Chapter 6: Structure and Control: Structure Follows Strategy (Chandler)
Chapter 6: Structure and Control: Structure Follows Strategy (Chandler)
Tall structures
impede communication & coordination
raise bureaucratic costs
distort information (intentional & non-intentional)
decreases motivation
too many middle managers (structure begets structure)
Organizational Structure
Vertical differentiation:
Centralization:
easier coordination of activities
decisions fit organizational strategy
speedy decision making
Decentralization:
reduces overload for TMT (can focus on strategy)
ee motivation & accountability increase
fewer managers are needed - flatter structure
Organizational Structure
Horizontal differentiation
The degree to which you separate tasks or skills in
the organization (specialization or functionalization).
Mechanistic Organic
Mechanistic vs. Organic
Feature Mechanistic Organic
Task Definition Rigid and highly specialized Flexible and less narrowly
defined
Coordination Rules and directives vertically Mutual adjustment, common
and Control imposed culture
Communication Vertical Vertical and horizontal
.
Organizational Structure
Integration
extent to which the organization wants to coordinate
value creation activities (interdependence)
more differentiation requires more integration
increasing integration = $
Some structures are naturally more integrating
Interdepartmental liaison
Task forces – x-functional ad hoc teams
Integrating roles/departments - full time job of
creating coordination between functions, etc.
Strategic Control Systems
Strategic Control
means of motivating ee’s to work at organizational goals
Statement of goals
Set of assumptions or forecasts (environmental)
Qualitative statement of how business will change
Specific action steps for implementation
Set of financial projections
provide information and feedback (information technology)
Why strategic controls?
Efficiency - efficient use of resources/productivity
Quality - defect free goods, customer complaints, returns, sampling
Innovation - encourage risk taking
CR - evaluate ee’s with customer contact
Strategic Controls
Types of controls
Financial - stock price, ROI, profitability, etc.
Output - efficiency, quality, innovation, CR
Behavioral - rules and procedures, budgets,
standardization
Balanced scorecard approach (Kaplan)
A way to look out the rear view mirror (financial) as well
as down the road (strategic building blocks)
Financial
Customer
Process
Employee Development
Strategic Controls
Organizational culture
values and norms that are shared by people/groups that
control the way they act internally and externally.
Values = beliefs about goals and appropriate standards for
achievement (behaviors).
Norms = expectations about behavior in specific situations
and toward one another.
Organizational culture is about behaviors, which are
very difficult to change. But the good news is that they
can be changed.
Organizational Culture
Levels of culture:
Artifacts
visible organization structures and processes
what one sees and hears and feels when encountering a
new group with unfamiliar culture (language, technology,
products, clothing, semiotics, etc.)
easy to observe but difficult to decipher - only interpretable
through experience
Org Culture
Levels
Espoused Values
individual values (CEO, managers) that the group adopts
through validation (cognitive transformation to shared
value)
conscious and explicit - serve a normative or moral
function to guide members in certain situations and in
socializing members.
Strategies - goals - philosophies
Org Culture
Levels
Basic underlying assumptions:
a solution to a problem that works repeatedly &
becomes taken for granted
cannot be confronted or debated and are difficult (if not
impossible) to change.
can only be changed through re-examination and re-
evaluation of the cognitive structure.
this destabilizes our cognitive and interpersonal world
individuals will distort or deny rather than adopt - thus
culture at this level is a defense mechanism
so…major change means managing at this level.
Org Culture
Org socialization - how people learn the culture
Consists of stories, myths, legends, etc.
influence of the founder
organizational structure
composition of TMT
Adaptive cultures - encourage and reward
initiative/innovativeness - easiest to change…
Inert cultures - cautious and conservative, does
not value initiative & may discourage
Org Culture
Reward systems:
in designing reward systems, jobs need to be defined in
terms of the results to be accomplished, not duties and
responsibilities.
System should track actual achievement vs. targeted
performance using strategic/financial objectives.
Measures usually are made up of both quantitative and
qualitative measures.
MBO – PMP – etc.
Reward Systems
Reward systems;
Generously reward those who reach objectives and
deny reward to those who don’t.
payoff should be a major piece of total comp. and…
should extend to everyone.
administration is paramount (timely, consistent, fair, kiss)
tightly linked to strategic objectives
line-of-sight
Every comp/promo decision will be carefully scrutinized
by all employees.