Title: HCM 381 Health Care Management
1HCM 381- Health Care Management
- Chapters 1-5
- Information Overview
2Ch. 1- Organizations and Org. Theory
- The purpose of Chapter One is to explore the
nature of organizations and organization theory
today. - What is an organization?
- Organizations as diverse as a church, a hospital,
and IBM have characteristics in common. - Organizations are social entities that are goal
directed, are designed as deliberately
structured and coordinated activity systems, and
are linked to the external environment.
3Thus,
- An organization is not just a building or a set
of policies and procedures. An organization is a
group of people who interact with one another. - A manager, then, is someone who structures and
coordinates organizational resources to achieve
the organizations purpose.
4- Note that even though work is structured into
separate departments or sets of activities, most
organizations today are looking for greater
horizontal coordination of work activities. - Boundaries between departments as well as those
between organizations are becoming more flexible
and diffuse as companies need to respond quickly
to environmental changes.
5The importance of organizations
- Organizations as we know them are relatively
recent - as late as the latter part of the
1800s, there were few large organizations. - The industrial revolution and the development of
large organizations transformed all of society. - Today, orgs. are central to peoples lives.
6Their importance?
- They bring together resources to achieve desired
goals and outcomes. - They produce goods and services efficiently.
- They facilitate innovation.
- They use modern manufacturing and computer based
technology. - They adapt to and influence a changing
environment. - They create value for owners, customers, and
employees. - They accommodate ongoing challenges of diversity,
ethics, and the motivation and coordination of
employees.
7The organization as a system
- Open vs. closed systems
- A closed system would not depend on its
environment it would be autonomous, enclosed,
and sealed off from the outside world. - Early organizational studies focused on internal
systems. - Early mgt. concepts, including scientific mgt.,
leadership style, and industrial engineering,
were closed system approaches which took the
external environment for granted, assuming it
would remain stable.
8An open system...
- Must interact with the environment to survive. It
both consumes resources and exports resources to
the environment. - It must continually adapt to the environment. The
org. must continuously find and obtain needed
resources, interpret and act on environmental
changes, dispose of outputs, and control and
coordinate internal activities in the face of
environmental disturbances and uncertainty.
9Thus,
- A system is a set of interacting elements that
acquires inputs from the environment, transforms
them, and discharges outputs to the external
environment. - The need for inputs and outputs reflects
dependency on the environment. - Interacting elements mean that people and depts.
depend on one another and must work together. Can
this be defined in terms of H.C.?
10An Open System and Its Subsystems
Environment
Transformation Process
Raw Materials People Information
resources Financial resources
Products and Services
Input
Output
Production, Maintenance, Adaptation, Management
Boundary Spanning
Boundary Spanning
Subsystems
11- Note that a system is made up of subsystems, as
reflected in Exhibit 1.2. - These subsystems perform various functions
required for org. survival, i.e. production,
boundary spanning, maintenance, adaptation, and
management.
12More on subsystems...
- The production subsystem produces the product and
service outputs of the organization. - Boundary subsystems are responsible for exchanges
with the external environment, and include such
activities as purchasing supplies or marketing
products.
13- The maintenance subsystem maintains the smooth
operation and upkeep of the orgs. physical and
human elements. - The adaptive subsystems are responsible for
organizational change and adaptation. - Management is responsible for coordinating and
directing the subsystems of the organization.
14Note that various parts of the org. are designed
to perform subsystem functions.
- Mintzberg suggested that every org. has five
parts - The technical core.
- Top management
- Middle management.
- Technical support.
- Administrative support.
15Five Basic Parts of an Organization
Top Management
Technical Support
Administrative Support
Middle Management
Technical Core
Source Based on Henry Mintzberg, The
Structuring of Organizations (Englewood Cliffs,
N. J. Prentice-Hall, 1979) 215-297 and Henry
Mintzberg, Organization Design Fashion or
Fit? Harvard Business Review 59 (Jan. Feb.
1981) 103-116.
16Regarding the technical core
- It includes people who do the basic work of the
organization. - It performs the production subsystem function and
actually produces the product and service outputs
of the organization. - This is where the primary transformation from
inputs to outputs takes place.
