Title: Organizational Design
1Organizational Design Processes
- Session 6
- MBA Course 51-454-02Fall 2006
2What was it all about?
- Get organized make it work
- To get the job done!
STRUCTURE
PROCESSES
3What was it all about?
- Configuring
- Structure
- Processes
- Reward systems
- People practices policies
-
TO SUPPORT THE STRATEGY
Source Galbraith, J al Designing Dynamic
Organization Chapter 1 Getting started
4STRATEGY Vision Mission Direction Competitive
advantage
5Organization design star model
STRATEGY Vision Mission Direction Competitive
advantage
PEOPLES PRACTICES Staffing and Selection Performan
ce feedback Learning and Development
STRUCTURE Power Authority Reporting
Relationship Oganizational roles
PROCESSES AND LATERAL CAPABILITY Networks,
Processes Teams, Integrative Roles Matrix
structure
REWARD SYSTEM Goals, Scorecards Values and
Behaviors CompensationReward
Source Galbraith, J al Designing Dynamic
Organization Chapter 1 Getting started
6What was it all about?
- Get organized make it work
- To get the job done!
7Learning fromThe Powerful Office
8PAWLING PORCELAIN MANUFACTURING
President CEO
Vice-President Marketing
Vice-President GM OP
Vice-President Fin. Control
Personnel Director
CLIFFORD Management Services Off.
R D
Production
Marketing
9PAWLING PORCELAIN MANUFACTURING
JACK President CEO
JOHN Vice-President Marketing
MIKE Vice-President GM OP
PAUL Vice-President Fin. Control
MARY Personnel Director
CLIFFORD Management Services Off.
SHEILA R D
BOB Production
PETER Marketing
10PAWLING PORCELAIN MANUFACTURING
JACK CEO
JOHN Marketing
MIKE GM OP
PAUL Fin. Control
MARY Director
CLIFFORD Management Services Off.
SHEILA R D
BOB Production
PETER Marketing
11PAWLING PORCELAIN MANUFACTURING
JACK CEO
JOHN Marketing
MIKE GM OP
PAUL Fin. Control
MARY Director
CLIFFORD Management Services Off.
SHEILA R D
BOB Production
PETER Marketing
12PAWLING PORCELAIN MANUFACTURING
JACK CEO
JOHN Marketing
MIKE GM OP
PAUL Fin. Control
MARY Director
CLIFFORD Management Services Off.
SHEILA R D
BOB Production
PETER Marketing
13Learning fromThe Powerful Office
- An Organization
- A SOCIAL Institution
- Made of PEOPLE
- Playing a ROLE
- And INTERACTING between each other.
14Learning fromThe Powerful Office
- Things evolve New people comes in and both can
have some impact - Beyond the formal line of authorities there are
relationships, formal and informal, between
people
15Learning fromT.E.K.
- ACTIONS RELATED TO TEK / US
- Training 6 1
- Inf., consultation involvement 5 9
- Nature of the work 3 1
- Monetary 2 3
- Hiring a consultant 1 0
- HR policies and practices 0 3
16Learning fromT.E.K.
- Respecting the line of authorities
- You can change people through training
- Money does not fix everything
17Learning fromT.E.K.
- INNOVATION
- Operational innovation
- How the work is done.
18Learning fromT.E.K.
- T.E.K Key strategic actions
- Restructure work so that each employee performs
all 25 operations involved on the assembly line.
Change technology and organisation of work
stations accordingly - Revise salaries so that they are slightly higher
than the industry average. - Implement a company share purchase plan for
employees using a wage deduction system.
19Learning fromT.E.K.
- Innovation can blossom almost anywhere in an
organisation that is properly structure to
encourage it.
Source The Economist The new organisation a
survey of the company
20Learning fromT.E.K.
- Toyota's success encourages every worker, no
matter how far down the production line, to
consider himself a knowledge worker and to think
creatively about improving his particular corner
of the organisation.
Source The Economist The new organisation a
survey of the company
21Learning fromMUCH / MRH
- Facing the growing complexity
- Matrix forms
- process organization
22Board
Administration
Therapeutic Services
Information Services
Diagnostic Services
Support Services
Admissions Billing, etc. Med. Records Computer
Info. Health Ed. Human Resour.
PT, OT Speech/Lang. Resp. Therapy Pharmacy
Nursing Dietary
Med. Lab Radiology Nuclear Med ER Cardiology
Neurology
Central Supply Biomedical Housekeeping
Maintenance Dietary Transportation
23Maisonneuve Rosemont Hospital
24Learning fromMUCH / MRH
- The growing complexity of health care and social
problems. - The aging of the population the chronicity.
- The nature of the problems
- forces to call upon
- various disciplines and various health care
centres, - leading to better integrated services.
25Learning fromMUCH / MRH
- The growing complexity
- the nature of the problems
- forces to call upon
- various disciplines
- leading to better integrated services.
