Lecture 10 PowerPoint Saff Use Only
Lecture 10 PowerPoint Saff Use Only
Lecture 10 PowerPoint Saff Use Only
Organisation Structures
for Effective Management
• Developing staff
• Management of change
• Financial implications
Developing staff – Organisational Development
We define organisation development (OD) as ‘planned and systematic approach
to enabling sustained organisation performance through the involvement of its
people’. (CIPD, 2017).
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/20141020053632-73915208-how-organization-development-differs-from-other-change-models /
OD applies to changes in the strategy, structure,
and/or processes of an entire system…….
such as:
• An organisation
• A single plant of a multi-plant firm
• A department or work group
• An individual role or job
What does Organisational Development
Involve?
• OD is based on the application and transfer of behavioural science
knowledge and practice (such as leadership, group dynamics and
work design), and is distinguished by its ability to transfer such
knowledge and skill so that the system is capable of carrying out more
planned change in the future
• OD is concerned with managing planned change, in a flexible manner
that can be revised as new information is gathered
• OD involves both the creation and the subsequent reinforcement of
change by institutionalising change
Developing staff
OD is focussed on improving organisational effectiveness by:
• The development of managers helps sustain their performance at the highest levels
possible is a particularly crucial element of wider organisational learning strategies
• Managing involves the planning, organisation, co-ordination and implementation of
strategies, programmes, tactics and policies in respect of people, resources,
information, operations and finance
• Management development interventions may therefore cover any or all of these
areas, depending on the level and nature of the management role as well as other
factors such as the stage of the individual’s career
Developing staff
The nature and characteristics of the management base means that the
task of identifying and providing effective learning opportunities for
managers presents a significant challenge for HR and L&D
professionals.
• For senior managers, there is often a need for individually tailored
development solutions
• Some very senior people, such as managers at board level, may have
the perception that others in the organisation fail to understand the
pressures they face. However, they can also be sensitive to their
senior status, and may reject the idea that they need to learn,
although the neutrality of the term 'development' often appeals.
Developing staff
• Small firms are not simply smaller versions of big companies in terms of
managerial roles but have different priorities and needs. Their senior
management development needs may relate to functional skills more normally
demonstrated in large environments by specialists
• Large global firms often need to consider the issues involved in international
management development when deploying managers on overseas
assignments, for example, developing them to deal with potentially widely
differing approaches to negotiating styles or marketing techniques, in addition
to the more obvious fundamental needs such as training in language skills and
cultural awareness.
Developing staff
Managers at all levels need a certain set of skills associated with their
people management role, and these need to be developed. It should
also not be assumed that well-qualified professionals who gain
promotion to posts involving line management responsibilities will
automatically adapt to the people management role.
Developing staff
Other factors, both internal and external, can also prompt change to your
organisational structure.
Internal factors include:
• Senior management and shareholders objectives to re-focus the business
• Change of ownership
External factors that might prompt a change in your business' structure
include having to:
• Address new markets
• React to changes in product or service demand
• Keep up with new technologies or products from competitors
Management of change
Other external events that can affect either your business or your rivals
can also stimulate organisational change. These include, for example:
• mergers and acquisitions - Common ways to expand your business
include making a strategic acquisition or merging with another
business.
• joint ventures and business partnerships - A joint venture is when
two or more businesses pool their resources and expertise to achieve
a particular goal. They also share the risks and rewards of the
enterprise.
• preparing to sell your business
Management of change – Merger and Acquisition
Forming a joint venture can have unique benefits for some businesses.
A joint venture could give you:
• More resources
• Greater capacity
• Increased technical expertise
• Access to established markets and distribution channels
Management of change – Internal Factors
http://www.themanager.org/Strategy/Change_Problems.htm
Financial implications
Unlike contractors, employees are at your beck and call, with no other
boss to work for, giving you more control over their work.
Financial implications
Workforce Characteristics
Human resources should influence the strategic choices leading to restructuring.
• To develop strategy, the owner must consider the company’s competitive
position, including employees’ strengths and weaknesses.
• HR supplies the owner with a workplace assessment -- a thorough inventory of
the employees’ skills and other characteristics such as talent, turnover, education
and experience.
• The inventory is compared against the strategies under consideration to calculate
how well the company’s workforce can enact them.
• Once strategy is chosen, HR then evaluates how it must transform the company’s
workforce to fill the company’s needs in the context of the restructuring and
strategy.
Financial implications
Organizational Structure
• Organizational structure determines job scope, working
relationships and resource sharing, so it has a profound
impact on how business gets done.
• Keeping the company’s strategy at the centre of structural
decisions allows HR to make the best choices. For example, if
a small business wants to focus on fine, custom-built
products, the organizational structure must promote
individual accomplishment instead of mass production.
Financial implications
Job Design
An article in Pepperdine University’s “Graziadio Business Review” listed job
design and talent choice as most critical in implementing new organizational
structure.
• HR must reassess the tasks and workflows needed to effectively do
business and compare those to the organization’s existing jobs and
processes.
• Positions may stay the same, change or be removed.
• Some tasks may require new positions. Considerations when designing
jobs include how specialized a job should be, how much authority an
employee needs to accomplish work and how much supervision is needed.
Summary
We have today, considers implications of Organisational Development
and growth.
As we have seen three areas need to be considered and strategies
developed to overcome the issues:
1. The need to consider the Developing staff to meet the needs of the
organisation
2. The importance of Managing the Change process
3. The Financial implications associated with the development of the
organisation
Any Questions?
Essential Reading
Bhattacharyya, D. K. (2009) Organisational Systems, Design, Structure
and Management, 1st ed), Himalaya, Mumbai.