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Leading Reorganizations

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Title: Leading Reorganizations


1
Leading Reorganizations
  • Tara Lynn Fulton

Nercomp Workshop Wesleyan College Middletown,
CT January 14, 2000
2
Introduction
  • The experiences of CIOs who have merged computing
    and libraries
  • Focus on choice of organizational structure
  • Dissertation research
  • Plus our experience at Bucknell

3
Topics of Discussion
  • What organizational structures are chosen?
  • What factors influence the choice of structure?
  • What themes emerge with CIOs?

4
The research
  • 7 mid-sized institutions
  • 7 CIOs
  • Merged 1993-1997
  • In-depth interviews and document analysis

5
CIO vision of level of integration
  • Libraries and computing will remain fairly
    distinct for the foreseeable future
  • There are areas of intersection that should be
    focused on for integration
  • We will become a hybrid of the two current
    organizations, but areas of specialization will
    continue

6
Merger metaphors
  • Collaboration
  • Marriage
  • Blending
  • Knitting
  • Loose confederation
  • Synergy
  • Living together

7
Traditional and new org models
  • Bureaucracy
  • Cybernetic/open system
  • Political arenas
  • Matrix structures (product and function)
  • Flattened hierarchies
  • Self-managed teams
  • Adhocracies
  • Boundaryless/virtual
  • Networks/webs

8
The moment of truth
9
Types of structures chosen
  • University librarian 2-4 computing
    directors cross-functional teams
  • Directors of 3-5 semi-integrated units with
    constituent focus
  • 8-12 hybrid units with some managers and some
    teams cross-functional teams
  • Team leaders reporting to 2-3 middle managers

10
What has/hasnt changed?
  • Library technical and public services are still
    separate in most cases
  • Administrative and academic computing are still
    separate in most cases
  • Media services is a frequent area of contention
    often a target for integration
  • Average 10-25 of staff affected directly

11
Goals for organizational structure
  • Form follows function
  • Evolution not revolution
  • Avoid perception that one is absorbing other
  • Organizational flexibility
  • Maintain balance of staff
  • Nurture leadership
  • Structure must endure after the CIO leaves

12
Factors that made no difference
  • CIO age, sex, or professional background
  • Type of institution
  • Campus organizational culture
  • Funding level

13
Factors that made a difference in some cases
  • Senior staff support
  • Existing organizational structure
  • Campus location
  • Date of integration
  • Pressure to solve a problem
  • CIO business experience

14
Institutional factors that usually make a
difference
  • Staff geography
  • Campus culture for change
  • Mandate to integrate
  • Staff readiness for change
  • Faculty status for librarians
  • Previous amount of interaction
  • Staff size
  • Personalities of incumbent leaders
  • Existing amount of centralization

15
CIO factors that often make a difference
  • Were they promoted from within or hired in from
    the outside?
  • How confident do they feel with restructuring?
    How bold can they be?
  • Their preferences for certain types of structures

16
CIO themes and advice
  • No forced integration natural alliances
  • Look for bridge positions and individuals
  • There is no perfect model
  • Look for opportunities
  • Staff involvement
  • Family-sized home base

17
CIO themes and advice, cont.
  • Make site visits and/or use a consultant
  • Use the honeymoon period
  • Its not about technology
  • Use an open, visible process
  • A shared vision is important

18
ISR structure and approach
  • Design Team CIO plus three inherited associate
    directors
  • Computer center is team-based library is
    flattened hierarchy
  • A few ISR teams
  • Opportunistic evolution
  • Just now articulating collaborative work
    environment
  • Network/web?

19
Why not a more radical choice?
  • Later integration revolution known to fail
  • CIO preference for organic change process
  • Campus not prepared for faster blurring
  • Functions not yet integrated
  • Staff readiness for change
  • More use of temporary structures

20
Why it would work
  • Trust among the Design Team
  • Ability of Design Team to model
  • Excellent history of collaboration cultures
    already bridged

21
Other Bucknell factors
  • Large organization 95 staff
  • Staff geographically separated
  • Didnt want either sides existing structure to
    win
  • Stigma of teams in library

22
Lessons from the 8 sites
  • Cultural differences are not as problematic as
    anecdotes make them out to be.
  • New organizational concepts are being integrated
    with traditional structures, but are not taking
    higher education by storm.
  • Structures must be chosen to fit the institution
    and the individuals in them.

23
Lessons from the 8 sites, cont.
  • Structure may be a place to start or the end
    result of merger.
  • Decisions are a combination of idealism and
    pragmatism.
  • Cross-functional teams are not leading to more
    integration in silos.

24
Lessons from the 8 sites, cont.
  • Structure is often not the issue mergers do not
    need to involve massive reorganization.
  • It takes 5-10 years to change a culture.
  • The first year of being a CIO is a life-altering
    experience -- exhausting, lonely, demanding, but
    gratifying. We need more leaders who are up to
    the challenge.
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