17Regarding technical support
- The technical support function helps the org.
adapt to the environment. - Technical support is responsible for creating
innovations in the technical core, helping the
organization to change and adapt.
18Regarding administrative support
- The admin. support function is responsible for
the smooth operation and upkeep of the
organization, including its physical and human
resources. - Includes such activities as recruiting and
hiring, establishing compensation and benefits,
and employee training and development, as well as
maintenance activities.
19Regarding management
- Management is responsible for the directing and
coordinating of other parts of the org. - Top mgt. provides direction, strategy, goals, and
policies for the entire org. - Middle mgt. is responsible for implementation and
coordination at the departmental level. - Note that skills, roles, and managerial functions
will vary by level.
20Continuing...
- An organization can be viewed structurally or
contextually - Structural dimensions provide labels to describe
the internal characteristics of an organization. - Structural dimensions include the following
- formalization
- specialization
- hierarchy of authority
- centralization
- professionalism
- personnel ratios
21Regarding structural dimensions..
- Formalization pertains to the amount of written
documentation in the org. - Specialization is the degree to which org. tasks
are subdivided into separate jobs. - Hierarchy of authority describes who reports to
whom and the span of control for each manager.
22- Centralization refers to the hierarchical level
that has authority to make a decision. - Professionalism is the level of formal education
and training of employees. - Personnel ratios refer to the deployment of
people to various functions and departments.
23Contextual Dimensions
- Size (number of people in the organization)
- Organizational technology (the tools, techniques,
and actions used to transform inputs into
outputs) - Environment (all elements outside the boundary of
the organization) - Goals and Strategy (the purpose and competitive
techniques that set the org. apart) - Culture (underlying set of key values, beliefs,
understandings, and norms shared by employees)
24- The eleven contextual and structural dimensions
are interdependent. - They provide a basis for the measurement and
analysis of characteristics that cannot be seen
by the casual observer, and they reveal
significant information about an organization.
25Performance and Effectiveness Outcomes
- The point of understanding an organization better
is so that you can design an org. in such a way
as to achieve high performance and effectiveness. - Efficiency refers to the amount of resources used
to achieve the organizations goals. - Effectiveness is a broader term, meaning the
degree to which an organization achieves its
goals.
26The evolution of org. theory and design
- Org. theory is not a collection of facts it is a
way of thinking about organizations. - The modern era of mgt. theory began with the
classical mgt. perspective in the late 19th and
early 20th century. - The classical system sought to make organizations
run like efficient and well-oiled machines.
27The classical perspective...
- Scientific management theory, ala Frederick
Winslow Taylor - postulated that decisions about organizations and
job design should be based on precise, scientific
study of individual situations.
28The Hawthorne Studies...
- The hierarchical system and bureaucratic
approaches that developed during the industrial
revolution remained the primary approach to
organization design and functioning well into the
1970s and 1980s. - The Hawthorne Studies demonstrated that positive
treatment of employees improved their motivation
and productivity. - Led to a host of human relations and behavioral
approaches.
29By the 1980s...
- New corporate cultures that valued lean staff,
flexibility, rapid response to the customer,
motivated employees, caring for customers, and
quality products. - Old mgt. forms and mgt. methods are inadequate to
cope with new problems in the emerging postmodern
world. - Contingency theory is the name of the game now.
30Contingency theory...
- Not all organizations are alike.
- The structures and systems that work in one
setting may not work in another. - Contingency means that one thing depends on other
things, and for organizations to be effective,
there must be a goodness of fit between their
structure and the conditions in the external
environment.
31Thus...
- The correct management approach is contingent on
the organizations situation. - Todays organizations must shift from a paradigm
based on mechanical systems to one based on
natural, biological systems. - A paradigm is a shared mindset that represents a
fundamental way of perceiving, conceptualizing,
and understanding the world.
