1 / 33

Legacy Factors: Organizational Growth

Longitudinal thinking and. Legacy Factors: Organizational Growth. Facilitator and Course Coordinator: Vinayshil Gautam PhD, FRAS(London) (Founder Director IIM K; Leader Consulting Team IIM S) A Al_Sager Chair Professor and First Head, Management Department, IIT D Chairman, DKIF.

rhoslyn
Télécharger la présentation

Legacy Factors: Organizational Growth

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Longitudinal thinking and Legacy Factors: Organizational Growth Facilitator and Course Coordinator: Vinayshil Gautam PhD, FRAS(London) (Founder Director IIM K; Leader Consulting Team IIM S) A Al_Sager Chair Professor and First Head, Management Department, IIT D Chairman, DKIF

  2. Organizational Growth • The future of any organization depends on how well it is able to relate itself to its givens and use that knowledge to project growth. • Also, calls for longitudinal thinking • The longitudinal thinking can effect different components of the organization differently, because, the givens can vary in each component (Burton et al., 2002; Eisenhardt et al., 1990b).

  3. Eg:Organizational Structure • There is no ideal organizational structure • Structures can be placed along the continuum from mechanistic to organic • Entrepreneurial choices about organizational structures and processes are driven by founders’ prior experiences in specific companies • As the organization grows, it evolves into a more organic structure. Past affiliations are an important and understudied component of founders. Beckman (2006)

  4. Factors that influence the choice of structure

  5. Longitudinal Thinking • The present state is a result of the past state and the future state would be the result of the present state--- nothing begins ab initio. • Tool to analyse organizational structure • Account for the constraints and facilitations provided by the environment

  6. Longitudinal Thinking (cont.) • Can help to establish a useful pattern or trend between a dependent and an independent factor over time. • Can reveal the impact of other surrounding or circumstantial or peripheral factors • There are 2 underlying sub processes • Longitudinal study(mapping the givens) • Longitudinal analysis (structure, aggregate, classify)

  7. Variables in Longitudinal Thinking- Used to factor variables into issues of technological choice and development

  8. Legacy Variables • The trajectory of organizational growth can be plotted as • c is the legacy variable • Represents the appropriate definition of the situation • Longitudinal Thinking can reveal ‘c’ i.e. the factors that impact the dynamics of the relation between y and x y = mx + c

  9. Legacy Variables (cont.) • c emerged as a result of • Molding influences during the early stages of growth • Contextual factors • Personality variables • Process variables • Has to be factorized/scientifically decomposed and selectively built upon • Done by longitudinal thinking

  10. Legacy Variables (cont) • Any choice the organization makes invariably reflects • Its past experience • Its learning from its mistakes • Present state of affairs • Its vision for the future

  11. Organizational Legacy • When an individual leaves an organization to pursue an entrepreneurial venture, the new firm’s initial endowment will be the knowledge that is embedded in the parent organization. • Certain decisions central to the capabilities of a new firm, are part of that knowledge • The design of the organization • The degree of hierarchy and span of control • The institutional routines • Organizational culture Agarwal et. al (2004)

  12. A substantial percentage of the founders in the successful Inc.500 gathered ideas for their new company while working for their prior employer in the same industry1. • The survival rate of new firms is greater when the founders have prior work experience in incumbent firms2. Bhide (2000) Klepper and Sleeper (2005)

  13. Longitudinal Analysis • Detailed examination of data and evidence to reveal trends over time • Reveals patterns in target population’s achievements, behavior etc over time • Comparison with trend analysis • Switch from trend to longitudinal is simple; focus on the individual’s event • Gives a ‘before’ and ‘after’ picture

  14. Comparison with cross-sectional analysis • People making up the population change according to who fits the criterion each year • Longitudinal analysis looks at the same people over time based on whether they fit the criterion at the selected time

  15. Comparison of Studies

  16. Longitudinal Study • Correlation research study that involves repeated observations of the same items over long periods of time. • Observational in nature • Repeated observations at an individual level • Enable to distinguish between short-term and long-term phenomena

  17. Types of Longitudinal Studies

  18. Cohort Analysis • Cohort • Group of people who share a common characteristics or experience within a defined period • Set of individuals entering a system at the same time • It seeks to explain an outcome through exploitation of differences between cohort

  19. Variations of Cohort Study

  20. Longitudinal Thinking & Organizational Effectiveness in Learning Process • Organizational learning is the sum total of the individual learning occurring in the workplace1 • There is a marked shift to group learning • Cowan (1995) made use of the Native American Medicine Wheel to describe this model of organizational learning2 • Circular, longitudinal & integrative Argyris & Schon, 1996; Levitt & March, 1988; Normann, 1985; Weick & Westley, 1996) Rhythms of Learning: Patterns That Bridge Individuals and Organizations : David Cowan, 1995

  21. North American Medicine Wheel Model

  22. Longitudinal Thinking and Organizational Planning • High-level planning activities • Establish the high-level goal • Scan the environment • Analyze the high-level goal • Develop strategies and tactics • Develop schedules and assign responsibilities We need a plan before planning

  23. Longitudinal Assessment for Grading System in Performance Appraisal • Based on the performance during the performance appraisal term • Each individual compared to their own beginning level • Assessment by means of • Process, effort, and participation as tools of learning. • Practice in generating and developing ideas. • Thinking skills, problems solving skills, and dexterity skills. • Grades on basis of ‘learning to think’.

  24. CASE A pharmaceutical company and the evolution of its organisation structure

  25. Organizational Legacy and Entrepreneurial Firm Performance • Study done on Swedish and Danish biotechnology start-ups • Founders’ immediate prior experience affects the performance of their new venture. • Differentiation between financial performance and product development

  26. Legacy Variable: Founders’ Professional Backgrounds

  27. Control Variables • Human Capital variable • Work experience of the founders • Number of publications • Number of citations • Social Capital variable • Founding alliances: Early stage strategic alliances • Later alliances

  28. Performance Measures • Innovative performance • Early stage inventive performance: No. of patents granted to the firm • Number of active clinical trials in the firm’s portfolio (market potential) • Financial performance • PMV (Post Money Value) • Market capitalization, calculated as the average daily closing price in each year for a given firm, multiplied by the number of stocks committed • Non-listed firms • Calculated per each round of capital inflow as the total number of shares committed, multiplied by share values paid by new investors

  29. Results: Effect of Organizational Legacies

  30. Thank you!

More Related