Unit 9 Foundations of Organizational Structure. What Is Organizational Structure? How job tasks are formally divided, grouped, and coordinated.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR
Advertisements

What Is Organizational Structure?
What Is Organizational Structure?
Chapter 14 Foundations of Organizational Structure
Chapter Learning Objectives
Chapter Learning Objectives
Chapter 13, Nancy Langton and Stephen P. Robbins, Organizational Behaviour, Fourth Canadian Edition 13-1 Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada Chapter.
© 2005 Prentice-Hall 13-1 Foundations of Organization Structure Chapter 13 Essentials of Organizational Behavior, 8/e Stephen P. Robbins.
What Is Organizational Structure?
Chapter 15: Foundations of Org Structure Structure defines how job tasks are formally divided, grouped, and coordinated. Specifically, there are six key.
Describe six key elements in organizational design
Organizational Behavior 15th Global Edition
Foundations of Organization Structure
Chapter 13, Nancy Langton and Stephen P. Robbins, Organizational Behaviour, Fourth Canadian Edition 13-1 Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada Chapter.
Prof. : Vivian Chen Reporter : Arthur Chung.  What is organization structure ?  Organization structure six key elements.  Common organizational design.
Organizational Behavior Lecture 29 Dr. Amna Yousaf PhD (HRM) University of Twente, the Netherlands.
Foundation of Organizational Design
Foundations of Organization Structure
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook
Chapter 12 Organizational Structures
Organization Behavior and Organization Structure
Chapter 14 Foundations of Organization Structure
© 2005 Prentice-Hall 13-1 Foundations of Organization Structure Chapter 13 Essentials of Organizational Behavior, 8/e Stephen P. Robbins.
Organizational Structure and Design
ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE AND DESIGN
Organizational Design
Foundations of Organizational Structure What Is Organizational Structure?  Organizational Structure – How job tasks are formally divided, grouped,
Copyright ©2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 14-1 Chapter 14 Foundations of Organizational Structure.
ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR
Chapter 10: Foundations of Organizational Design
O r g a n i z a t i o n a l b e h a v i o r e l e v e n t h e d i t i o n.
Organizational Structure & Design Ch 10. Defining Organizational Structure Organizational Structure  The formal arrangement of jobs within an organization.
HNDBM – 12. Organization Structure
Management, Organizational Policies & Practices Lecture 29 Dr. Amna Yousaf PhD (HRM) University of Twente, the Netherlands.
Copyright ©2012 Pearson Education Chapter 14 Structure and Organizational Behavior 14-1 Essentials of Organizational Behavior, 11/e Stephen P. Robbins.
Organizational Structures
Organizational Behavior BUS-542 Instructor: Erlan Bakiev, Ph.D. 1-1.
O r g a n i z a t i o n a l b e h a v i o r e l e v e n t h e d i t i o n.
Organizational Behavior Lecture 28 Dr. Amna Yousaf PhD (HRM) University of Twente, the Netherlands.
ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR S T E P H E N P. R O B B I N S W W W. P R E N H A L L. C O M / R O B B I N S T E N T H E D I T I O N © 2003 Prentice Hall Inc.
Copyright © 2015 Pearson Education, Inc Copyright © 2015 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 15: Foundations of Organization Structure 15-2.
BZUPAGES.COM. Organizational Behavior Presented To: Sir Tisman Pasha Presented By: Khurram Shahzad Roll# :
MGT 321: Organizational Behavior
© 2003 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved.15–1 Lecture 5b ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURES 1.Identify the six key elements that define an organization’s structure.
Welcome to AB140 Introduction to Management Unit 4 Seminar – Organizing Robin Watkins.
ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR S T E P H E N P. R O B B I N S E L E V E N T H E D I T I O N W W W. P R E N H A L L. C O M / R O B B I N S © 2005 Prentice Hall.
© 2007 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved. Foundations of Organizational Structure Chapter SIXTEEN.
© 2007 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved. Foundations of Organizational Structure Chapter SIXTEEN.
ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR S T E P H E N P. R O B B I N S E L E V E N T H E D I T I O N W W W. P R E N H A L L. C O M / R O B B I N S © 2005 Prentice Hall.
Foundations of Organization Martyn Kingston, PhD, MBA.
Copyright ©2012 Pearson Education Chapter 14 Structure and Organizational Behavior 14-1 Essentials of Organizational Behavior, 11/e Global Edition Stephen.
“It’s all about working together”.
Organizational Behavior (MGT-502)
Fundamentals of Organizational Structure Munif Ahmad.
Organizational Behavior 15th Ed Foundations of Organizational Structure Copyright © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall15-1 Robbins.
ORGANISATIONAL STRUCTURE
Chapter Learning Objectives
Foundations of Organization Structure
Organization Structure
HND – Tutorial 10 *solutions*
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook
ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR
HND – 12. Organization Structure
Foundations of Organization Structure
Designing Organizational Structure
Foundations of Organizational Structure
RESTRUCTURING ORGANIZATIONS
Introduction to Organisational Behaviour and Application to Management
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook
Presentation transcript:

Unit 9 Foundations of Organizational Structure

What Is Organizational Structure? How job tasks are formally divided, grouped, and coordinated.

What Is Organizational Structure? Key Elements:  Work specialization  Departmentalization  Chain of command  Span of control  Centralization and decentralization  Formalization

1. What degree are articles subdivided into separate jobs? (work specialization) 2. On what basis will jobs be grouped (departmentalization) 3. To whom do people report? (chain of command) 4. How many people can a manager direct (span of control) 5. Where are decisions made (centralization/decentralization) 6. What are the rules and regulations (formalization)

Division of labor:  Makes efficient use of employee skills  Increases employee skills through repetition  Less between-job downtime increases productivity  Specialized training is more efficient  Allows use of specialized equipment

Grouping Activities By:  Function  Product  Geography  Process  Customer

Authority - The rights inherent in a managerial position to give orders and to expect the orders to be obeyed. Chain of Command - The unbroken line of authority that extends from the top of the organization to the lowest echelon and clarifies who reports to whom. Unity of Command - A subordinate should have only one superior to whom he or she is directly responsible.

Concept: Wider spans of management increase organizational efficiency. Narrow Span Drawbacks:  Expense of additional management.  Increased complexity of vertical communication.  Encouragement of overly tight supervision and discouragement of employee autonomy.

Centralization - The degree to which decision making is concentrated at a single point in the organization. Decentralization - The degree to which decision making is spread throughout the organization. Formalization - The degree to which jobs within the organization are standardized

Simple Structure A structure characterized by a low degree of departmentalization, wide spans of control, authority centralized in a single person, and little formalization.

Bureaucracy - A structure of highly operating routine tasks achieved through specialization, very formalized rules and regulations, tasks that are grouped into functional departments, centralized authority, narrow spans of control, and decision making that follows the chain of command.

Strengths  Functional economies of scale  Minimum duplication of personnel and equipment  Enhanced communication  Centralized decision making Weaknesses  Subunit conflicts with organizational goals  Obsessive concern with rules and regulations  Lack of employee discretion to deal with problems

Matrix Structure – A structure that creates dual lines of authority and combines functional and product departmentalization.

Team Structure– The use of teams as the central device to coordinate work activities.  Breaks down departmental barriers.  Decentralizes decision making to the team level.  Requires employees to be generalists as well as specialists.  Creates a “flexible bureaucracy.”

Virtual organization– An organization that outsources its major business functions. Highly centralized with little or no departmentalization.

Boundaryless organization– An organization that seeks to eliminate the chain of command, have limitless spans of control, and replace departments with empowered teams

Organic Model - A structure that is flat, uses cross-hierarchical and cross-functional teams, has low formalization, possesses a comprehensive information network, and relies on participative decision making. Mechanistic Model - A structure characterized by extensive departmentalization, high formalization, a limited information network, and centralization.

 Innovation Strategy - A strategy that emphasizes the introduction of major new products and services.  Imitation Strategy - A strategy that seeks to move into new products or new markets only after their viability has already been proven.  Cost-minimization Strategy - A strategy that emphasizes tight cost controls, avoidance of unnecessary innovation or marketing expenses, and price cutting

 STRATEGYSTRUCTURAL OPTION  InnovationOrganic: Loose structure  Cost MinimizationMechanistic: Tight control  ImitationMechanistic and organic: Mix of loose and tight properties

 Size of Organization  Technology – how an organization transfers its inputs and outputs.  Environment - forces outsize of the organization.  Capacity  Volatility  Complexity

 Research Findings:  Work specialization contributes to higher employee productivity, but it reduces job satisfaction.  The benefits of specialization have decreased rapidly as employees seek more intrinsically rewarding jobs.  The effect of span of control on employee performance is contingent upon individual differences and abilities, task structures, and other organizational factors.  Participative decision making in decentralized organizations is positively related to job satisfaction.