32More on contemporary organizational design
- Todays organizations and managers are shifting
from a mindset based on mechanical systems to one
based on natural and biological systems. - Many managers are redesigning their companies
toward something called the learning
organization. - The learning organization promotes communication
and collaboration so that everyone is engaged in
identifying and solving problems, enabling the
organization to continuously experiment, improve,
and increase its capability.
33- The trade off is between efficient performance
versus a learning environment. - Put another way, from vertical to horizontal
structure. - From routine tasks to empowered roles
- From formal control systems to shared information
- From competitive to collaborative strategy
- From rigid to adaptive cultures
34Ch. 2- Strategy, Org. Design and Effectiveness
- This chapter will look at strategies top managers
use to help their organizations achieve
organizational goals. The chapter will also look
at the impact of strategy on organization design,
and how designing the organization to fit
strategy and other contingencies can lead to
organizational effectiveness.
35Top Management Role in Organization Direction,
Design, and Effectiveness
External Environment
Organization Design
Opportunities Threats Uncertainty Resource
Availability
Effectiveness Outcomes
Structural Form learning vs.
efficiency Information and control
systems Production technology Human resource
policies, incentives Organizational
culture Interorganizational linkages
Strategic Management
Resources Efficiency Goal attainment Stakeholders
Competing values
Define mission, official goals
Select operational goals, collaborative strategies
CEO, Top Management Team
Internal Environment
Strengths Weaknesses Distinctive
competence Leadership Style Past Performance
Source Adapted from Arie Y. Lewin and Carroll
U. Stephens, Individual Properties of the CEO as
Determinants of Organization Design, unpublished
manuscript, Duke University, 1990 and Arie Y.
Lewin and Carroll U. Stephens, CEO Attributes as
Determinants of Organization Design An
integrated Model, Organization Studies 15, no. 2
(1994) 183-212
36- An organization is created and designed to
achieve some end which is decided by the top
executive and upper management. - The primary responsibility of top mgt. is to
determine an organizations goals, strategy, and
design, thereby adapting the organization to a
changing environment. - Middle mgrs. do the same thing for major depts.
37- The direction-setting process begins with an
assessment of the opportunities and threats in
the external environment, as well as an
assessment of internal strengths and weaknesses. - This is referred to as a S.W.O.T. assessment.
38Following the S.W.O.T. eval.
- Define overall mission and official goals based
on the correct fit between external opportunities
and internal strengths. - Specific operational goals or strategies can then
be formulated to define how the organization is
to accomplish its overall mission. - Note that organizational design reflects the way
goals and strategies are implemented. - Organizational design is the administration and
execution of the strategic plan.
39Put another way...
- New goals and strategies are selected based on
environmental needs, and then top management
attempts to redesign the organization to achieve
those ends. - Note that managers can interpret the environment
differently and develop different goals. The
choices that top managers make about goals,
strategies, and organizational design can have a
tremendous impact on organizational effectiveness.
40More on goals and strategy...
- The overall goal for an organization is called
the mission, which is the organizations reason
for existing. - The mission describes the organizations vision,
its shared values and beliefs, and its reason for
being. - The mission is sometimes called the official
goals of the organization.
41Operative goals...
- Operative goals designate the ends sought through
the actual operating procedures of the
organization and explain what the organization is
actually trying to do. - Operative goals describe specific measurable
outcomes and are often concerned with the short
run. - Operative vs. official goals represent actual vs.
stated goals.
42More on operative goals...
- These goals concern overall performance, boundary
spanning, maintenance, adaptation, and production
activities. - Goals are important. While official goals
(through the mission statement) serve to provide
legitimacy, operative goals provide employee
direction, decision guidelines, and criteria for
performance.
43Examples of operative goals
- Overall performance (i.e. profitability, volume,
etc.) Also known as operative goals. - Resource allocation goals (pertain to the
acquisition of needed material and financial
resources from the environment) - Market share goals (relate to market share, and
are the responsibility of marketing, sales, or
advertising department)
44More goals
- Goals for employees (training, promotion, safety,
and growth) - Innovation and change goals (pertain to internal
flexibility and readiness to adapt to unexpected
changes in the environment, and may include
development of new services and products) - Productivity goals (P I/O, which describes the
amount of resources needed to reach desired
outputs- use standardized cost accounting to
track productivity goals)
45In addition to setting goals, an organization
needs to develop a strategy...
