Gyaan Kosh Term 4: Management of Organizations
Gyaan Kosh Term 4: Management of Organizations
Gyaan Kosh Term 4: Management of Organizations
TERM 4
Learning and
Management of Organizations
C
CONTENTS
1. Introduction
INTRODUCTION
The 7-S Model is used as a tool to assess and monitor changes in the internal situation of an organization.
2. Structure: the way the organization is structured and who reports to whom.
• How is the company/team divided? What is the hierarchy?
• How do the various departments coordinate activities? Where are the lines of communication?
• How do the team members organize and align themselves?
• Is decision making and controlling centralized or decentralized?
3. Systems: The daily activities and procedures that staff members engage in to get the job done.
• What are the main systems that run the organization? Consider financial and HR systems
as well as communications and document storage.
• Where are the controls and how are they monitored and evaluated?
• What internal rules and processes does the team use to keep on track?
4. Shared Values: Called "super ordinate goals" when the model was first developed, these are the
core values of the company that are evidenced in the corporate culture and the general work ethic.
• What are the fundamental values that the company/team was built on?
• What is the corporate/team culture?
• How strong are the values? In critical situations, are the values side-stepped?
7. Skills: The actual skills and competencies of the employees working for the company.
• What are the strongest skills represented within the company/team?
• Are there any skills gaps? How are skills monitored and assessed?
• What is the company/team known for doing well? Do the current employees/team
members have that ability?
2. Coordination mechanism
a. Balance between effective integration and careful differentiation
b. Coordination issues related to unusual (non-routine) matters require mechanisms
such as plans and budgets, negotiation, coordination committees etc.
c. Coordination is costly – so need to strike the right balance
4. Organizational boundaries
a. Inside vs outside execution of activities (outsourcing)
b. Make vs buy, strategic alliances with vendors
5. Informal structure
a. Relationships between employees important
b. Managers need to be aware of the informal network and should be careful about
it while making changes
6. Political Structure
a. Varying or competing interests among employees or divisions and departments –
managers need to be aware of this political landscape
Forms of Organizations:
1. Functional:
Activities grouped by common functions – R&D, marketing, production
Vertical coordination by hierarchy
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Benefits
High collaboration, efficiency, quality
Helpful for scaling up of organizations
Reduces duplication of efforts and resources
Career paths well defined
High functional expertise
Disadvantages
Issue of coordination across departments
Inflexible to respond to environment
Restricted view of broad picture of organization
Diffused accountability
When useful
Competitive issues require organization to stress functional expertise, efficiency and quality
Stable environment
High economies of scale are required
For small to mid-size companies
2. Divisional:
Activities grouped by products, geographies– R&D, marketing, production in each division
Vertical coordination by hierarchy
Benefits
High coordination in divisions
Each division a profit center
General management skills
Fast response to external factors
High accountability
Disadvantages
Issue – degree of autonomy to each division
No Economies of scale
Lack of functional expertise
Lack of coordination among divisions
Duplication of efforts and competition among division for selling products to same customers
When useful
Environment uncertainty is moderate to high
Competitive environment require you to innovate
Medium to large organizations
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3. Matrix Structure
Benifits
Customer, market, product focus
Faster communication and decision-making
Better business orientation/ownership
Opportunity for employees to either develop either functional skills or general
management skills
Disadvantages
Complex, Dual reporting , chances of conflict (divisional vs functional boss)
Potential role ambiguity due to dual reporting
Potential lack of accountability
Potentially time-consuming
When useful:
Organizations need both technological expertise and horizontal coordination across functions
Economies of scale as well as flexibility is required
Network Structure
“Why own when you can rent” philosophy
Outsourcing of non-core functions
Flattened hierarchy structures
Small core, with strong ties to other organizations/individuals
All virtual organizations are network organizations, but all network organizations are not
virtual organizations.
Benefits
Highly flexible and responsive structure
Real time interaction with vendors and customers
Informal structure and highly adaptable culture
Key Disadvantages
Reduces management’s control over key parts of its business
Blurring of boundaries
Accountability is poorly diffused
When useful
Innovation is the strategic advantage of the organization, most suited for Volatile environment
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Strategic HR Alignment:
A positions – Positions that are strategically important to the company. The two defining
characteristics of an A position is:
1. First, as you might expect, its disproportionate importance to a company’s ability to execute
some part of its strategy and,
2. Second—and this is not nearly as obvious—the wide variability in the quality of the work
displayed among the employees in the position.
Superior talent gives a company its competitive edge. But your star performers aren’t
going to add much value to the org if they are not engaged in work that is essential to
company strategy. Seems obvious but very few companies do it.
A positions are crucial to your company’s ability to execute some part of its strategy. To
identify these positions, clarify the basis on which your company competes: Price?
