MOB: Chapter 7: Organizational Structure & design
functional
Grouping jobs by functions performed
factors of chain of command
Responsbility Authority Accountability Unity of Command Delegation Line & staff Authority
Span of control
The # of employees a manager can efficiently & effectively manage
Chain of Command
The continuous line of authority that extends from the top of the organization to the lowest level & clarifies who reports to whom
formalization
The degree to which jobs are standardized & employees rely on the rules & procedures.
Work Specialization
The degree to which tasks are divided into separate jobs
example of centralization
Usually upper levels of management
technology
What the organization uses to transform inputs into outputs
network organizations
a small core organization that outsources major business functions
virtual organizations
an organization that has elements of a traditional organization, but also relies on recent developments in information technology to get work done.
boundaryless organizations
an organization that is not defined by a chain of command, places no limits on spans of control, & replaces departments with empowered teams.
Imitation
an organization's attempt to minimize risk and maximize profit opportunities by copying the market leaders
innovation
an organization's drive to be on the cutting edge of its industry
cost minimization
an organization's push to tightly control costs.
organic organization
an organizational design that is highly adaptive & flexible
mechanistic organization
an organizational design that is rigid & tightly controlled
Project structures
an organizational structure in which employees continuously work on projects
team structures
an organizational structure in which the entire organization is made up of work groups or teams.
Matrix structures
an organizational structure that assigns specialists from different functional departments to work on one or more projects
simple structure
an organizational structure with low departmentalization, wide spans of control, authority centralized in a single person, & little formation.
what factors determine whether an organization will toward more centralization or decentralzation?
companies facing dynamic environments are more likely to need to adapt quickly to change & this decentralized decision making
division structure
contains of separate business units or divisions
centralization
degree to which decision making is concentrated at a single point in the organization
Departmentalization
functional, product, geographical, process & customer
employee empowerment
giving more authority to employees to make decisions
product
grouping jobs by product line
Customer
grouping jobs by type of customer & needs
Process
grouping jobs on the basis of product or customer flow
geographical
grouping jobs on the basis of territory or geography
functional structure
groups similar or related occupational specialities together
organizational structure
how jobs are divided, grouped and coordinated within an organization
strategy involves what 3 dimensions
innovation , cost minimization, imitation
line & staff authority- 2 parts
line managers & staff managers
line managers
managers responsible for the essential activities of the organization, including production & sales
Staff Managers
managers who work in the supporting activities of the organizations(such as HR or accounting)
components of technology
mass production, unit production & process production
mechanistic organization is characterized by:
o High specialization o Rigid departmentalization o Narrow spans of control o High formalization o Limited information network o Limited participation in decision making by employees
Organic Organization characteristics
o Highly adaptive o Flexible o Little work specialization o Minimal formalization o Little direct supervision of employees
size & structure
o Larger organizations gravitate to more specialized, departmentalized, formalized, & centralized structures o Smaller organizations tend to the opposite
environmental uncertainties
o The more uncertain, the more flexibility required in the structure o The more certain, the more rigid the structure
how can organizations be structured
simple structure, functional structure, division structure
contemporary organizational designs
team structures, matrix & project structures, Boundaryless organizations,virtual organizations, network organizations
delegation
the assignment of authority to another person to carry out specific duties, allowing the employee to make some of the decisions.
Decentralization
the degree to which lower-level employees provide input or actually make decisions
unity of command
the management principle that states every employee should receive orders from only one superior.
Accountability
the need to report & justify work to a manager's superiors
Responsibility
the obligation or expectation to perform any assigned duties
organizing
the process of creating a structure that supports the achievement of the organizations objectives
organizational design
the process of developing or changing an organizations structures.
process production
the production of items in continuous processes
mass production
the production of items in large batches
unit production
the production of items in units or small batches
Authority
the rights inherent in a managerial position to tell people what to do & what to expect them to do it.
cross functional teams
work teams made up of individuals who are experts in various functional specialities
organizational design challenges
• Keeping employees connected • Building a learning organization o Employees continually acquire & share new knowledge o Apply the knowledge to making decisions • Managing global structural issues o Considering the cultural aspects within the design
span of control is affected by
• Skills & abilities of the manager & employees • Characteristics of the work being done
what factors affect organizational structure?
• Strategy • Size & structure • Technology • Environmental uncertainties
what are the major elements of organizational structure
• Work Specialization • Departmentalization • Chain of command • Span of control • Centralization & decentralization • Formalization