- Michael Porter introduced the concept of two
basic competitive strategies - low-cost leadership , or
- differentiation
- Note that focus can be broad or narrow, within
the context of each of the above strategies.
46Low cost leadership...
- Tries to increase market share by emphasizing low
cost. - With this strategy the organization is very
concerned about efficiency, cost reductions, and
will use tight controls to produce products more
efficiently than its competitors. - Concerned with stability vs. taking risks or
innovating.
47Differentiation strategy...
- In a differentiation strategy, orgs. will try to
distinguish their products or services from
others in the same industry. - May use advertising, distinctive product
features, exceptional service, or new technology
to achieve a product uniqueness. - Maytag
- Tommy Hilfiger
- Intel Pentium chips- note no price sensitivity.
48Or, another approach is the Miles and Snow
Strategy Typology
- Speculated that managers will seek to formulate
strategies that will be congruent with the
external environment. Thus, - the Prospector strategy will innovate, take
risks, seek new opportunities, and grow - the Defender strategy is one of retrenchment and
stability - the Analyzer tries to maintain a stable business
while innovating on the periphery - the Reactor is not really a strategy at all.
49Strategy affects Org. Design
- Choice of strategy affects internal org.
characteristics which in turn need to support the
firms competitive approach. - Example with a low-cost leadership strategy,
mgrs. take an efficiency approach to
organization. - The prospector strategy requires characteristics
similar to a differentiation strategy, and the
defender strategy takes an efficiency approach
similar to the low-cost leadership.
50So, strategy is one factor that affects
organizational design.
- Other factors might include environment, size,
life cycle, technology, and organizational
culture. - For example, in a stable environment, the org.
can have a traditional structure that emphasizes
vertical control, efficiency, specialization,
etc.Likewise, with mass production technology
(think of the auto assembly line), efficiency,
formalization, specialization, tight control, and
centralized decision making are appropriate.
51How do we know if were being effective?
- By reaching goals (see next slide for various
reported goals) - By being able to obtain needed resources (by
getting inputs) See Slide 53 - By looking at internal indicators of
effectiveness or health (how strong is the org.
culture, team spirit, group loyalty, trust
between workers, etc.) See Slide 54
52Reported Goalsof U.S. Corporations (Ex. 2.8)
Goal Corporations
Profitability 89 Growth 82 Market
Share 66 Social Responsibility 65 Employee
welfare 62 Product quality and
service 60 Research and development 54 Diversifica
tion 51 Efficiency 50 Financial
stability 49 Resource conservation 39 Management
development 35
Source Adapted from Y. K. Shetty, New Look at
Corporate Goals, California Management Review
22, no. 2 (1979), pp. 71-19.
53- Another approach to evaluating effectiveness is
to consider whether the organization is
successful in obtaining and managing valued
resources in order to be effective. - From this perspective you would look at whether
you are able to obtain scarce and valued
resources and successfully integrate and manage
them.
54Internal indicators of effectiveness
- There are seven indicators of an effective
organization as seen from an internal process
approach - 1. strong corporate culture and positive work
environment. - 2. team sprit, group loyalty, and teamwork
- 3. confidence, trust, and communication between
workers and management - 4. decision making near sources of information
- 5. undistorted horizontal and vertical
communication and the sharing of relevant facts
and feelings - 6. rewards to managers for performance, growth,
and development of subordinates and for creating
an effective work group - 7. interaction between the organization and its
parts.
55Yet another approach, the stakeholder approach...
- The satisfaction of the various groups can be
assessed as an indicator of the orgs.
performance. Constituents can include - owners (financial return)
- employees (pay, work satisfaction)
- customers (quality of goods and services)
- creditors (creditworthiness)
- community (contribution to community affairs)
- suppliers (satisfactory transactions)
- government (obedience to laws and regulations)
56Ch.3- Fund. Of Org. Structure
- This chapter introduces basic concepts of
organizational structure, and defines structure. - There are three key components to organizational
structure.
