1 / 27

Designing Organizational Structure: Specialization & Coordination

Designing Organizational Structure: Specialization & Coordination. Chapter 6. Functional Structure. People grouped based on: Common skills/ expertise (SBA Faculty) Shared resources (AV Services) The result of horizontal differentiation Simplest structure

xia
Télécharger la présentation

Designing Organizational Structure: Specialization & Coordination

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. Designing Organizational Structure: Specialization & Coordination Chapter 6

  2. FunctionalStructure • People grouped based on: • Common skills/ expertise (SBA Faculty) • Shared resources (AV Services) • The result of horizontal differentiation • Simplest structure • As tasks requirements emerge, functions emerge & become specialized, & core competences develop.

  3. Advantages of Functional Structure • Opportunities to learn skills from one another & become more specialized & productive • Most skilled are promoted • Monitor, control & supervise peers • Why is that important? • Norms & values develop over time more committed, more effective(stronger culture)

  4. Disadvantages of Functional Structure • Subunit orientationSolution? • Hard to measure each function’s contributions & profitability Necessary why? • Finding balance decentralized/ centralized D/M with different geographical locations • Time spent on coordination & integration rather than on long-term strategy • Control problems

  5. Disadvantages of Functional Structure • Control problems: • Core competences develop allowing org to produce wider variety of G/S • Creates more value & customer demand increases • Becomes more difficult for organization to provide service • Production costs increase • Pressure to stay in business with quality product. Now what?

  6. Functional Structure Ideal When: • Producing small number of similar G/S • Production in one or few locations • Servicing only one type of customer …..Otherwise, control problems develop & we need to move to a more complex structure. How do we do this?

  7. Designing a More Complex Structure • Increase horizontal differentiation (Product teams or product divisions) • Increase vertical differentiation • Integrate subunits (Figure 6-3, Page 150) --- When a functional structure faces control problems, the most common design change is towards a divisional structure.

  8. Divisional Structures If control problem due to: -Complexity of products Product structure -Number of locations Geographic structure -Large number different customers Market structure

  9. Product Structure Products are grouped into separate divisions, according to similarities or differences Why?Smaller, more manageable subunits  control Two choices: • Centralize support functions • Create multiple support functions(1 per division) • The decision depends on…? How similar or different the products are. Can they share resources?

  10. Types of Product Structure • Similar products & similar markets Product division structure • Different products & different markets Multidivisional structure • Technologically complex products & rapidly changing customer needs Product team structure

  11. Product Division StructureP. 152 • Similar products & markets Ex: Food processors (Heinz), furniture makers, paper products (Kimberly Clark). • Horizontal differentiation separates product lines • Centralized support functions.Why? • Each division has is own manufacturing unit &product division manager (PDM) which increases vertical differentiation What is PDM’s role? • Each support function is divided into product oriented teams that focus on 1 product.Page 153

  12. Multidivisional Structurep. 153 • Wide range of complex products, many markets (GE, Johnson & Johnson, most Fortune 500 Co.) • Distinguishing Factors: 1. Self-contained divisions with own set (decentralized) support functions. Why? Increases __ Differentiation 2. Corporate headquarters staffis new level of managers needed to do what? Increases __ Differentiation

  13. What integrating mechanisms are we using in the multidivisional structure? • Integrating Role  Corporate Managers- who integrate corporate HQ and divisional managers • Integrating Department  Corporate HQ

  14. Multidivisional Structure Advantages: • Increased organizational effectiveness- How? • Increased control- How? • Monitor profitable growth- How & why? • Internal labor market- Benefit? Allows a corporation to operate many different businesses. Each division can be a different business with its own structure. P. 156

  15. Multidivisional Structure Disadvantages: • Managing divisional- corporate relationship How much to centralize or decentralize? • Competition among divisions Over what? • Transfer pricing Ea division wants to maximize its profits to get more resources. How do we overcome this & promote coordination? • Bureaucratic costs Why so high? • Distorted communication Why?

  16. Product Team Structure p. 159 • Ideal for rapidly changing market & customer needs; high tech industry (Hallmark Cards, Chrysler) • Specialists from every support function are combined into product development teams(PDT) that specialize in 1 product. The benefit? • Each team has a product team manager (PTM) who heads the self-contained division • Is D/M centralized or decentralized?Why? • VD? HD? Integrating mechanism?

  17. Geographic Structure p. 161 • For org. located in many different geographical areas Crown, Cork and Seal Nieman-Marcus • Some functions are centralized at HQ location & others are decentralized at regional location. Why? • Divisions are established based on manufacturing demands • Creates new level of hierarchy to increase control Regional Managers (their role?)

  18. MarketStructure p. 163 • Divisions established based on marketing different customers’ needs (Mellon Bank) • Ea. division focuses on the needs of a specific customer group • Not a specific product • Centralized support functions. Why? • Marketing focus allows organization to rapidly respond to changing consumers’ needs.

  19. Matrix Structurep. 165 Groups people & resources by both function & product (TRW Systems, hospitals) Flat with decentralized authority Two-boss employees report to both functional managers & product team managers Cross-functional product teams coordinate & integrate different functions Organic structure: task & authority relationships are vague; empowered; use mutual adjustment

  20. Matrix StructureCross Functional Team (Highlighted)

  21. Traditional Top-Down StructureNote duplication of core functional skills across each product line.

  22. Redesign to Matrix StructureEliminates duplication of skills & responsibilities.Cross functional teams are used instead.

  23. Matrix Advantages: • Reduces subunit orientation • Opens communication between functions • Maximizes use of skilled professionals • Promotes concern for both quality & cost • Ability to respond to rapidly changing environment Disadvantages: • Role conflict & role ambiguity(lacks bureaucratic structure) • Conflict over resources(vague hierarchy of authority) -Power struggles & political maneuvering

  24. Sample of Matrix Structure

  25. Network Structure • Cluster of organizations coordinated bycontracts & agreements(with suppliers,manufacturers, distributors)rather than formal hierarchy • Outsourcing of many value creation activities Why outsource? • Use information technology to manage relationships. Nike’s R&D in Beaverton can use CAD to design shoes then send electronically to manufacturers in China.

  26. Network Advantages: • Network with partner who can create value at less cost • Reduced BC Why? • Organic structure– can develop new relationships & sever links with partners quickly in response to changing environmental situations Disadvantages: • Doesn’t work well for high tech, complex companies where mutual adjustment is high (coordination/motivation problems when not f-to-f)

  27. Boundaryless Organization • People linked by faxes, computers, videoconferencing • People not formal members of organization, but act as functional experts • Experts fulfill obligations of contract & move on.

More Related