The Mushroom Factory
The Mushroom Factory
The Mushroom Factory
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Background
The ESCO Company is a Midwest manufacturing departmental organization which holds and
accessories department that focus’ specifically on producing specialized industrial which aid in
complimenting the high volume standard products of the company. authority in the creation of
claim to fame modern things whose intention is to compliment the organization's high volume
standard items. The Accessories department at first had full range of control over its products
which includes the customer service and relations. In 1972 this department changed severely
introducing two groups which are the Product Engineering and Manufacturing Engineering
groups, the former continued handling the product inception, prototype production and production
start-up as well as customer service and relation, and the latter handling the products during the
production stage. In 1973, to add to the already detrimental problems of the manufacturing
department, the company had purchased a few small manufacturing plants and began transferring
the operations to these newly acquired factories, which was also putting them out of jobs.
Employee satisfaction during this time was severely damage, morale and work efficiency suffered
greatly. The following year, efforts were made were to reduce the damage that was done by
reverting the decision but this proved to be futile due to the fact that not long after the reversion,
the company was merged with another division of its parent company and as a result of this middle
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Problem Statement
The Core Problem Identified in this case study was the poor Leadership displayed by some of the
managers and leaders of The Mushroom Factory. (Winston and Patterson, 2006) defines leadership
as the selection, equipment, training, and influencing of one or more followers who have diverse
gifts, abilities, and skills and focuses the followers to the organization’s mission and objectives
causing the followers to willingly and enthusiastically expend spiritual, emotional, and physical
energy in a concerted coordinated effort to achieve the organizational mission and objectives.
(Robbins and Judge, 2018) also defines leadership as having the ability a group of persons towards
Figure 1
Department
Manager
Richard Long
5 Engineers 4 Engineers
5 Technicians
2 Technicians 3 Technicians
Figure one shows the leaders and managers within the organization. They were assigned based on
technical specialization and existing work load. Group leaders were encouraged to develop their
own ideas for accessory products, and bonus checks were distributed each year to the group that
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Each of the leaders within the department had differing leadership style. John Ritch was more of
a Democratic (Participative) Leader and he was arguably the strongest leader in the organization,
he always got the job done and was the one leader that all the engineers and technicians looked to
for help, whereas Valentino Rockford could be seen as having Charismatic Leadership but having
a terrible work ethic, his group would get assigned tasks completed and even win some merit prizes
but Valentino’s work was mostly done for him by his employees or John Ritch. George Kelley had
an Autocratic Leadership style, he had years of experience but he never got the job done
sufficiently and had nothing to show to be rewarded with the merit prizes that were awarded to
groups, management stopped assigning engineers to his group because he kept running them away
due to his outdated way of doing things and his stubbornness. Richard Long the department
“by-the-book” type of leader but not as successful as one would think he should be given his
credentials due to his shyness and lack of communication with employees as a result of that. In
terms of leadership, John Ritch was the only Valuable asset the company had as a leader, Valentino
Rockford, George Kelley and Richard Long all had fundamental flaws with their personalities
which in turn affected their style of leadership and as a result of that the company was not as
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Analysis, Major Issues, Discussion
Ineffective Communication
Communication is something that no group or organization can exist without, it is the transfer and
understanding of meaning. The meaning must be understood and only then can information and
ideas be conveyed. (Robbins and Judge, 2018). Robbins and Judge go onto say that there are four
different forms of communication, downward communication flows from one level of a group to
a lower level and is used by group leaders and managers to allocate goals, provide instructions,
explain policies and procedures, talk about problems and give feedback. Managers need to bring
clarity to the reasons why certain decisions were made. Upward communication flows from a level
of a group to a higher level, this is where employees can air out any concerns or current problems,
provide feedback to the higher-ups and make them aware of goal progress. Upwards
communication is useful to managers as it can be used as a tool for conjuring ideas on how to
improve work conditions. Lateral Communication flows between employees of the same level
within the organization in the same workgroup or different workgroups or any other horizontally
equivalent workers. Lateral Communication saves time and facilitates coordination and they can
be formally sanctioned or informally created which they mostly are the latter. The company
suffered a breakdown in downward communication because Richard Long had great difficulty
communicating with his subordinates and he could not delegate authority to people that he hardly
knew, because of his inadequacies many company functions went undone. Upward communication
saw its fair share of problems as well, George Kelley was the prime offender of these problems,
due to his stubbornness and his jealousy of not being department manager, he was very
unreasonable and belligerent towards his subordinates which caused them to have little respect for
him, if any at all. As a result of this group B often broke the chain of command and sought out
John Ritch to assist them with their dilemmas. Downward communication saw further breakdown
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when Top Management decided to share the company changes with the executives, which includes
Richard Long, who we already know has difficulty communicating, and it was suggested that they
leak the information to their departments, Richard gave the message to George Kelley assuming
that he would get the word around but George told no one and when the change happened, all the
employees except George was caught by surprise. Lateral Communication worked against the
company after the change happened, Val’s group learned of the better working conditions that the
product development group had as it was told by the old members of Val’s group who had been
put into Product Development, this caused the manufacturing department to become jealous and
hostile.