57The 3 components of org. structure
- Org. structure designates formal reporting
relationships, including the number of levels in
the hierarchy and span of control of managers and
supervisors. - This is depicted in the organizational chart.
- It identifies the grouping together of
individuals into departments and departments into
the organization. - It includes the design of systems to ensure
coordination and effective communication.
58- When designing the organizational structure, it
should be designed to provide both vertical and
horizontal information flow. - Note that there is a tension between vertical and
horizontal mechanisms in the organization. - Vertical linkages are designed for control, while
horizontal linkages are designed for coordination
and collaboration.
59When designing the organization
- One must choose whether to orient toward a
traditional organization designed for efficiency
which emphasizes vertical communication and
control, or toward a contemporary learning
organization which emphasizes horizontal
communication and coordination. - See exhibit 3.2 on page 93
60What is linkage?
- Linkage is the extent of communication and
coordination among organizational elements. - Vertical linkages connect the top of the
organization with the bottom. - Organizations use various devices to connect the
top with the bottom hierarchical referral,
rules, plans, and vertical information systems.
61Horizontal linkage?
- Horizontal linkage refers to the amount of
communication and coordination horizontally
across organizational departments. - You can improve horizontal linkage through
information systems, direct contact using liaison
persons, task forces, the hiring of a full time
integrator (may be called a product manager,
program manager, etc.), and the use of project
teams.
62Various ways to group activities are detailed in
the text
- The functional grouping (similar functions or
work processes). - The divisional grouping (by product or strategic
business). - The geographic structure (best meets the needs of
users and customers). - The multi-focused grouping (e.g. matrix or
hybrid- a combination of functional and
divisional grouping). - The geographic grouping
63A recent development- the horizontal structure...
- Organizes employees around core processes (not
tasks, functions, or geography). - Eliminates the vertical hierarchy and old
departmental boundaries. Teams, not individuals,
are the basis of organization. - People on the team are given the skills, tools,
motivation, and authority to make decisions.
64More on horizontal structure...
- Strengths and weaknesses are listed in exhibit
3.12 on page 111. - Strengths include flexibility and rapid response
as well as promoting a focus on teamwork and
collaboration. It also improves quality of work
life. - Weaknesses include the fact that it is hard to
determine, sometimes, core processes and managers
may have to give up power.
65In reality...
- Many structures in the real world do not exist in
the pure forms outlined in this chapter, and thus
a hybrid structure may evolve to meet individual
organizational needs. - Most companies combine characteristics of
functional, divisional, geographical, or
horizontal structures to take advantage of the
strengths and weaknesses of the various
structures.
66How do you know if you have structural problems?
Symptoms
- When organization structure is out of alignment
with organization needs, one or more of the
following symptoms will appear - delayed decision making or lack of quality in
making decisions. - The organization does not respond innovatively to
a changing environment. - Too much conflict is evident.
67Ch.4 -The External Environment
- The external environment includes that
environment to which the org. is sensitive and
must respond to survive. - This relates to domain, or the chosen
environmental field of action. It is the
territory an org. stakes out for itself with
respect to products, services, and markets served.
68An Organizations Environment
- (a) Competitors, industry size and
- competitiveness, related issues
- (b) Suppliers,
- manufacturers, real
- estate, services
- (c) Labor market,
- employment agencies,
- universities, training
- schools, employees
- in other companies,
- unions
- (d) Stock markets,
- banks, savings and
- loans, private
- investors
- (e) Customers, clients,
- potential users of products
- and services
- (f) Techniques of production, science,
(g) Recession, unemployment rate, inflation rate,
rate of investment, economics, growth (h) City,
state, federal laws and regulations,
taxes, services, court system, political
processes (i) Age, values, beliefs, education,
religion, work ethic, consumer and
green movements (j) Competition from and
acquisition by foreign firms, entry into
overseas markets, foreign customs,
regulations, exchange rates
International Context
(j) International Sector
(a) Industry Sector
DOMAIN
(b) Raw Materials Sector
(i) Socio-cultural Sector
(h) Government Sector
(c) Human Resources Sector
ORGANIZATION
(d) Financial Resources Sector
(g) Economic Conditions Sector
(e) Market Sector
(f) Technology Sector
69- The domain can be further subdivided into
sectors, or subdivisions, of the external
environment. In turn, ten sectors can be analyzed
for each organization - industry, raw materials, human resources,
financial resources, market, technology, economic
conditions, government, socio-cultural, and
international.
