Title: Chapter 2 The High Performance Organization
1Chapter 2The High Performance Organization
2Chapter 2The High Performance Organization
- Topics
- What is the high performance context of
organizational behavior? - What is a high performance organization?
- What are the management challenges of high
performance organizations? - How do high performance organizations operate?
3What is the high performance context of
organizational behavior?
- OB and changing customer expectations
- Total Quality Management (TQM).
- Meeting customer needs.
- Doing tasks right the first time.
- Continuous improvement.
- Is this necessary?
- If so, can it be done better?
4What is the high performance context of
organizational behavior?
- OB and changing customer expectations cont.
- Upside-down pyramid view of organizations.
- Customers and clients at the top of organization.
- Workers directly affect customers and clients.
- Team leaders and middle managers directly support
the workers. - Top managers clarify the mission and objectives,
set strategies, and make adequate resources
available.
5What is the high performance context of
organizational behavior?
- OB and the changing workforce.
- Increasing workforce diversity in
- United States.
- Canada.
- European Union.
- Generation X (or Gold-Collar workers).
- Poor educational preparation of some high school
graduates.
6What is the high performance context of
organizational behavior?
- Generation X workers.
- Desire empowerment.
- These desires are strongest for knowledge
workers. - Have a high level of skills and abilities for
functioning well in challenging jobs and work
settings.
7What is the high performance context of
organizational behavior?
- Ill-prepared high school graduates.
- Enter the workforce with significant skill
deficiencies. - Need for remedial training.
- High cost to organizations.
- Individuals can suffer long-term career
disadvantages.
8What is the high performance context of
organizational behavior?
- OB and changing organizations.
- Changes in the way people work.
- Stresses of downsizing and restructuring.
- Impact of information technology.
- New meanings in employer-employee relationships.
9What is the high performance context of
organizational behavior?
- OB and changing organizations cont.
- Process reengineering.
- Rethinks and radically redesigns business
processes to stimulate innovation and change and
improve performance. - Electronic commerce.
- Transaction of business through the Internet.
- E-corporations.
10What is the high performance context of
organizational behavior?
- OB and changing organizations cont.
- Free agent economy.
- Shamrock organizations.
- Relatively small core group of permanent,
full-time employees with critical skills. - Outside operators contracting to core group to
perform essential daily activities. - Part-timers hired by core group on an as-needed
basis.
11What is a high performance organization?
- High performance organizations (HPOs).
- HPOs intentionally designed to
- Bring out the best in people.
- Produce organizational capability that delivers
sustainable organizational results. - HPOs place people first.
12What is a high performance organization?
- Emphasis on intellectual capital.
- Intellectual capital is the foundation for HPOs.
- To utilize intellectual capital, HPOs often
organize work-flow around key business processes
and use work teams within these processes.
13What is a high performance organization?
- Key components utilized in HPOs.
- Employee involvement.
- Self-directing work teams.
- Integrated production technologies.
- Organizational learning.
- Total quality management.
14What is a high performance organization?
- Employee involvement.
- The amount of decision making delegated to
workers at all levels. - Employment involvement can be visualized on a
continuum. - No involvement or parallel involvement.
- Moderate involvement or participative management.
- High involvement or employee empowerment.
15What is a high performance organization?
- Self-directing work teams.
- Empowered to make decisions about planning,
doing, and evaluating their work. - Sometimes called self-managing or self-leading
work teams. - Important in HPOs due to
- Need to tap employees expertise and knowledge.
- Need for employees to manage themselves.
16What is a high performance organization?
- Integrated production technologies.
- Focus on providing flexibility in manufacturing
and services and involves job design and
information technology. - Key components
- Just-in-time systems.
- Use of computers.
17What is a high performance organization?
- Organizational learning.
- A way for organizations to adapt to their
settings and to gather information to anticipate
future changes. - HPOs are designed for organizational learning.
18What is a high performance organization?
- Total quality management (TQM).
- A total commitment to
- High-quality results.
- Continuous improvement.
- Meeting customer needs.
- TQM is a a tightly integrated part of HPOs.
- Encourages all workers to do their own quality
planning and checking.
19What are the management challenges of high
performance organizations?
- Challenges of environmental linkages.
- HPOs are open systems influenced by a rapidly
moving external environment. - Open systems components.
- Inputs worksite problems and opportunities, and
vision, mission, and strategy. - Transformation processes five HPO components.
- Outputs individual, group, and organizational
effectiveness, and contributions.
20What are the management challenges of high
performance organizations?
- Challenges of internal integration.
- Challenge of integrating five HPO components.
- Top-down and bottom-up decision making in HPOs.
- HPO islands.
21What are the management challenges of high
performance organizations?
- Challenges for middle manager roles.
- Helping implement HPO components.
- HPO changes may alter middle managers jobs.
- Dealing with employee resistance to self-managing
teams. - Resolving tensions among HPO components.
22What are the management challenges of high
performance organizations?
- Challenges for high level leadership.
- Deciding how far to go in becoming a HPO.
- Internationalizing United States business
practices.
23How do high performance organizations operate?
- Southwest Airlines as an HPO.
- HPO component employee involvement.
- Flat and lean hierarchy.
- Heavy team emphasis throughout organization.
- Paper work minimized.
- Rapid decision making emphasized.
- People were empowered to do whatever it takes
to get the job done.
24How do high performance organizations operate?
- Southwest Airlines as an HPO.
- HPO component self-directing work teams.
- Longer term service teams.
- Ad hoc teams for given projects or duties.
- Culture promotes cooperative activities.