26Learning fromMUCH / MRH
- To meet new challenges
- rethink our ways of delivering care and
services to the population, with a view to
situating the client at the centre of our
concerns. - André Ducharme, GM, MRH
27Learning fromMUCH / MRH
- To meet new challenges
- rethink the way of delivering products and
services to the client
28Learning fromMUCH / MRH
- CHANGING THE CULTURE
- beyond the organizations structure
- cultivate a
- collective sense of responsabilitity
- among employees
Source Majchrzak, A. Wang, Q. Breaking the
Functional Mind-set in Process Organizations HBR
29Learning fromVERIFONE
- A distance-insensitive company held together by
electronic glue. - Spread all over the world The workplace is where
the employee is.
A VIRTUAL CORPORATION
Source The VERIFONE (1997) case HBR
30Learning fromVERIFONE
- A virtual corporation
- is created by the extensive contracting out of
activities IT allows independent firms to join
together in networks, which then act as if they
are single corporations. - Also call the networked organization.
Source Galbraith, Jay R. Creating a virtual
corporation
31Learning fromVERIFONE
- A virtual team
- is a group of coworkers, geographically and/or
organizationally dispersed, who is assembled
using a combination of telecommunications and
information technologies to accomplish an
organizational task.
Souce Townsend A.M. al Virtual Teams
Technology and the workplace of the future
32Learning fromVERIFONE
- Todays information technology has a dramatic
impact on the way organizations work - IT enables work to be organized in many and in
very different ways
33Learning fromIBM
34Learning fromIBM
- Either
- Splitting IBM businesses or
- Integrating into 1-activity
- How to explain the two logics?
35Learning fromIBM
- Splitting IBM businesses
- In reaction to the new environment new
competitors providing narrow/horizontal slice of
the total package - Customers support
- To break up IBMs pricing umbrella (bundle
prices) - Interest in getting computing power to the
individual employees - To bring more competition into the marketplace
- A financially-market driven strategy IPO of many
companies - For many IBM executives, an organizational and
cultural logic, where each entity already first
perform in its own turf.
36Learning fromIBM
- Integrating into 1-activity
- A client-driven logic at the end of the day, the
customer needs an integrator, to create value - Problem solving
- Ability to apply complex technologies to solve
business challenges - integration
- In this new environment (with tens of thousands
small companies) IBM s scale and broad-based
business capabilities were its competitive
advantage - A new organizational and cultural logic
performance is measured in terms of contribution
to the whole
37Learning fromIBM
- A new conception of IBMs business model
- Based on two emerging forces
- Customers would increasingly value companies that
could provide solutions that integrated
technology from various suppliers and integrated
technology into the processes of an enterprise. - Networked model of computing would replace the
PC-dominated world of 1994.
38Learning fromIBM
- A new conception of IBMs business model
- Creating a Global Enterprise
- Capitalizing on its ability to integrate all the
parts for the customers.
39Learning fromIBM
- A new conception of IBMs business model
- A services-led model
- Designs, builds and delivers integrated
technology solutions. - Build the largest and the most influential
services business in the IT industry.
40Learning fromIBM
- A new conception of IBMs business model
- Pulling together all of IBMs software assets
under a single executive In a world of open
standards focus on the middlewareworking
cross platform - Acquiring Lotus to complete the middleware
portfolio and enter in the world of
collaborative computing. - Leaving application software and partnering
with application software developers - Enter the technology components marketplace.
41Learning fromIBM
- A new conception of IBMs business model
- Integrating IBM
- Organization / Brand Image / Compensation
42Learning fromIBM
- A new conception of IBMs business model
- Organization
- Breaking up the fiefdoms from geographical
organization to a global, customer-oriented
organization. - Brand Image
- Global and unified brand
- Compensation
- Pay for performance stock-based compensation
bonus link to overall IBMs performance
43Learning fromIBM
- Which activities should be kept, outsourced or
abandoned. - To protect and develop
- the integrator" role,
- to better-served the client
- stay on focus
44Learning fromIBM
- Which activities should be kept, outsourced or
abandoned. - Sell unproductive assets and not essential for
the company, to raise cash (examples Expensive
training centers, Fine-art collection, Federal
Systems Company/national security and space
programs) - Leaving application software and partnering
with application software developers (no longer
competing against them) - Selling the IBM network (5 billion) to ATT a
part of the stack that was not strategically
vital and avoid huge capital investment to
maintain the network. - Exit the DRAM business exit the hard-disk-drive
business - Selecting markets and competing on the basis
- of a distinctive, sustainable competency.
45Learning fromIBM
- IBM transformation of the management roles and
organizational culture. - A culture of collaboration
- Organizational structure and processes that
favour the collaboration the expression of a new
culture. - Managing by principles
- Focus on the outside the client.
46Learning fromIBM
- IBM transformation of the management roles and
organizational culture. - For the Mature Business (H1)
- Operators deep functional expertise
- For the rapidly Growing Business (H2)
- Business Builders entrepreneurial
- For the Emerging Business (H3)
- Visionaries unconventional thinkers.
47Managing changes
- Culture isnt just one aspect of the game it
is the game.