70Further...
- The organizations environment can be categorized
as a task environment (includes sectors with
which the organization interacts directly and
that have a direct impact on the organizations
ability to achieve its goals), and the general
environment (those sectors that may not have a
direct impact on the daily operations of a firm
but will indirectly influence it.
71Regarding the international sector
- Can directly affect many organizations.
- All domestic sectors can be affected by
international events. - Recent economic turmoil in Asia and Eastern
Europe has impacted the American economy. - The impact of the international sector has grown
rapidly with advances in technology and
communication.
72How does the environment affect the organization?
- Complexity and change in the environment create a
need for information about the environment. - The organization also needs materials from the
environment. - There is uncertainty regarding both of these
factors.
73The environment can be viewed, then, as either
simple or complex...
- The simple-complex dimension concerns
environmental complexity, which refers to
heterogeneity, or the number and dissimilarity of
external elements relevant to an organization's
operations. - In a complex environment, many diverse external
elements interact with and influence the
organization.
74Or as stable or unstable...
- Refers to whether elements in the environment are
dynamic. If the environment remains the same over
a period of months or years, it is stable. Under
unstable conditions, environmental elements shift
abruptly. - Instability may occur when a competitor reacts
with aggressive moves.
75Put the simple-complex and stable-unstable
dimensions together, and you will have 4 possible
environments facing you...
- The four environments
- The simple-stable environment (low uncertainty).
- The complex-stable environment (greater
uncertainty). Universitys and Appliance Manfs. - The simple-unstable environment (rapid change
creates uncertainty). Soft drink retailers and
beer distributors. - The complex-unstable environment (the greatest
uncertainty). Computers and the airline industry.
76Contingency Framework for Environmental
Uncertainty and Organizational Responses
STABLE
ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
Uncertainty
UNSTABLE
SIMPLE
COMPLEX
ENVIRONMENTAL COMPLEXITY
77Adapting to environmental uncertainty...
- As the complexity in the external environment
increases, so does the number of positions and
departments within the org., which in turn
increases internal complexity. - For example, each sector in the external
environment requires an employee or department to
deal with it.
78Or...
- The organization might take a traditional
approach to coping with environmental uncertainty
by establishing a buffer department. - The buffering departments role is to absorb
uncertainty from the environment it surrounds
the technical core of an organization and
protects it. - A newer approach sees the org. dropping the
buffers and exposing the tech. core to
uncertainty.
79Or...
- The organization may establish boundary-spanning
activities. - Boundary spanning is primarily concerned with the
exchange of information to (1) detect and bring
into the organization information about changes
in the environment and (2) send information into
the environment that presents the organization in
a favorable light.
80Another response to environmental uncertainty...
- Differentiation in the cognitive and emotional
orientations among personnel when the external
environment is complex and rapidly changing,
departments become highly specialized, and
success requires special expertise and behavior-
unique attitudes, values, goals, and education
may distinguish these folks from others.
81- And, integration, or the quality of collaboration
among departments. When the environment is highly
uncertain, frequent changes require more
information processing to achieve horizontal
coordination so integrators become a necessary
addition to the organizational structure.
82- Indeed, Lawrence and Lorschs research found that
organizations perform better when the levels of
differentiation and integration match the level
of uncertainty in the environment. - Organizations that performed well in uncertain
environments had high levels of both
differentiation and integration.
83Management processes...
- Another response to environmental uncertainty is
the amount of formal structure and control
imposed on employees. - When the external environment is stable, the
internal organization is characterized by rules,
procedures, and a clear hierarchy of authority.
This is known as a mechanistic org. system. - In rapidly changing environments, the internal
org. has to be much looser, free-flowing, and
adaptive. Decision-making authority is
de-centralized. This is an organic type of
management structure.
