Organizations and Organization Design
Organizations and Organization Design
Organizations and Organization Design
CHAPTER OVERVIEW
Learning Objectives
CHAPTER OUTLINE
A LOOK INSIDE
Xerox Corporation
On the eve of the twenty-first century, Xerox was on top of the world, but less
than two years later, many considered it a has-been. Xerox was founded in 1906
as the Haloid Company, a photographic supply house that developed the world’s
first xerographic copier in 1959. While the 914 copier was a money-making
machine, Xerox became a victim of its own success. Leaders didn’t look beyond
the 70 percent gross profit margins of the 914 copier while younger, smaller
companies were developing money-making products and services. Xerox’s
market share declined from 95 percent to 13 percent by 1982. Outsiders,
however, believe the failure had to do with Xerox’s dysfunctional culture which
was slow to adapt and paralyzed by politics. Thoman was brought in to shake
things up, but when he tried, the old guard rebelled. The failed CEO succession
illustrates the massive challenge of reinventing a century-old company. Xerox had
restructured, cut costs, and reinvented itself for two decades, but little had
changed. In August 2001, Allaire turned over the CEO reins to Anne Mulcahy who
challenged the status quo. She launched a turnaround plan that included massive
cost cutting and the closing of several money-losing operations. Mulcahy thought
about succession plans, and in 2009 she handed the top job to her second-in-
command, Ursula Burns, the first African-American woman to head a Fortune 500
company. Burns set a new course to dominate the office of tomorrow. A decade
after this American icon almost crashed, Xerox is once again admired in the
corporate world.
is chapter, please each of the following statement
Organization Design in Action
Topics
The Xerox case which opens the chapter illustrates organization design
topics such as adapting to competitors, customers, government, and
creditors, strategic and structural changes to attain effectiveness,
avoiding ethical lapses, coping with a large and extensive bureaucracy,
appropriate use of power and politics, coping with internal conflict,
shaping corporate culture, and deciding what type of innovation and
change is needed.
ORGANIZATIONS AND ORGANIZATION DESIGN ● 3
BOOK MARK
Great by Choice: Uncertainty, Chaos, and Luck—Why Some Thrive Despite
Them All
by
Jim Collins and Morten T. Hansen
Current Challenges
Globalization
Intense Competition
Ethics and The Green Movement
Speed and Responsiveness
Social Business and Big Data
What Is an Organization?
Definition
Organizations are social entities that are goal directed, with deliberately
structured and coordinated activity systems, and with a link to the external
environment. An organization is open system that obtains inputs from the
external environment, adds value, and discharges products and services
back to the environment.
From Multinationals to Nonprofits
We will study both large and small organizations. We will also look at
manufacturing and service organizations, for- profit and nonprofit
organizations.
Importance of Organizations
Organizations create value for owners, customers, and employees by their
activities. They bring together resources to accomplish specific goals,
whether those goals are putting together an aircraft carrier or planting new
trees in the city. Organizations produce goods and services, using
innovative techniques and modern manufacturing technology, for competitive
pricing. Organizations adapt to and influence the environment and its
globalization while accommodating the challenges of diversity, ethics, and
the motivation and coordination of employees.
IN PRACTICE
Harley-Davidson
Harley-Davidson has always charged a huge premium for its bikes and customers were
willing to pay the price and wait as long as 18 months to get a bike. It’s almost as if
inefficiency was part of the charm. But by 2009, Harley was close to collapse. Managers
knew the company could compete only by redesigning the production system to increase
efficiency. The York plant recently won an Industry Week Best Plants award. Customer
demand is soaring now that people can get a bike within a couple of weeks of ordering
rather than waiting a year and a half. Craig Kennison at the research firm Baird said “it’s
certainly the best turnaround I’ve ever seen.”
Dimensions of Organization Design
Structural Dimensions
Structural dimensions provide labels to describe an organization’s internal
characteristics. Formalization pertains to the amount of written
documentation in the organization; Specialization is the degree to which
organizational tasks are subdivided into separate jobs; Hierarchy of
authority describes who reports to whom and the span of control;
Complexity refers to the number of distinct departments or activities within
the organization. Centralization refers to the hierarchical level that has
authority to make a decision.
ORGANIZATIONS AND ORGANIZATION DESIGN ● 5
IN PRACTICE
Shizugawa Elementary School Evacuation Center and
BP Transocean Deepwater Horizon Oil Rig
When the fishing village of Minamisanriku was ravaged by a tsunami in 2011, the
creation of rules, procedures, and authority structures helped create a sense of
normalcy and comfort at the Shizugawa Elementary School Evacuation Center.
Contrast that smooth operation to what happened after a Transocean oil rig
exploded in the Gulf of Mexico,. Activities were so loosely organized that no one
seemed to know who was in charge or what was their level of authority and
responsibility. When the explosion occurred, confusion reigned. As fire spread,
several minutes passed before people received directions to evacuate.
