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Organizations and Environments

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Title: Organizations and Environments


1
Organizations and Environments
  • MBA 540
  • 2/10/03

2
Definitions of Organizations
  • Social entity, goal directed, deliberately
    structured, identifiable boundaries (Daft)
  • Response to and means of creating value that
    satisfies human needs. Embodies collective
    knowledge, values, and vision (Jones)
  • Integration of specialized knowledges into a
    common task (Drucker)

3
Organizations
  • Human creations whose operations and products are
    results of the ways we govern them and of the
    social, institutional, and political structures
    within which they operate (i.e., their
    environments)
  • Organizations are both products of these
    structures and de-stabilizers of these structures

4
Trends and Tensions in Contemporary Organizations
  • Small and flexible vs. large and vertically
    integrated
  • Technology as work saver vs. work producer
  • Networks vs. hierarchies
  • Knowledge workers vs. administrators as powerful
    organizational members
  • Manufacturing vs. service
  • Labor shortages vs. labor surpluses

5
Trends and Tensions in Contemporary Organizations
  • Production of high vs. low wage service jobs
  • Job as package of specific duties in specific
    time period vs. job as flexible in duties, time,
    and space
  • Need for organizational learning vs. poor memory
    capacity due to downsizing, merger, and
    acquisition activity

6
Trends and Tensions in Contemporary Organizations
  • Globalism vs. nationalism vs. environmentalism
  • Establishment of strong organizational cultural
    values vs. appreciating diversity
  • Multigenerational workplaces Veterans vs.
    boomers vs. GenXers, vs. Generation Y vs.
    millennial generation
  • New technologies vs. old human values (e.g.,
    biotechnology, wireless technology)

7
Essential Features of Organizations
  • Open system input, transformation, output
  • Subsystems boundary spanning, production,
    maintenance, adaptation, management
  • Domains range of products and services produced
    for serving markets and customers
  • Environmental Transactions dealing with factors
    outside the organizational boundaries

8
Open Systems View of Organization
ENVIRONMENT
Raw Materials Resources
Products Services
Output
Transformation
Input
Organization
Production Maintenance Adaptation Management
Boundary Spanning
Boundary Spanning
Subsystems
9
Organization-Environment Interface
  • Task (specific) factors
  • Customers
  • Suppliers
  • Distributors
  • Regulatory agencies
  • Competitors
  • Unions
  • Partners
  • Special Interests
  • General factors
  • Economic
  • International
  • Political/legal
  • Technology
  • Social/demographic
  • Cultural
  • Physical/natural resources

10
Environmental Uncertainty
  • Simple -Complex Dimension
  • Number of elements and their similarity
  • Family restaurant vs. automobile manufacturer
  • Determines what information you need
  • Stability-Change Dimension
  • how fast and unpredictably elements change
  • Universities vs. telecommunications
  • Determines how often you need to collect
    information

11
Perceived Environmental Uncertainty
  • Simple vs. Complex Elements
  • Stable vs. Dynamic Elements
  • Richness vs. Poorness of Elements
  • More uncertainty results when organization has to
    deal with complex, changing, and/or poor quality
    elements.

12
Environmental Uncertainty
Rate of Change
Low
High
Low Uncertainty
Moderate Uncertainty
Low
(Information known and available)
(Constantly need new information)
Complexity
Moderate Uncertainty
High Uncertainty
High
(Information overload)
(Information needs unknown)
13
Theories of Organization-Environment Relationships
  • Contingency Theory
  • Resource Dependence
  • Strategic Choice
  • Population Ecology
  • Institutional Theory
  • Transaction Cost Theory

14
Contingency Theory
  • Most effective way to organize is contingent on
    complexity and change in environment
  • Stable environments Mechanistic structures
    (specialization, formality, hierarchy)
  • Changing environments Organic structures (less
    specialization, informality, lateral relations)

15
Resource Dependence
  • Organizations obtain scarce and valued resources
    from environments
  • Desire to control these resources to minimize
    dependencies
  • Processes and transactions used to obtain
    resources develop dependencies
  • Balancing act of maintaining autonomy and
    recognizing dependencies

16
Strategic choice
  • Managers perceive environments
  • Make strategy and design structure
  • Re-strategize when changes are perceived
  • Managers enact environments through their
    decision-making choices
  • Since managers perceive differently, they bring
    organizations in different directions
  • Example Sears vs. Montgomery Ward

17
Population Ecology
  • Focus is on whole population of organizations
    (e.g., gasoline stations in Canada wine industry
    in California)
  • Natural selection processes
  • Variation Selection Retention
  • Unsuccessful organizational forms die out
  • Environmental determinism