84Thus,
- Change and complexity dimensions can be combined
and represent 4 levels of uncertainty. - (1) The low uncertainty environment is simple and
stable. - Organizations in this environment will have few
departments and a mechanistic structure.
85- (2) In the low-moderate uncertainty environment,
more departments are needed along with more
integrating roles to coordinate the departments. - (3) In the high-moderate uncertainty environment,
things are unstable but simple. Organizational
structure is organic and decentralized. Planning
is emphasized.
86Lastly,
- The high uncertainty environment is both complex
and unstable and it is the most difficult to deal
with. Organizations are large and have many
departments, but they are also organic. A large
number of management personnel are assigned to
coordination and integration, and the
organization uses boundary spanning, planning,
and forecasting.
87Thus far we have been discussing ways in which
org. adapt to the lack of information and to
uncertainty.
- What about the need for material and financial
resources? - Resource dependence means that organizations
depend on the environment but strive to acquire
control over resources to minimize their
dependence. - When material costs and risks are high, companies
may team up with other companies, but this
creates risk in itself, because dependence on
shared resources gives power to other
organizations.
88To meet the need for resources...
- Organizations will maintain a balance between
linkages with other organizations and their own
independence. They will maintain this balance
through attempts to modify, manipulate, or
control other organizations. - They will use ownership, establish formal
strategic alliances, use co-optation and/or
interlocking directorates, share or transfer
executives, and/or use advertising and PR.
89Further, the org. may try to change the
environment itself...
- The domain can be changed, where it seeks new
environmental relationships and drops old ones. - Refers to the line of business, the market to
enter, and the suppliers, banks, and employees it
uses. - It can try to influence government legislation
and regulation. - It can work jointly with similar organizations,
through trade organization, to change the
environment.
90Ch. 5- Inter-organizational Relationships
- This refers to the flow and linkages that occur
among two or more organizations. - Traditionally these transactions and
relationships have been seen as a necessary evil
to obtain what an organizations needs. - The presumption has been that the world is
composed of distinct businesses that thrive on
autonomy and compete for supremacy.
91However
- A recent trend is to reduce boundaries and
increase collaboration between companies, to
include competitors, in order to survive in
todays chaotic environment. - In this regard, organizations can choose to build
relationships in many ways, such as appointing
preferred suppliers, establishing agreements,
business partnering, joint ventures, or even
mergers and acquisitions.
92Again, the term inter-organizational
relationship...
- Refers to the resource transactions, flows, and
linkages that occur among two or more
organizations. - A new view espoused by James Moore is that
organizations are now evolving into business
ecosystems. - An organizational ecosystem is a system formed by
the interaction of a community of organizations
and their environment.
93An ecosystem can cut across industry lines and a
company can create its own ecosystem.
- Consider Microsoft- it travels in 4 major
industries consumer electronics, information,
communications, and personal computers. Its
ecosystem also includes hundreds of suppliers,
including HP and Intel, and millions of customers
across many markets.
94Is competition dead?
- If by competition you mean a distinct company
competing for survival and supremacy with other
stand-alone businesses, it may be dead. - In today's world, a new form of competition is
intensifying. Companies now need to co-evolve
with others in the ecosystem so that everyone
gets stronger. - Consider the wolf and the caribou.
95Ecosystem management requires a new role for the
manager...
- Top management can no longer look down to enforce
order and uniformity. - In this new world managers think about horizontal
processes rather than vertical structures. - Important initiatives are not just top down, they
cut across the boundaries separating
organizational units. This is a much broader
leadership role.
96Within the context of a larger organizational
ecosystem, then...
- Managers must evaluate external relationships to
determine whether they are competitive or
cooperative, and are the other organizations
dissimilar or similar. A framework for analyzing
the different views of inter-organizational
relationships is in Exhibit 5.2 on Page 176. - By understanding these perspectives, managers can
assess their environment and adopt strategies to
suit their needs.
97With regard to resources...
