Mechanisms, Parts, and Systems (4) Flashcards

1
Q

Reminders

A
  1. Organizations face conflicting requirements (division of labor/coordination)
  2. Division of labor leads to separate activities (interdependence increases complexity, complexity increases coordination costs)
  3. Coordination is achieved by 5 mechanisms (mutual adjustment, direct supervision, standardization of processes, standardization of outputs, standardization of skills)
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2
Q

Interdependence

A

Pooled- if workers only share resources

Sequential- If they take previous outputs as inputs

Reciprocal- If they iterate and give feedback

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3
Q

Task Complexity

A

Most organizations use all five coordination mechanisms, but some can be more prominent

they usually appear in sequential order as a function of interdependence

mutual adj–> direct sup. –> standard.–> mutual adj.

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4
Q

Mutual Adjustment

A

Coordination achieved by informal communication

Simplest mechanisms, but the only one that works for very complex tasks

Ex: canoeing teams, apollo crews

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5
Q

Direct Supervision

A

Coordination achieved by one individual with formal responsibility

quite simple, necessary if the number of workers becomes too large

ex: football teams, construction crews

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6
Q

Standardization of Processes

A

Coordination achieved by the programming of work

Analysts’ instructions reduce the need for communication or supervision

Ex: assembly line, telegraph operator

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7
Q

Standardization of Outputs

A

Coordination achieved by specifying work results

Downstream workers receive what they expect, without communication or supervision

Ex: insurance salesmen, fast food franchises

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8
Q

Standardization of Skills

A

Coordination achieved by specifying training or qualifications

Most sophisticated, usually at play even before workers are hired

Ex: chemical engineers, diplomatic officials

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9
Q

Vertical Division of Labor

A

More complexity induces supervision

Even more complexity induces standardisation

A new kind of specialization emerges

  • those who perform
  • those who supervise
  • those who standardize
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10
Q

Five basic parts

A
  1. Those who perform: Operating Core
  2. Those who supervise: Strategic apex, middle line
  3. Those who standardize: Technostructure

technostructure and support staff stay mostly out of the scalar chain

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11
Q

Operating Core

A
  1. Procurement, production, marketing
    - purchasing agents secure inputs
    - assembly line workers turn inputs into outputs
    - salespeople distribute the outputs
    - helped by warehouse, repairmen, shippers
  2. Work directly related to products or services
    - lawyers in corporate law firms
    - welders in car manufacturing
  3. Must be sealed off from the environment
    - uncertainty threatens core operations
    - usually subject to greatest standardization
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12
Q

Strategic Apex

A
  1. Overall responsibility for the organization
    - most general and abstract activities
    - high discretion, low repetition and standardization
  2. Different and demanding duties
    - interfacing with the environment (relating to government and unions, negotiating, ensuring access to external resources)
    - formulating high-level strategy
    - defining organizational goals
    - ensuring progress toward goals
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13
Q

Middle Line

A

-all the managerial roles but faster, less abstract
-helps ensure flow of info
(downward, upward, and sideways)

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14
Q

Technostructure

A
  • helps the org by regulating behavior (design work, plans it, changes it, trains workers)
  • analytic work at all levels of the hierarchy (strategic planning and financial control, operations and departmental planning, production schedules and accounting)

-main vehicle of standardization
engineering workflows to increase productivity
ensuring that activities stay within budget
specifying production and sales goals
training

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15
Q

Support Staff

A
  1. Fringe work at all levels of the hierarchy (public relations and legal counsel, industrial relations and R&D, mailroom, reception, payroll, cafeteria)
  2. Different from technostructure (not concerned with standardisation, its main purpose is not advisory)
  3. Resembles a set of mini-organizations (own managers, analysits, and core, internalized to reduce transaction costs; coupled with other parts only in a pooled way)
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16
Q

Differences btw line and staff

A
  1. Authority
    in the line it is mostly formal, because superiors give and enforce orders; in the staff it is mostly informal, because it stems from control of resources
  2. Loyalty
    the line has a direct relation with organizational goals, so workers and managers are mainly loyal; staffers only have an indirect relation and are mainly loyal to their professions
17
Q

How the parts fit together

A
  1. Purely formal or informal systems
    - system of formal authority (Fayol)
    - system of regulated flows (Taylor, Weber)
    - system of informal communication (Mayo)
  2. Mixed systems
    - system of work constellations
    - system of ad-hod decision processes

All systems are simultaneously at work
Flows of authority, resources, information,etc. connect the parts and stack on top of each other, making organizations effective but complex

18
Q

System of formal authority

A

-shown by organigram
jobs and units
direct supervision
no informal relations

-shapes informal relations
sets their direction
generates defenses
requires conformity

19
Q

System of regulated flows

A

-systematic and explicit
shows standardisation

-3 distinct flows

  1. operating work (materials, documents, customers)
  2. Control information (plans, budgets, performance, exceptions)
  3. Staff information (advice for the line, external intelligence)
20
Q

Bypassing formal systems

A

how supervision and standardization usually fail:

  1. operators on different projects talk to each other
  2. they directly communicate with staff members
  3. they skip middle managers and go to the top
21
Q

System of informal communication

A
  • shown by sociogram
    supplementary info
    spontaneous and flexible
    ties outside the line

-defacto power centers
top managers
low-level staffers
disconnected middle line

-too fluid to standardize
mutual adjustment

22
Q

Trist and Bamforth’s 1951 study

A
  1. Before mechanization
    crews responsible for mining activity
    verbal communication –> mutual adj.
  2. After mechanization
    horizontal and vertical division of labor
    intro of shifts, loss of control
  3. Supervision and standardization ineffective
    low productivity, absenteeism
  4. Intro of a hybrid system
    sall, informal, self-managed groups
    measurable performance –> standardization
23
Q

Why informal structure ?

A
  1. Talking is attractive
    increase volume and speed of info; personal contacts perceived as more important
  2. Organizations are social
    workers need friendship and chances to vent
  3. Trading favors is efficient
    appealing to superiors makes workers uneasy; rules sometimes take too long to be enforced
24
Q

System of work constellations

A
  1. Consists of cliques
    spatial proximity
    same goals and interests
  2. Not like regulated flows
    differential coupling
    more diverse information
    mostly horizontal
  3. formal and informal
    functional specialization
    verbal communication
25
Q

Variation across parts

A

constellations in the core often map to functional units

In technostructure, middle line, and apex, they are usually cross-functional

in support staff, some map to units and some do not

26
Q

System of ad-hoc decision processes

A
  1. Handles unusual work
    irregular interactions
    unforeseen problems
    complaints
  2. Consists of decisions
    signals of intention
    resource commitments
  3. Involves multiple stages
    identification
    development
    selection
27
Q

Decision stages and routines

A

Identification

  1. Recognition: acknowledging problem
  2. Diagnosis: understanding decision constraints

Development

  1. Search: look for existing solutions
  2. Design: develop custom-made solutions

Selection

  1. Screening: decide which solution to consider
  2. Evaluation-choice: weighing possible solutions
  3. authorization: securing approval for choice
28
Q

Decision categories

A
  1. Operating decisions
    highly routinized and programmed
    generally included in regulated flows
  2. Administrative decisions
    - guide operating decisions (coordinative) : routinized and partly programmed, also included in regulated flows
    - handle special case of low importance (exceptional): non-routinized and partly programmed
  3. Strategic decisions
    - handle special cases of high importance
    - neither routinized nor programmed