Contingency Factors
Contextual dimensions characterize the whole organization and describe the
organizational setting. Size is the organization's magnitude as reflected in
the number of people in the organization; Organizational technology refers
to the tools, techniques, and actions used to produce the organization’s
products or services; Environment includes all elements outside the
boundary of the organization; Goals and strategy define the purpose and
competitive techniques that set it apart from other organizations; Culture is
the underlying set of key values, beliefs, understandings, and norms shared
by employees.
Valve Software Corporation is a leader in the video game industry. The company has been
“boss free since 1996,” as its Website proclaims. “It’s amazing what creative people can
come up with when there’s nobody there telling them what to do.”. At Valve, everyone
makes important decisions. Any employee can make hiring decisions There are no
promotions, only new projects, with someone emerging as the de facto leader. Contrast
Valve’s approach to that of Walmart, which achieves its competitive edge through cost
efficiency. Stores are controlled from the top. and employees follow standard procedures
with little say in decision making. An even greater contrast is seen in government agencies.
much iron or steel for the Bethlehem Steel plant. Administrative principles
focused on the total organization based on insights of practitioners such as
Fayol. Bureaucracy was an effective approach for the needs of the
Industrial Age, calling for clearly defined authority and responsibility, formal
recordkeeping, and uniform application of standard rules. It remained the
primary approach to organization design through the 1980s. The
Hawthorne Studies led to a revolution in worker treatment from findings that
positive treatment improved motivation and productivity. Since the 1980s,
flexible approaches to organization design have become prevalent because
of the Internet, globalization, and the growth of knowledge- and information-
based work.
Managers view their world through one or more mental frames of reference. The
structural frame of reference sees the organization as a machine. The human
resource frame sees the organization as its people. The political frame sees it as a
competition for scarce resources. The symbolic frame sees it as theater, with
emphasis on symbols, vision, culture, and inspiration. Which frame reflects your
way of viewing the world?
ANSWER: Agree. Top managers have many responsibilities, but one of the most
important is making sure the organization is designed correctly. Organization design
organizes and focuses people’s work and shapes their response to customers and other
stakeholders. Managers consider both structural and contextual dimensions as well as
make sure the various parts of the organization work together to achieve important
goals.
Organic and Mechanistic Designs
A mechanistic design means that the organization is characterized by machine-
like standard rules, procedures, and a clear hierarchy of authority. Organizations
are highly formalized and are also centralized, with most decisions made at the
top. A mechanistic design is associated with large size, efficiency strategy, a
stable environment, a rigid culture, and a manufacturing technology. An organic
design means that the organization is much looser, free-flowing, and adaptive.
Rules and regulations often are not written down or are flexibly applied. An
organic design is associated with smaller size, innovation strategy, a changing
environment, an adaptive culture, and a service technology..
Guidelines
Centralization means that decision authority is located near the top of the
organizational hierarchy. With decentralization, decision making authority is
pushed down to lower organizational levels. A task is a narrowly defined
piece of work assigned to a person description. A role is a part in a dynamic
social system. Formal systems, mechanistic organizations, emphasize
vertical communication. Informal Systems, organic organizations,
emphasize horizontal communication. A mechanistic design has a formal
chain of command. An organic design, emphasizes collaborative teamwork.
Contemporary Design Ideas: Radical Decentralization
Current challenges include greater flexibility for most organizations.. A few
organizations have shifted to an extremely organic, “bossless” design. Advantages
include greater employee initiative and commitment, and better, faster decision
making. Challenges include an investment in employee training and development.
The culture also has to engage employees and support the non-hierarchical
environment.
IN PRACTICE
Morning Star
The founder of Morning Star, the world’s largest tomato processor for companies
such as Heinz and the Campbell Soup Company, believes that people can work
without a boss. At the Morning Star Self-Management Institute, every employee
goes through training to learn how to work effectively as part of a team, how to
handle the responsibilities of “planning, organizing, leading, and controlling”, how
to balance freedom and accountability, how to understand and effectively
communicate with others, and how to manage conflicts. Every colleague writes a
personal mission statement and is responsible for accomplishing it.
ORGANIZATIONS AND ORGANIZATION DESIGN ● 9
LECTURE ENHANCEMENT
ORGANIZATIONAL TYPOLOGIES
To understand and conceptualize the world of organizations, researchers have
developed typologies by which organizations can be classified. A typology is a
set of categories, with each category including certain characteristics which
differentiate the organizations in it from those in other categories. Just as
artists portray the same person or scene in different ways, researchers have
based their typologies on different underlying dimensions that they see as
important in differentiating between organizations. Typologies are methods of
organizing information. The characteristics of the organizations in each cell
indicate the nature of the organizations.