10-Foundations of Organizational Structure
10-Foundations of Organizational Structure
10-Foundations of Organizational Structure
Organizational
Structure
_____ defines how job tasks are formally
divided, grouped, and coordinated.
a. Organizational structure
b. Work specialization
c. Departmentalization
d. Organizational behavior
e. Matrix departmentation
What Is Organizational Structure?
Organizational Structure
– How job tasks are formally divided, grouped, and
coordinated
– Key Elements:
1. Work specialization
2. Departmentalization
3. Chain of command
4. Span of control
5. Centralization and decentralization
6. Formalization
1. Work Specialization
The degree to which tasks in the organization are
subdivided into separate jobs
Division of Labor
– Makes efficient use of employee skills
– Increases employee skills through repetition
– Less between-job downtime increases productivity
– Specialized training is more efficient
– Allows use of specialized equipment
Can create greater economies and efficiencies – but not
always…
Work Specialization Economies and Diseconomies
Bureaucracy
– A structure of highly operating
routine tasks achieved through
specialization, very formalized
rules and regulations, tasks that
are grouped into functional
departments, centralized
authority, narrow spans of control,
and decision making that follows
the chain of command
An Assessment of Bureaucracies
Strengths Weaknesses
– Functional economies of – Subunit conflicts with
scale organizational goals
– Minimum duplication of – Obsessive concern with
personnel and equipment rules and regulations
– Enhanced communication – Lack of employee
– Centralized decision discretion to deal with
making problems
_____ is characterized by a low degree of
departmentalization, wide spans of control,
authority centralized in a single person, and
little formalization.
a. Bureaucracy
b. Matrix organization
c. Simple structure
d. Team structure
e. Centralized structure
Organizational structure has six key elements.
Which of the following is not one of these
elements?
a. centralization
b. departmentalization
c. work specialization
d. formalization
e. location of authority
The key component underlying bureaucracies
is _____.
a. flexibility
b. standardization
c. dual lines of authority
d. wide span of control
e. the organizational pyramid
A bureaucracy is characterized by all of the
following except _____.
a. highly routine operating tasks
b. formalized rules and regulations
c. tasks that are grouped into functional
departments
d. decentralized decision making
e. specialization
Common Organizational Designs: Matrix
Matrix Structure
– A structure that creates dual lines of authority and combines
functional and product departmentalization
Key Elements
– Gains the advantages of functional and product
departmentalization while avoiding their weaknesses
– Facilitates coordination of complex and interdependent
activities
– Breaks down unity-of-command concept
New Design Options: Virtual Organization
– A small, core organization
that outsources its major
business functions
– Highly centralized with
little or no
departmentalization
• Provides maximum
flexibility while
concentrating on what
the organization does
best
• Reduced control over
key parts of the business
New Design Options: Boundaryless Organization
– An organization that seeks to eliminate the chain of
command, have limitless spans of control, and replace
departments with empowered teams
– T-form Concepts
• Eliminate vertical (hierarchical) and horizontal (departmental)
internal boundaries
• Breakdown external barriers to customers and suppliers
Two Extreme Models of Organizational Design
The structure that creates dual lines of
authority is the _____.
a. organizational structure
b. bureaucracy
c. matrix structure
d. virtual organization
e. simple structure
The matrix structure combines which two
forms of departmentalization?
a. process and functional
b. functional and product
c. product and process
d. all of the above
e. none of the above
Four Reasons Structures Differ
1. Strategy
– Innovation Strategy
• A strategy that emphasizes the introduction of major new
products and services
• Organic structure best
– Cost-minimization Strategy
• A strategy that emphasizes tight cost controls, avoidance of
unnecessary innovation or marketing expenses, and price
cutting
• Mechanistic model best
– Imitation Strategy
• A strategy that seeks to move into new products or new
markets only after their viability has already been proven
• Mixture of the two types of structure
Why Structures Differ
2. Organizational Size
– As organizations grow, they become more mechanistic,
more specialized, with more rules and regulations
3. Technology
– How an organization transfers its inputs into outputs
• The more routine the activities, the more mechanistic the
structure with greater formalization
• Custom activities need an organic structure
4. Environment
– Institutions or forces outside the organization that
potentially affect the organization’s performance
– Three key dimensions: capacity, volatility, and complexity
Three-Dimensional Environment Model
Volatility
Complexity Capacity
Capacity
– The degree to which an environment can support growth
Volatility
– The degree of instability in the environment
Complexity
– The degree of heterogeneity and concentration among
environmental elements
Organizational Designs and Employee Behavior
Impossible to generalize due to individual differences in
the employees
Research findings
– Work specialization contributes to higher employee
productivity, but it reduces job satisfaction.
– The benefits of specialization have decreased rapidly as
employees seek more intrinsically rewarding jobs.
– The effect of span of control on employee performance is
contingent upon individual differences and abilities, task
structures, and other organizational factors.
– Participative decision making in decentralized organizations
is positively related to job satisfaction.
People seek and stay at organizations that match their
needs.
Global Implications
Culture and Organizational Structure
– Many countries follow the U.S. model
– U.S. management may be too individualistic
Culture and Employee Structure Preferences
– Cultures with high-power distance may prefer mechanistic
structures
Culture and the Boundaryless Organization
– May be a solution to regional differences in global firms
– Breaks down cultural barriers, especially in strategic alliances
– Telecommuting also blurs organizational boundaries
Questions