Source GERSTNER, L.V. Who Says Elephant Cant
dance? p.182
48The new IBMnew CEO Sam Palmisano
- We have to let go the old command-and-control
structure if we were going to grow - The business must adopt a culture of
collaboration both within their four walls and
outside - Linda Sanford, Senior Vice-president, IBM Let
Go to Grow
Source The Economist The new organisation a
survey of the company
49(No Transcript)
50What is it all about?
51Organizational Design Processes
- An organizations structure is not an end in
itself. But it sets the context for managerial
action. - Structure is just one tool that managers can
employ to achieve the objectives that have been
set.
Source Nohria, N. Note on Organization
Structure Harvard Business School
52From the classical forms
- The Functional Form
- Activities grouped by common function
production, sales, finance, RD - The Divisional Form
- Grouping diverse functions into divisions
products, region, client-based - The Matrix Form
- Divisional and functional structures are
implemented employees report to both of them.
Source Nohria, N. Note on Organization
Structure Harvard Business School
53 to the process organization
- Moving away with the functional silos
- To create new organizational structures
process-complete unit - each able to perform all the cross-functional
steps or tasks required to meet - customers' needs.
Source Majchrzak, A. Wang, Q. Breaking the
Functional Mind-set in Process Organizations HBR
54 to new forms of organization
- The disaggregated virtual networked
- Creating smaller sub-units with significant
decisions rights - Decreasing the layers of management and the
extent of central staff - Joint-venture and strategic-alliance and
outsourcing the line of what is inside and what
is outside has blurred.
Source The Economist The new organisation a
survey of the company
55 to new forms of organization
- The disaggregated virtual networked
- Linked closely where opportunities to create
values and loosely where values lie in
differentiation - And where IT becomes an electronic glue
- Redrawing the boundaries
Source The Economist The new organisation a
survey of the company
56New Organization ModelNew Management Roles
- Building from small front-line operating units
- Cross-unit integrative process
- Commitment to empowerment
Source BARTLETT, C.A. GHOSHAL S. The Myth of
the Generic Manager
57New Organization ModelNew Management Roles
-
- in building and managing a company that
stimulates people to take initiatives, to
collaborate, to renew themselves and the
organization
Source GOSHAL, S., BARTLETT, C.A. Building
Organizational Capabilities
58New Organization ModelNew Management Roles
- The Entrepreneurial Process
- Looking for innovation opportunities
- The Integration Process
- Linking resources and competencies
- The Renewal process
- Challenging its own beliefs and practices
Source GOSHAL, S., BARTLETT, C.A. Building
Organizational Capabilities
59THE RENEWAL PROCESS
Inspiring Energizing Through the Vision
THE INTEGRATION PROCESS
Linking best Practices across units
Managers role
Source GOSHAL, S., BARTLETT, C.A. Building
Organizational Capabilities
THE ENTREPRENEURIAL PROCESS
Innovation Pursuing Opportunities
Coaching Supporting Initiatives
Questioning Challenging Finger-in-the-pie
Front-line Managers
Middle Managers
Executives Managers
60New Organization ModelNew Management Roles
- ENTREPRENEURS
- COACHES
- LEADERS
Source BARTLETT, C.A. GHOSHAL S. The Myth of
the Generic Manager
61New Organization ModelWhat does it take?
- LEADERSHIP
- TALENT
- CULTURE
Source BARTLETT, C.A. GHOSHAL S. The Myth of
the Generic Manager
62LEADERSHIP ORGANIZATION
CULTURE VALUE
PROCESSES TOOLS
INNOVATION EFFECTIVENESS
PEOPLE SKILLS
EVERYTHING IS LINK TOGETHER
Source Loewe, P. Dominiquini, J Overcoming
the barriers to effective innovation Strategy
Leadership
63New Organization ModelWhat does it take?
- LEADERSHIP
- more responsibilities handed down to the
workforce at large, many more people than before
are having to exercise authority. - TALENT
- hold on knowledge workersessentials to its
operations and who are not motivated only by
money. - CULTURE
- the compass that steers employees in the way
the organisation wants them to go, is its
culture.
Source The Economist The new organisation a
survey of the company
64New Organization Model
- Configuring
- Structure
- Processes
- Reward systems
- People practices policies
-
TO SUPPORT A NEW STRATEGY
How can we get organized to deliver on the
strategy?
Source Galbraith, J al Designing Dynamic
Organization Chapter 1 Getting started
65New Organization Model
- To the reconfigurable organization
- Active leadership
- The organization as a source of competitive
advantage - Knowledge management
- Collect and share knowledge across boundaries IT
connected - Learning
- People who have learning aptitude and can move
around - Flexibility
- And more changes to come tolerance for ambiguity
and unpredictability -
TO RESPOND TO AN EVER-CHANGING ENVIRONMENT
Source Galbraith, J al Designing Dynamic
Organization Chapter 1 Getting started
66What is it all about?
- Get organized make it work
- To get the job done!
STRUCTURE
PROCESSES
67What is it all about?
- Get the right people at the right place
- To get the job done!
68What is it all about?
- People
- To get the job done!
69THANKS!