MacroStructure and Linkages (6) Flashcards

1
Q

9 parameters
4 and 5: MacroStructure
6 and 7: Lateral Linkages

A
  1. Specialization
  2. Formalization of behavior
  3. Training and indoctrination
  4. Unit grouping
  5. Unit size
  6. Planning and control systems
  7. Liaison devices
  8. Vertical decentralization
  9. Horizontal decentralization
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Sequential clustering

A

After jobs are designed, they are grouped into units; then, units are grouped into larger units

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Why cluster positions

A

Clustering aids 3 coordination mechanisms
1. Direct supervision (each units gets one manager, linking managers creates system of authority )

  1. Mutual adjustment (sharing of common facilities, spatial proximity, frequent informal communication, creation of group identity: motivation)
  2. Standardization of outputs (same resources, equipment, budget, common measures of performance)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

Unintended consequences

A
  1. Reduces btw-unit coordination
    communication remains within clusters
    differentiation of goals, time horizon
  2. Sometimes this is advantageous
    formalization of behavior different for each unit
    organic units in mechanized structures
  3. Usually it is not
    formation of “silos”
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

Criteria for unit grouping

A
  1. Function (work processes or purpose)
  2. Output (final product or service)
  3. Place (area of operation)
  4. Customer (targeted market segment)
  5. Knowledge (skills)
  6. Time (timing of activities)

Function (knowledge, skills, processes) Market (output, customer, place)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Reminder

A

Pooled: if workers only share resources
Sequential: if they take previous outputs as inputs
Reciprocal: if they iterate and give feedback

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

Interdependence in workflow

A
  1. Mostly of reciprocal nature
    - heavy reliance on informal commun.
    - creates “psychologically complete” tasks
  2. Clustering according to cycles of operation
    - takes care of problems arising in workflow (most are solved by mutual adjustment, many of the rest are solved by direct supervision)
    - reflects natural clustering of activities
    - protects task identity: motivation
  3. Not only relevant to the operating core
    - also in staff units (for example filing a patent: content developed by R&D department, application overseen by legal department)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Other sources of interdependence

A
  1. Work processes
    arises when there is specialization of knowledge, as in the case of railroad and road transport specialists
  2. Scale economies
    arise when numbers are needed for efficiency, as in the case of repairmen for different assembly lines
  3. Social relationships
    arises when work is dull or dangerous, as in the case of coal mining crews and relay assemblers
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

Functional Structure

A
  1. Similar job in same unit regardless of output
    - coordination by formalization
    - better in simple or stable environment
    - process coordination at expense of workflow
  2. Favors specialization and technical excellence
    - mutual learning and knowledge spillover
    - sense of belonging, peer evaluation, career paths
  3. Creates problems of adaptability
    - reduces attention to a broader purpose
    - difficult to track responsibility and performance
    - difficult to adjust btw different specialists
    - lets problems rise to higher levels of the hierarchy
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

Divisional Structure

A
  1. Same output in unit regardless of job similarity
    - workflow coordination at expense of process/scale
    - coordination by adjustment and supervision
    - better in uncertain or diversified environments
  2. Favors responsiveness and accountability
    informal communication btw specialists
    easier to supervise and standardize outputs
    modular, easier to add tasks, units, or sububits
    line develops general management skills
  3. Generally more expensive and wasteful
    - less learning by repetition
    - duplication of personal and equipment
    - diminished sense of professional worth
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

Combining grouping criteria

A
  1. High middle line
    mostly pooled
    market grouping
  2. Low middle line
    mostly sequential
    function grouping
  3. Operating Core
    mostly reciprocal
    function grouping
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

What about staffers?

