The six factors are closer to real life organizational dynamics demonstrate the complexities of routines of real life. 1. UN ANTICIPATED CONSEQUENCES OF.

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The six factors are closer to real life organizational dynamics demonstrate the complexities of routines of real life. 1. UN ANTICIPATED CONSEQUENCES OF ORDINARY ACTION First, the rate of adaptation may be inconsistent with the rate change of environment. -Unless an environment is perfectly stable organization can not learn appropriately (lag variable apply). -Where an environment changes quickly relative to the rate of organization adaptation the process of adaptation can easily lose its sense to be sensible and relevant.

-Similarly some products that are technologically too advanced also liable to fail because they are ahead of time. -Similar is the case with changing organisation strategy and organisation when situation/ time or environment /market is not mature enough to absorb change. -Therefore, it is possible for an anticipatory process (problem-solving) to result in changes that out run the environment and thereby become unintelligent. -Second the causal structure may be different from that implicit in the process.

-Following and imitating we tend to focus external effects and ignore causal links which are benign or hidden. Since we have an incomplete picture or false model of causality – therefore eventually change can result in unanticipated outcomes. -Third concurrent or parallel processes (changes at times stay parallel) appear to carry sense may combine to produce joint out come that are not intended by any one, and counter the interests motivating the individual action. (e.g. of parallel system=automation) -Though avoided but these unanticipated outcomes are quite common. COMPETENCY MULTIPLIER -Organizations have procedure to involve relevant people in decision-making, planning, budgeting or the like. Individual vary in their knowledge, skills and interests about a problem. Initial participation rate vary – and participating individual turn out to be slightly more competent than others.

- This induce them to become even more competent. Before long, the de facto composition of the group can change dramatically. (than initially conceived) -More generally organizations learn from experience, repeating actions that are successful. As a result they gain greater experience in areas of success than in areas of failures. (seems sensible). The sensibleness of such specialization depend on the learning rate and rate of change in environment. The process can easily lead to misplaced specialization if there are infrequent, major shifts in the environment

Satisficing –Individuals and organizations are satisficing. - organizations seek alternatives that will satisfy target goal rather than to look for the alternative with the highest possible value (March & Simon). - organizations seek alternatives that will satisfy target goal rather than to look for the alternative with the highest possible value (March & Simon). Satificing organizations can be viewed as organizations to maximize the probability of achieving targets. But it is not necessary to assume that satisficing organizations will follow decision rules – that are – risk avoiding in good times, and, risk-seeking in bad times. Oorganizations that are facing bad times will follow riskier means and riskier strategies, thus simultaneously increasing the chances of their survival through the present crisis and reducing their life expectancy simultaneously.

Second – Organization most of the time risk-avoiding Because, if organizations goals vary with organizations performance and performance of comparable organizations,then most organizations will be termed reasonably good most of the time. The above example depicts how routine can lead to un- intended surprise outcome. PERFORMANCE CRITERIA Organization measures the performance of participants. Common criteria for Business firms is to reward their managers on the basis of calculation of profits warned by different parts of the organizations The performance reward linkage is made precise and visible for organizations control purposes as well.

However this practice may lead to ignore long term consequences for organizations since it is more efficient in short term Superstitious Learning Organizations learn from their experience, repeating actions associated with good outcomes and avoiding actions associated with bad outcomes (Learning by association phenomenon or conditioning). This is successful in stable world.

But the world is not so simple and stable experiential learning can result in superstitious learning. Example reported one author here is of Pilots. The trainers reward Pilots who make good landings and punishing pilots who makes bad ones. They observe that pilots who are punished generally improve on the subsequent landings, while pilots who are praised generally do worse. Thus they learn that negative reinforcement works better than the positive one. The learning is natural but the experience, is a confounded one. Hence these examples illustrates the variation in behavior generated by adaptive processes in a typical organizations Conditions which can lead to surprising outcomes.

2.SOLUTION DRIVEN PROBLEMS: According to Cyert and March, “There is ample evidence that when org. performance fails to meet objective when org. search for new solution, that is new ways of doing things as changes often seem to be driven less by problems than by solutions.”

Why this is so? -Because organizations Face a large no of problems of about equal importance, but only a few solutions. Thus the chance of a solution to a particular/unique problem is small. Consequently org. scans for solutions rather than problem, and matches any solution found with some relevant problem. -Second reason the linkage between individual solutions and individual problem is often difficult to make unambiguously. -When causality and technology are ambiguous – therefore what we observe will be predicted by knowledge of solutions than by a knowledge of problems.

-Therefore professional change their procedures and introduce new technologies because they have a knowledge of it. -An organization that is modern adopts new things because that is what being modern means. -When a major stimulus for change comes from a sense of competence, problems are created in order to solve them, and solutions and opportunities stimulate awareness of previously un-salient or unnoticed problems or preferences.

3. TRANSFORMATION OF INNOVATIONS & ORGANIZATIONS It is observed that both innovations and organizations tend to be transformed during the process of innovation. Different and multiple meanings exist for the intended change in the organization – hence the standardization of meanings of change is a problem – owing to inappropriate strategy or poor analysis. It is also a common problem that change policy or program gets started with some intent and eventually end up with something else – because of the fundamental ways in which changes are transformed by the process of change.