Week 4
Week 4
4th Week
Fundamentals of Organization Structure
Workshop Topic:
You and Organization Structure
Organizational Structure
Organization structure is one vital factor that helps organizations execute their strategies and
achieve their goals.
Companies use structural innovations such as cross-functional teams and matrix designs to
achieve the coordination and flexibility they need.
Some organizations have moved to a bossless structure, in which all jobs, including those
typically controlled and supervised by assigned managers, are handled by teams.
Organizations use a wide variety of structural alternatives to help them achieve their purpose and
goals, and nearly every firm needs to undergo reorganization at some point to help meet new
challenges.
Structural changes are needed to reflect new strategies or respond to changes in other
contingency factors (environment, technology, size, culture).
1. Organization structure designates formal positions and reporting relationships, including the
number of levels in the hierarchy and the span of control of managers and supervisors.
2. Organization structure identifies the grouping together of individuals into departments and of
departments into the total organization.
Organization Chart
It shows the various parts of an organization, how they are interrelated, and how each position
and department fits into the whole.
Centralized vs Decentralized
Centralization and decentralization pertain to the hierarchical level at which decisions are made.
Centralization means that decision authority is located near the top of the organization.
With decentralization, decision authority is pushed downward to lower organization levels.
Centralized vs Decentralized
Managers are always searching for the best combination of vertical control and horizontal
collaboration, centralization and decentralization, for their own situations.
Vertical linkages are used to coordinate activities between the top and bottom of an organization
and are designed primarily for control of the organization.
1. Hierarchical Referral.
The first vertical device is the hierarchy, or chain of command.
The lines of the organization chart act as communication channels.
1. Information Systems.
Computerized information systems enable managers or frontline workers throughout the
organization to routinely exchange information and update each other about progress, problems,
opportunities, activities, or decisions.
2. Liaison Roles.
A higher level of horizontal linkage is direct contact between managers or employees affected by
a problem.
One way to promote direct contact is to create a special liaison role.
A liaison person, sometimes called a coordinator, is located in one department but has the
responsibility for communicating and achieving coordination and collaboration with another
department.
3. Task Forces
Liaison roles usually link only two departments.
When linkage involves several departments, a more complex device such as a task force is
required.
4. Full-time Integrator
He or she is located outside the departments and has the responsibility for coordinating several
departments.
Unlike the liaison person described earlier, the integrator does not report to one of the functional
departments being coordinated.
5. Cross-Functional Teams
Project teams tend to be the strongest horizontal linkage mechanism.
Cross-functional teams are permanent task forces made up of members from different functional
areas and are often used in conjunction with a full-time integrator.
When activities among departments require strong coordination and collaboration over a long
period of time, a cross-functional team is often the solution.
Many of today’s companies use virtual cross-functional teams.
Relational Coordination
The highest level of horizontal coordination is relational coordination.
Relational coordination refers to “frequent, timely, problem-solving communication carried out
through relationships of shared goals, shared knowledge, and mutual respect.
It is part of the very fabric and culture of the organization.
In an organization with a high level of relational coordination, people share information freely
across departmental boundaries, and people interact on a continuous basis to share knowledge
and solve problems.
Ladder of Mechanisms for Horizontal Linkage and Coordination
Divisional grouping means people are organized according to what the organization produces.
Matrix grouping means an organization embraces two or more structural grouping alternatives
simultaneously.
An organization may need to group by function and product divisions simultaneously or might
need to combine characteristics of several structural options.
With virtual network grouping, the organization is a loosely connected cluster of separate
components.
Departments are separate organizations that are electronically connected for the sharing of
information and completion of tasks.
This structure is sometimes also called a product structure or strategic business unit structure.
The distinctive feature of a divisional structure is that grouping is based on organizational
outputs.
Geographic Structure
Each region of the country may have distinct tastes and needs.
Each geographic unit includes all functions required to produce and market products or services
in that region.
Matrix Structure
Sometimes, an organization’s structure needs to be multifocused in that both product and
function or product and geography are emphasized at the same time. One way to achieve this is
through the matrix structure.
The matrix structure often is the answer when organizations find that the functional, divisional,
and geographic structures combined with horizontal linkage mechanisms will not work.
Managers and functional managers have equal authority within the organization employees
report to both of them.
Outsourcing means to contract out certain tasks or functions, such as manufacturing, human
resources, or credit processing, to other companies.
SOURCE MATERIALS:
• Daft, Richard L., Organization Theory & Design, 13th Edition, Cengage Inc., 2021.
• Daft, Richard L., Organization Theory & Design, 10th Edition, Cengage Inc., 2009.
• Daft, Richard L., Management, 9th Edition, Cengage Inc., 2010.