A

Functional and horizontally specialized by definition; centrally directed even when dispatched to divisions

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Unit Size (span of control)

A

Evidence from industrial organizations: chief executives have up to 18 subordinates, manufacturing foremen have 50 on average, top manager of Bank of America has 600

Small size faciliates supervision/adjustment

Increasing size is easier after standardization

  • of processes and skills: supervision unnecessary
  • of outputs: “Carbon-copy” units
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Flat vs. tall structures

A

Flat: more time spent on direct supervision, fewer distortions and interruptions of flows, decisions take longer and are less accurate, more opportunities for trial and error, resonates with workers’ need for autonomy

Tall: more time spent on other managerial duties, interruptions are needed to aggregate information, decisions are improved by intermediate reviews, fewer chances to learn from one’s own mistakes, resonates with workers’ need for security

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

Determinants of unit size

A

Usually high in core and lower middle line; small in staff, apex, higher line

Increases with need to reduce information distortion, need for self-actualization, task similarity, any kind of standardization

Decreases with need to perform non-supervisory duties, need to have a supervisor nearby, task complexity

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

Connecting Units

A
  1. Once units are created, they need to be linked
    vertically by formal authority
    vertically and horizontally by regulated flows
  2. Planning/control systems create regulated flows
    standardization of processes and outputs
    designed and implemented by technostructure
    ex: budgets, schedules, prod. quotas

Two main systems:

  • action planning: “sell 70% to new customers”
  • performance control: “increase profit rate by 3%”
17
Q

Planning and control systems

A

Planning is about what will happen

Control is about what has already happened

There is nothing to control without planning, and no point in planning without control

18
Q

Action planning

A
  1. Specific targets and how to reach them
    predetermined actions at predetermined times
    like formalization, but for non-routine decisions
  2. Creates a top-down flow of information
    start with strategic plans, turn plans into programs, turn programs into schedules and specifications, take corresponding actions
  3. Reduces units’ autonomy
    allows fulfilment of of overarching goals
    most important in functional structures
19
Q

Performance Control

A
  1. Sets desired result of any given unit
    overall results over a period of time
    measurement and review: motivation
    only influences decision-making indirectly
  2. Integrates performance of multiple units
    each division as a separate profit center
    most important in divisional structures
  3. Creates bottom-up and top-down flows
    strategic objectives into subobjectives, budgets
    subobjectives and budgets into operating plans
    units iterate subobjectives, plans, and budgets
20
Q

Capturing residual interdependence

A

Liaison positions
communication routers without any formal authority

Task forces and committees
expert groups in charge of occasion/standing issues

Integrating managers
dedicated but without formal authority over people

Matrix structure
crossover of functional and market-based groups

21
Q

Task forces and committees

A

organizations depend on meetings

  • improvised meeting: informal structure
  • fixed participants, schedule: formal structure

task forces

  • cross-functional group to address a problem
  • given a deadline, budget, and some discretion
  • disbands after solving the problem

Standing committees

  • permanent groups for enduring problems
  • present at all levels of the hierarchy
22
Q

Integrating managers

A

Like liaison positions but with some authority (budgets, payments, but never personnel!)

Appear in functional or divisional structures (negotiating btw functional departments, favoring specialization across market divisions)

Rely on persuasion more than formal authority (trust, domain knowledge)

23
Q

Matrix Structure

A

the ultimate liaison device

  • workers have multiple managers with equal power
  • managers jointly responsible for the same decisions

best suited to professional work

  • horizontally specialized, complex, interdependent
  • coordination must go through mutual adjustment

effective for innovation
- optimal use of scarce, expensive specialists

a structure for “grown-ups”

  • destroys unity of command
  • breaks down boundaries that protect managers
24
Q

2 types of matrix

A

permanent: when residual interdependence is stable
shifting: when it is unstable (in project work)

25
Q

A higher-dimensional matrix

A

can be used to combine any grouping criteria

  1. Functional managers
    - allocate specialists
    - assess performance
  2. Product managers
    - prepare budgets
    - coordinate workers
  3. regional managers
    - market perspective
26
Q

Dangers of the matrix structure

A

internalizes conflicts but does not remove them

confusion and frustration about dual authority

  • role conflict and ambiguity, possible overload
  • more time spent on interaction and negotiation

proliferation of managers, administrative costs