Hatchch 03
Hatchch 03
Chapter 3
ENVIRONMENT
ORG
Inputs
Outputs
Organizational Environment
Modernist theory, the environment
lies outside the boundary of the organization. provides the organization with resources and absorbs its products and services.
Organizational Environment
Symbolic-Interpretivists suggest environments are social constructions.
Organizational Environment
Postmodernists see environment as
fragmented
boundaryless
image-driven
simulacra
NETWORK
Unions
Figure 3.2
Competitors
Stakeholder theory
Organizations operate under a social contract that guarantees certain rights to those who have a stake in the organizations activities or outcomes. Those attending to stakeholder demands will be more successful.
Interorganizational Network
Stakeholders:
Any actor that affects or is affected by the organization.
Network actors:
Investors, competitors, employees, media, suppliers, distributors, government, the physical environment, etc.
Figure 3.3
Interorganizational Network
General Environment
Culture
Network
Legal
Political
Figure 3.4
ORG
Physical
Social
Economy Technology
GENERAL
ENVIRONMENT
Legal Culture pluralism Political TASK ENV ORG Economy globalization Technology broadband surveillance
Physical
global warming
GENERAL GENERAL TASK ORG GENERAL TASK ORG GENERAL TASK GENERAL TASK ORG GENERAL TASK ORG TASK ORG
Figure 3.5
ORG
INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENT
International Environment
The economic, political, sociocultural, legal, technological, and physical interconnections that allow for permeable borders between nations.
Table 3.1
Physical
Culture
Legal
Network
Physical Political
Economy Technology
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT
Fig. 3.7
Environmental Uncertainty
low Rate of change high
low Complexity
Low uncertainty
Moderate uncertainty
high
Moderate uncertainty
High uncertainty
Fig. 3.8
low Complexity
high
Information Overload.
Responding to Uncertainty
The Law of Requisite Variety
(General Systems Theory)
For one system to deal effectively with another it must be of the same or greater complexity.
Isomorphism
The organization takes on the same form as its environment.
The environment therefore has power over an organization and can influence decision making.
Fig. 3.9
Capital inputs
(investors)
Outputs
Org
(customers)
Labor inputs
(employees)
Managing Power/Dependence
Pfeffer and Salancik suggest prioritizing dependence elements according to :
Criticality The estimate of the importance of a particular resource Scarcity The estimate of resource availability
Population Ecology
Organizations within an ecological niche are competitively interdependent and compete for survival. Study how & why some organizations survive.
Population Ecology
The portion of the environment studied by population ecology is an ecological niche. Consisting of the resource pool upon which a group of competitors depends.
*Your job as a manager is to help your firm find a pool of resources over which it can compete successfully with other firms for its survival.
Political Domain of Resource Dependence Theory Social Technological Economic Domain of Pop Ecology Theory
Institutional Theory
Institutional Pressures
Coercive: Pressure to conform that comes from the government in the form of rules or laws.
Normative: Pressure from cultural expectations. Mimetic: The desire of one organization to look like another. Usually used as a response to uncertainty.
Social Legitimacy
Institutional environments reward organizations for adopting acceptable practices and structures. Without this acceptance, organizations can be driven out of business.
Your job as a manager is to to help your firm mimic practices indicated by the institutional environment through coercion or normative expectation in order to ensure its social legitimacy.
Fig. 3.10
Social Legitimacy as an
Organizational Resource
Inputs
raw materials labor capital equipment social legitimacy
Transformation Process
Outputs
Enacted Environment
The conditions of the environment cannot be separated from managers perceptions of those conditions. When decision makers respond to their perceptions they enact the environment they anticipated.
(Weick)
Ambiguity Theory
Encouraging multiple interpretations of goals, vision, and actions to produce different strategies.
Deconstruction Trace discursive and non-discursive influences over time Fragmented environment
Phases of Industrialization
(Burns)
Phase 1:
The Factory System Productivity through machines and routinization.
Phases of Industrialization
Phase 2:
Greater product variety, more complex production processes, growth in bureaucracy
- Control, routine, and specialization. - Development of management structure
Phases of Industrialization
Phase 3
Production overtakes domestic demand
- customer sensitive - stimulated consumption - internationalization - technical developments
Post-Industrialism
(Bell)
Society is organized around the creation of knowledge and uses of information. Society is shaped by its method of acquiring and distributing knowledge.
Avoiding Hegemony
Hegemony is the practice of interpreting the interests of the ruling class as universal. - Surface language that implies the dominance of one group over others. - Give voice to others.