Title: Leading Reorganizations
1Leading Reorganizations
Nercomp Workshop Wesleyan College Middletown,
CT January 14, 2000
2Introduction
- The experiences of CIOs who have merged computing
and libraries - Focus on choice of organizational structure
- Dissertation research
- Plus our experience at Bucknell
3Topics of Discussion
- What organizational structures are chosen?
- What factors influence the choice of structure?
- What themes emerge with CIOs?
4The research
- 7 mid-sized institutions
- 7 CIOs
- Merged 1993-1997
- In-depth interviews and document analysis
5CIO 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
6Merger metaphors
- Collaboration
- Marriage
- Blending
- Knitting
- Loose confederation
- Synergy
- Living together
7Traditional 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
8The moment of truth
9Types 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
10What 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
11Goals 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
12Factors that made no difference
- CIO age, sex, or professional background
- Type of institution
- Campus organizational culture
- Funding level
13Factors 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
14Institutional 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
15CIO 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
16CIO 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
17CIO 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
18ISR 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?
19Why 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
20Why it would work
- Trust among the Design Team
- Ability of Design Team to model
- Excellent history of collaboration cultures
already bridged
21Other Bucknell factors
- Large organization 95 staff
- Staff geographically separated
- Didnt want either sides existing structure to
win - Stigma of teams in library
22Lessons 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.
23Lessons 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.
24Lessons 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.