- Resource dependence theory argues that
organizations try to minimize their dependence on
other organizations for the supply of important
resources and try to influence the environment to
make resources available. - How dependent you are depends on the importance
of the resource to the firm, and how much
discretion or monopoly those who control a
resource have over its allocation and use.
98Orgs. that are aware of resource dependence
develop strategies...
- They can adapt to or alter the interdependent
relationships (purchase ownership, develop
long-term contracts or joint ventures, etc.) - Join trade associations,sign trade agreements, or
merge with another firm. - Political action, etc.
- Use power strategies (large independent companies
have power over small suppliers).
99- Also, instead of being resource dependent, the
development of collaborative networks can be
pursued. - Companies join together to become more
competitive and to share scarce resources. - Why this interest in inter-organizational
collaboration? - Major reasons are sharing risks when entering new
markets, mounting expensive new programs and
reducing costs.
100So...
- North Americans have learned from their
international experience how effective
inter-organizational relationships can be. - Consider Japan, and the traditions of corporate
clans or industrial groups that collaborate and
assist each other. This grouping is called
Keiretsu. - We have traditionally considered interdependence
a bad thing, believing it would reduce
competition.
101Thus,
- We are seeing the development of new
organizational structures and forms to meet the
demands of an ever changing environment. - The author also discusses the fact that not all
new organizational forms or organizations, for
that matter, will survive (see next slide).
102New organization development
- New organizational forms continually appear, and
this is referred to as variation. As these
variations evolve, some will suit the marketplace
better than others, and orgs. will move through a
process of selection, leading to retention, which
is the preservation and institutionalization of
selected organizational forms.
103- From the population ecology perspective, the
environment becomes an important determinant of
organizational success or failure. The org. must
meet an environmental need, or it will be
selected out. The process of variation,
selection, and retention leads to the
establishment of new org. forms in a population
of organizations.
104Another view of this process
- Each organization struggles for survival, for its
very existence. - Organizations and populations of organizations
are engaged in a competitive struggle over
resources, and each organizational form is
fighting to survive. - As a result, generalist or specialist strategies
might be brought to bear as a means to surviving.
105- In this view, organizations with a wide niche or
domain, that is, those that offer a broad range
of products or services or that serve a broad
market, are generalists. Organizations that
provide a narrower range of goods or services or
that serve a narrower market are specialists.
106Moreover
- Organizations are highly interconnected. Just as
companies need efficient production to survive,
the institutional view argues that they also
need legitimacy from their stakeholders. - Legitimacy is defined as the general perspective
that an organizations actions are desirable,
proper and appropriate within the environments
system of norms, values, and beliefs.
107- So, organizations have a strong need to appear
legitimate. Their structure and behavior will be
geared toward environmental acceptance rather
than toward internal technical efficiency. - This will cause organizations in a similar
population to look like one another. - Put another way, this is why organizations in the
same field may develop similar structures and
approaches and appear similar. This is called
Institutional Similarity.
108Other forces may lead to organizations looking
similar
- Some organizations face great uncertainty. It is
not clear what products, services, or
technologies will achieve desired goals, and
sometimes those goals themselves are not clear.
In the face of this uncertainty, mimetic forces,
or the pressure to copy or model other
organizations, occur. - Benchmarking is an example of this process. Its
really just official copying of what works for
others.
109- The mimetic process leads to banks, or high
schools, or manufacturing firms looking and
acting like one another.
110Further
- All organizations are subject to pressure, both
formal and informal, from Government. Coercive
forces (e.g. regulation) may exist, and these
forces exert pressure on an organization to adopt
structures, techniques, or behaviors similar to
other organizations.
111- Lastly, normative forces, or those forces or
pressures to change and to achieve certain
standards of professionalism by adopting
techniques that are considered by the
professional community to be up to date and
effective, may lead to organizational change.
112Put another way, to achieve legitimacy...
- The organization may be pressured to copy or
model other organizations (mimetic forces). - It may be coerced into doing so (coercive forces
are the external pressures exerted on
organizations to adopt structures, techniques, or
behaviors similar to other organizations). - They may change because they are expected to do
so (normative forces).