand Development

V.P Sales/Marketing

V.P HumanResources

V.P Production

IndustrialProductsDirector-

Sales

ConsumerProductsDirector-

Sales

Page 9: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Tall versus Flat OrganizationsChief

Executive

ChiefExecutive

Tall

hier

arch

yFl

at h

iera

rchy

Relatively widespan of control

Relatively narrowspan of control

Tall Organization

Flat Organization

Page 10: Foundation of Organizational Structure

A Product Organization

Pro-duction Acctg.Sales R&D Pro-

duction Acctg.Sales R&DPro-duction AcctgSales R&D

ProductGroup 2

ProductGroup 1

ProductGroup 3

President

ChiefExecutive

Officer

Page 11: Foundation of Organizational Structure

A Horizontal Organization

Team responsible for core process(e.g., generating and fulfilling orders)

Team responsible for core process(e.g., product development)

Team responsible for core process(e.g., flow of materials)

Adviser

Adviser

Adviser

Overall Manager

Objective:Reducedcycle time

Objective:More new products

Objective:Enhancedproductquality

Page 12: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Common Organization Designs

Page 13: Foundation of Organizational Structure

The Bureaucracy

Strengths– Functional

economies of scale

– Minimum duplication of personnel and equipment

– Enhanced communication

– Centralized decision making

Weaknesses– Subunit conflicts

with organizational goals

– Obsessive concern with rules and regulations

– Lack of employee discretion to deal with problems

Page 14: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Decentralization: Benefits When Low and When High

Low Decentralization(High Centralization)

Eliminates the additional responsibility not desired by people performing routine jobs

Permits crucial decisions to be made by individuals who have the “big picture”

High Decentralization(Low Centralization)

Can eliminate levels of management, making a leaner organization

Promotes greater opportunities for decisions to be made be people closest to problems

Table 12-1

Page 15: Foundation of Organizational Structure

The Matrix StructureThe Matrix Structure

Cross-FunctionalCross-FunctionalCoordinationCoordination

ClearClearAccountabilityAccountability

Allocation Allocation of Specialistsof Specialists

Dual ChainDual Chainof Commandof Command

Page 16: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Matrix Structure (College of Business Administration)

(Dean)

(Director)

Employee

Page 17: Foundation of Organizational Structure

A Matrix Organization

ProjectGammamanager

Productionsupportgroup

Legalsupportgroup

Accountingsupportgroup

Engineeringsupportgroup

ProjectBeta

manager

Productionsupportgroup

Legalsupportgroup

Accountingsupportgroup

Engineeringsupportgroup

ProjectAlpha

manager

Productionsupportgroup

Legalsupportgroup

Accountingsupportgroup

Engineeringsupportgroup

Productiondepartment

Legaldepartment

Accountingdepartment

Engineeringdepartment

Farm MachineryDivision

President

Functionalauthority

Projectauthority

Page 18: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Mechanistic vs. Organic Designs

Dimension

Stability

Specialization

Formal rules

Authority

Mechanistic

Change unlikely

Many specialists

Rigid rules

Centralized in a few top people

Organic

Change likely

Many generalists

Considerable flexibility

Decentralized, diffused throughout the organization

Structure

Table 12-2

Page 19: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Mechanistic Versus Organic Models

Page 20: Foundation of Organizational Structure

A Virtual Organization

Page 21: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Organization Structure: Its Determinants and Outcomes

Page 22: Foundation of Organizational Structure

New Design Options

Concepts:

Provides maximum flexibility while concentrating on what the organization does best.

Disadvantage is reduced control over key parts of the business.

Page 23: Foundation of Organizational Structure

What Is Organizational Structure? (cont’d)

Division of labor:

• Makes efficient use of employee skills

• Increases employee skills through repetition

• Less between-job downtime increases productivity

• Specialized training is more efficient

• Allows use of specialized equipment

Page 24: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Economies and Diseconomies of Work Specialization

E X H I B I T 15-2

Page 25: Foundation of Organizational Structure

What Is Organizational Structure? (cont’d)

Grouping Activities By:

• Function

• Product

• Geography

• Process

• Customer

Page 26: Foundation of Organizational Structure

What Is Organizational Structure? (cont’d)

Narrow Span Drawbacks:• Expense of additional

layers of management.• Increased complexity of

vertical communication.• Encouragement of overly

tight supervision and discouragement of employee autonomy.

Concept:Concept:Wider spans of Wider spans of management increase management increase organizational efficiency.organizational efficiency.

Page 27: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Contrasting Spans of Control

E X H I B I T 15-3

Page 28: Foundation of Organizational Structure

What Is Organizational Structure? (cont’d)

Page 29: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Common Organization Designs (cont’d)

Key Elements:

+ Gains advantages of functional and product departmentalization while avoiding their weaknesses.

+ Facilitates coordination of complex and interdependent activities.

– Breaks down unity-of-command concept.

Page 30: Foundation of Organizational Structure

New Design Options

Characteristics:• Breaks down

departmental barriers.• Decentralizes decision

making to the team level.• Requires employees to

be generalists as well as specialists.

• Creates a “flexible bureaucracy.”

Page 31: Foundation of Organizational Structure

New Design Options (cont’d)

T-form Concepts:

Eliminate vertical (hierarchical) and horizontal (departmental) internal boundaries.

Breakdown external barriers to customers and suppliers.

Page 32: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Why Do Structures Differ?

Page 33: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Why Do Structures Differ?

Page 34: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Why Do Structures Differ? – Strategy

Page 35: Foundation of Organizational Structure

The Strategy-Structure Relationship

E X H I B I T 15-9

Page 36: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Why Do Structures Differ? – Technology

Characteristics of routineness (standardized or customized) in activities:

• Routine technologies are associated with tall, departmentalized structures and formalization in organizations.

• Routine technologies lead to centralization when formalization is low.

• Nonroutine technologies are associated with delegated decision authority.

Page 37: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Why Do Structures Differ? – Environment

Key Dimensions:

• Capacity: the degree to which an environment can support growth.

• Volatility: the degree of instability in the environment.

• Complexity: the degree of heterogeneity and concentration among environmental elements.

Page 38: Foundation of Organizational Structure

What Is Organizational Structure? (cont’d)

Page 39: Foundation of Organizational Structure

The Three Dimensional Model of the Environment

E X H I B I T 15-10

Complexity

Volatility

Capacity

Page 40: Foundation of Organizational Structure

Organizational Designs and Employee Behavior

Research Findings:

• Work specialization contributes to higher employee productivity, but it reduces job satisfaction.

• The benefits of specialization have decreased rapidly as employees seek more intrinsically rewarding jobs.

• The effect of span of control on employee performance is contingent upon individual differences and abilities, task structures, and other organizational factors.

• Participative decision making in decentralized organizations is positively related to job satisfaction.