18
Institutional Theory
  • Societal institutions are powerful forces for
    ensuring control and order
  • In responding to institutional pressures,
    organizations develop isomorphic (similar)
    strategies, structures, and systems
  • Normative, coercive, and mimetic forces make all
    organizations look the same
  • Goal is to obtain social legitimacy
  • Example banks, universities, discount stores

19
Transaction Cost Theory
  • Organizations try to reduce monitoring,
    negotiating, and governing exchanges with
    environmental elements (transaction costs)
  • Environmental uncertainty, opportunism, bounded
    rationality, small numbers bargaining, asset
    specificity, and risk levels increase transaction
    costs
  • Transaction and bureaucratic costs balanced

20
What specific adaptation devices do organizations
use?
  • Structural Responses
  • Develop new positions or units
  • Boundary-spanning activities
  • Buffering roles and units
  • Planning Groups
  • Forecasting
  • Management Information Systems

21
Specific Adaptation Devices
  • Inter-organizational Linkages
  • Symbiotic interdependencies
  • Benefit both organizations
  • Competitive interdependencies
  • Direct competition for scarce resources

22
Symbiotic Interdependencies
  • Good reputation
  • Cooptation
  • Interlocking directorates
  • Strategic alliances
  • Long-term Contracts
  • Equity ownership in other firms
  • Joint ventures
  • Mergers, acquisitions, and takeovers
  • Licensing
  • Consortia
  • Marketing or distribution agreements
  • Franchising

23
Competitive Interdependencies
  • Collusions
  • Signaling
  • Cartels
  • Trade associations
  • Regulatory bodies
  • Competitive strategic alliances
  • Networking

24
How do we assess if an organization is effective
in its environment?
  • Goals approach
  • Official vs. operative goals
  • Achieving organizational goals is effectiveness
  • Systems resource approach
  • Obtaining scarce and valued inputs
  • Measured by quality and costs of inputs stock
    price and market share
  • Example Software firm hires the best engineers
    with competitive compensation

25
What is organizational effectiveness?
  • Internal Systems Approach
  • Innovation and quick response to changes
  • Measured by decision making time, product
    innovation rate, time to get new products to
    market, reduction of conflict and motivation
    problems
  • Example 3M 25 of sales must come from
    products less than 5 years old

26
What is organizational effectiveness?
  • Technical efficiency approach
  • Ability to convert skills and resources into
    goods and services efficiently
  • Measured by rate of reduction of defects,
    reduction of product costs and delivery times,
    increases in customer service and product quality
  • Example TQM processes at Stanley Engineering

27
What is organizational effectiveness?
  • Stakeholder Approach
  • Stakeholders are any individuals, groups, or
    organizations that have an interest in the firms
    activities and ultimate survival
  • Internal stakeholders owners or shareholders,
    employees, and managers
  • External stakeholders customers, suppliers,
    government, unions, local community, general
    public, natural environment

28
Managing Stakeholders
  • Inducements and contributions balance
  • Inducements are what the firm provides for
    stakeholder
  • Contributions are what the stakeholder provides
    for the firm
  • Firms would like to provide as little inducement
    as possible for adequate levels of stakeholder
    contribution and vice versa

29
Managing Stakeholders
  • Assess importance of stakeholders
  • Power, legitimate rights, and urgency
  • Assess potential for threat vs. potential for
    cooperation
  • Determine appropriate strategies for managing the
    stakeholder

30
Potential for Threat
Low
High

Supportive Stakeholder Get Involvement
Mixed Blessing Stakeholder Collaborative
strategies
High
Potential for Cooperation
Non-supportive Stakeholder Defensive strategies
Marginal Stakeholder Monitor
Low
31
Managing Stakeholders
  • Managing multiple goals of stakeholders
  • setting priorities or preference ordering
  • sequential attention
  • bargaining and compromise
  • satisficing
  • At least minimal satisfaction of all current
    stakeholders is organizational effectiveness.

32
Total Responsibility Management Systems
  • Focus is on the triple bottom line
  • Economic (profits)
  • Social (people)
  • Environmental (place)
  • TRM can be significant source of competitive
    advantage for firms who take the lead in these
    initiatives

33
Pressures for TRM
  • Primary stakeholders owners, employees,
    customers, and suppliers
  • Secondary stakeholders NGOs, activists,
    communities, and governments
  • Social and institutional pressures and trends
    best of rankings and awards emerging global
    standards (e.g., UNs Global Compact) and
    reporting/accountability initiatives (e.g., GRI
    or SA 8000 or AA1000)

34
Three Processes in the TRM Approach
  • Institutionalizing a vision and set of valuses
    regarding responsible practice through the
    enterprise (inspiration)
  • Integration of the responsibility into practice
    through strategy, management systems, and human
    resource capacity
  • Improvement and innovation through measurement,
    feedback systems, and learning and remediation
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