Quality? Mass customization? Then identify the technologies, information, and skills
required to create your intended competitive advantage.
Ask which jobs employ those critical capabilities in the execution of your strategy.
1. Evaluation
Determine what differentiates high and low performance in each A position and measure people
against those criteria.
2. Development
Actively develop people in A positions by providing training and professional development opportunities.
3. Compensation
Generously compensate A players in A positions.
4. Succession
Build bench strength for each A position.
Intelligently managing your A positions isn’t enough: manage B and C positions, too. B positions
can support A positions (think IBM’s feeder roles). Consider outsourcing or eliminating C jobs. At
minimum, move C players out of A positions and help B players in those roles become A players.
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What is Culture
Culture is a system of shared values (defining what is important) and norms (defining appropriate
behaviors and attitudes.)
Core Values: The primary values (which may or may not be included in the “espoused values”)
that are accepted throughout the organization, which trump all other decision-making criteria.
Norms:
Categories of norms:
• Performance norms
• Appearance norms
• Social arrangement norms
• Allocation of resources norms
Artifacts
The observable symbols and signs of an organization’s culture. Typical/common artifacts include:
• Physical structures and spaces
• Symbols & Slogans
• Rituals and ceremonies
• Language
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Leveraging culture is but one of a number of key leadership tools. By actively managing culture, an
organization is more likely to deliver on its strategic objectives over the long run. However, the first
criterion to using culture as a leadership tool is that it must be strategically relevant.
To effectively use culture as a leadership tool – the less formal direction you give employees
about how to execute strategy, the more ownership they take over their actions & the better
they perform. Eg – Nordstrom tells employees “use your good judgment in all situations.” So,
the second criterion for using culture as a leadership tool is that it must be strong
The third & final criterion for using culture as a leadership tool involves the content of
organizational culture. Research shows firms where culture included norms & values
promoting innovation & change were most successful. Managers should be able to also
quickly implement promising ideas.
1) NEEDS THEORIES
• MASLOW’S HIERARCHY:
This is one of the oldest theories – It has 5 categories of need. In the order of importance they are
1. Physiological (basic necessities) 2. Safety 3. Social 4. Esteem (internal: self-respect, external: status) and
5. Self-Actualization (achieving one’s potential)
As per the theory people fulfill needs in this order
• MCCLELLAND’S LEARNED
NEEDS THEORY:
People are influenced by a need for
achievement (nArch), need for power
(nPow) and need for affiliation (nAff)
a) Hygiene – job related factors which prevent dissatisfaction but do not promote employee
growth or development (lower- order needs)
b) Motivator - job related factors that encourage growth ( these are higher order needs)
• JOB-DESIGN MODEL:
Motivation through job design i.e. allocation of tasks can be down in three ways:
a) Job Rotation: Moving employees from one specialized job to another
b) Job Enlargement: Horizontal expansion of job and increasing more tasks at same level
c) Job Enrichment: Vertical expansion of job and assigning more responsibility.
If perceived “under-rewarded” - will produce lesser quantities in case they are paid by time
and will produce lesser quality products when paid by quantity.
If perceived “Over-rewarded” – will produce more in case they are paid by time and will
produce fewer but more quality products when paid by quantity.
Summary
Purely rational decision making is rarely used and often not practical
Individuals rely on heuristics to make decisions and these are often biased and are
sometimes not appropriate
Individuals need to be aware of their heuristics and the conditions under which they are used
Decision making can be improved using IT, structure, and more conscious processing of information
Gyaan Kosh Term 4 MGTO
Introduction
The most common source of mistakes in management decisions is the emphasis on finding the
right answer rather than the right question. - Peter Drucker
Groupthink:
Need for unanimity renders group incapable of
rational decision making
Cohesion and avoidance of conflict
“Closed” Leadership (Reduce consideration of
alternatives)
A “disease” that infects groups.
• Confirmation Bias
– Data should be used carefully
• Question the data – seek disconfirming evidence
• Frame and present data carefully
• Decision-making heuristics and biases amplified in groups
– Common information effect
– Groupthink
• A-priori biases compound and influence others’ decisions
• Heuristics can boost or undermine (risky-shift) operational effectiveness
Principles of Networking
Self-Similarity Principle
We are inclined to pick ties that have similar intellectual backgrounds, training, and experience.
Proximity Principle
We are inclined to pick ties that are in the same departments, units, and teams as ourselves
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Gives you everything the Self-similarity Principle gives you without any of the drawbacks;
solves the Trust/Diversity Paradox; and builds brokerage networks
Role of Brokers:
Innovation Adoption Lifecycle – How to spot, understand and influence different types of people
in the lifecycle:
Market Mavens
Brokers
Pragmatists
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Conservatives
Resistors
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