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Motivation
According to (Robbins and Judge, 2017) Motivation is the processes that account for an
individual’s intensity, direction and persistence of effort towards attaining a goal. It is the
enthusiasm of an individual to reach the specified organizations goal, regarding their personal
goals. In an organization, the role of management along with the head of a department is to allocate
to improve the quality of work that is achieved within an organization. In the Mushroom Factory
Case, the McGregor X and Y theory of motivation could be used to analyze the company.
McGregor described the X Theory as the workers who have little ambition, dislike work, want to
avoid responsibility and need to be closely controlled to work effectively. While he described
Theory Y as a positive view that assumes employees enjoy work, seek out and accept responsibility
and exercise self- direction. (Robbins and Coulter, 2016). In the case, George Kelley is an
examples of McGregor’s Theory X because he believed that he was entitled to the department
manager positions. When he did not receive the promotion to department manager and was instead
placed as the head of section B, he took this as an insult. His problem with section B was that they
were never given any of the interesting assignments due to the lack of technical depth. George
distrust in his technicians made him believe that they were unable to do anything correctly. He
believed that for it to be done correctly he had to do majority of the work himself. George Kelley
never gave his full potential because he believed that being head of section B was beneath him,
also never accepting help, but always complaining that he never received help lead to the
technicians not trusting him and taking any problems they had to John Ritch head of Section A.
John Ritch and his employees is an example of McGregor’s theory Y. John was a pleasant, likable
man who got along with all the members of his team. He was an excellent engineer, he did not
assume that he would always have the best or only answer, but understood that the technicians
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would have more experience and a more practice approach to solving problems within the
organization. John was quite a competent worker, that understood that there needed to be a distance
between leaders and their group member. He stated that he liked to talk about other things during
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Attitudes to work
“Attitudes can be defined as providing a state of readiness or tendency to respond in a particular
way.” (Mullins, J. L., 2005). (Robbins and Judge, 2017) also states “Attitudes are evaluative
we feel about something. When you say “I like my job,” you are expressing your attitude about
your work.” In the saving phase of the case study, Richard Long had more communication issues
because he was incapable of interacting with his workers. He pretty much disregarded the
employee complaints and dismissed them by just replying with answers such as “it is company
policy, there is nothing that can be done to rectify the situation, or just plainly telling them to be
quiet and go by the book. As a result of this everything started falling apart, job dissatisfaction was
at an all-time high, as employee morale got lower “accidents” around the workplace began
happening, equipment was being destroyed, pilferage occurred, absenteeism and turnover started
to increase.
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Possible Alternative, Pros and Cons
Some alternatives that could be looked at to help the business would be:
roles and duties to employees, for example where George Kelley kept running away his engineers,
had there been an HR department, they would be able to air their grievances towards George.
Pros:
department to listen to and try to solve their problems related to other employees of all
An HR department would help in the hiring process of the organization; it would allow for
Cons:
There would be a cost to hiring qualified persons to head and work within the department,
Effectiveness of the department may be reduced due to the lack of trust the employees
would have.
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Better Qualified Managers
Pros:
Hiring more qualified managers similar to John Ritch with his Democratic Leadership
style, looking at how successful Group A is, the company would benefit with more
managers that have decent work ethic and motivates their employees.
Managers who will listen to their employees when they voice their concerns and use that
Cons:
It is difficult to find persons who would have similar technical expertise of John Ritch.
It would be very time consuming to find such a manager, as well as gauging their
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Recommendations
1) The company could either opt to train the leaders who have poor work ethic, but seeing as
the problems with them lie deep within their personality it would be better to get rid of
them because they are a hindrance to the organizations effectiveness. It would be better
suited to find motivated persons with quality work ethic to hold these positions.
heavily in the downfall of the organization, more effort should be placed into keep
3) Collaborative problem solving should be done through the employees and leaders of certain
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References
Kortmann, S. (2012). The Relationship between Organizational Structure and Organizational
Robbins, S. and Coulter, M. (2016). Management. 13th ed. Essex: Pearson Education Limited, p
495
Robbins, S. and Judge, T. (2018). Essentials of organizational behavior. 14th ed. Harlow: Pearson,
pp.217, 276.
ROBBINS, S. and Judge, T. (2017). ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR. 17th ed. UPPER SADDLE
https://www.regent.edu/acad/global/publications/ijls/new/vol1iss2/winston_patterson.doc/winsto
(Mester, Cheryl., Visser, Delene., Roodt, Gert,. 2003) – ‘Leadership style and its relation to
employee attitudes and behaviour’ (Mullins, J. Laurie,. 2005) – Management and Organisational
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