ORGANIZATIONAL TECHNOLOGY

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Management Process
Advertisements

Manufacturing and Service Technologies
Chapter Thirteen Organization Design.
For use with MARTIN, ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOUR AND MANAGEMENT 3e ISBN  Copyright © 2005 Cengage Learning 1 POWER AND CONTROL Lecture 17.
Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATIONS
Introduction: The Nature of Leadership
Organizational Design, Competences, and Technology
Chapter 6 Groups and Teams. Copyright © 2006 by Thomson Delmar Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 2 Purpose and Overview Purpose –To understand effective.
BA 5201 Organization and Management Organizational technology Instructor: Ça ğ rı Topal 1.
Chapter 15 Organizational Design and Structure
Leadership & Technology
Organizational Effectiveness
Development in Organization Theory (continued) The Contingency Theory Approach.
ORGANIZATION STRUCTURE
9- Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 1 Organizational Theory, Design, and Change Fifth Edition Gareth R. Jones Chapter 9 Organizational Design, Competences,
Chapter 12 CONTROL AND JOB DESIGN.
Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATIONS
Power, Conflict and Politics Ashley Crnic Steffany Flook Roxanne Tian.
Introduction: The Nature of Leadership
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook
Effective Groups and Teams
Mullins: Management and Organisational Behaviour, 7th edition © Pearson Education Limited 2005 Management and Organisational Behaviour 7th Edition CHAPTER.
Corporate Management: Introduction Dr. Fred Mugambi Mwirigi JKUAT 9/19/20151.
Ass. Prof. Dr. Özgür KÖKALAN İstanbul Sabahattin Zaim University.
Organizations: Effectiveness, Design, and Cultures
© 2011 Delmar, Cengage Learning Part II Organizational Perspectives Chapter 5 Contemporary Organizational Theories and Management Systems.
16-1©2005 Prentice Hall 16: Organizational Design and Structure Chapter 16: Organizational Design and Structure Understanding And Managing Organizational.
OB = Organisational Behaviour (meaning: behaviour within organisations): focuses on the description & explanation of the causes and effects of individual.
Organizational Structure and Design
Chapter 10: Foundations of Organizational Design
HSA 171 CAR. 1436/4/26  the process of establishing the orderly use of resources by assigning and coordinating tasks. The organizing process transforms.
Basic Organizational Design
For use with Organizational Behaviour and Management by John Martin and Martin Fellenz © 2010 Cengage Learning Chapter 1 Introducing Management.
Manufacturing & Services Technology. Technology What is it? What is it? Core v. Noncore Technology Core v. Noncore Technology.
Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATIONS © Prentice Hall,
1 Copyright 2004 Prentice Hall Organizational Theory, Design, and Change Text and Cases Fourth Edition Gareth R. Jones.
1 CHAPTER 14 ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE. 2 LEARNING OBJECTIVES Define organizational structure and explain how it corresponds to division of labour. Discuss.
COPYRIGHT 2001 PEARSON EDUCATION CANADA INC. CHAPTER 14 1 CHAPTER 14 ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE.
Copyright 2004 Prentice Hall 1 Organizational Theory, Design, and Change Text and Cases Fourth Edition Gareth R. Jones.
Organizational Structure & Design Ch 10. Defining Organizational Structure Organizational Structure  The formal arrangement of jobs within an organization.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 1-1 Organizational Theory, Design, and Change Sixth Edition Gareth R. Jones Chapter.
Understanding Groups & Teams Ch 15. Understanding Groups Group Two or more interacting and interdependent individuals who come together to achieve particular.
1616. CHAPTER 16 Determinants of Organization Structure and Culture Copyright © 1999 Addison Wesley Longman 2 Organizational Environment The set of resources.
C3 Information Systems, Organizations, and Strategy.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 1-1 Organizational Theory, Design, and Change Sixth Edition Gareth R. Jones Chapter.
1 Copyright 2004 Prentice Hall Organizational Theory, Design, and Change Text and Cases Fourth Edition Gareth R. Jones.
C3 Information Systems, Organizations, and Strategy.
Factors Influencing Knowledge Management
1 The Subject Is Organizations I. What is a Formal Organization? Special type of secondary group designated to allow a relatively large number of people.
Organizational Effectiveness
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 1-1 Organizational Theory, Design, and Change Sixth Edition Gareth R. Jones Chapter.
An Overview of Management
For use with MARTIN, ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOUR AND MANAGEMENT 3e ISBN  Copyright © 2005 Cengage Learning 1 TECHNOLOGY AND WORK Lecture 14.
CHAPTER 11 ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN AND WORK PROCESSES BOH4M1.
Four basic organizational design challenges
ORGANIZATIONAL TECHNOLOGY
Manufacturing and Service Technologies
Introduction: The Nature of Leadership
Copyright © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
Chapter 10: Foundations of Organizational Design
Project Management Framework
Describe six key elements in organizational design
Organizational Effectiveness
Designing Organizational Structure
Organizational Effectiveness
Organizational Design, Competences, and Technology
Project Management Framework
Planning Ahead — Chapter 11 Study Questions
Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATIONS
Manufacturing and Service Technologies
Presentation transcript:

ORGANIZATIONAL TECHNOLOGY Chapter 11 ORGANIZATIONAL TECHNOLOGY

TECHNOLOGY –DEFINITIONS Technology - the means by which relevant material, technical, procedural, informational, cognitive and social resources are deployed to achieve desired outcomes Core technology - the means employed in the transformation activities that lead to the main outputs of the organization (or unit) Material technology - the tangible aspects of technology that can be seen, touched or heard Social technology - the social and behaviour shaping devices of structure, control, co-ordination, motivation and reward systems

TECHNOLOGY –DEFINITIONS Winner (1977) identifies three general applications of technology: Apparatus - the physical apparatus or materials that are necessary for the achievement of tasks Technique - the purposive aspects of human activity through the application of skills, methods, procedures or routines as a means of achieving objectives Organization - refers to social arrangements or frameworks including factories, bureaucracies and teams established to achieve particular goals

Open systems model of an organization Figure 11.1

Taxonomies of systems Figure 11.2

Industrialization and technological change Blumer (1990) distinguishes between industrialization and technological change: Non-industrial technological change - some technological developments that have no impact on the level of industrialization Industrialization as one form of technological development - Industrialization brings with it many changes other than those based on technology Transplanted industrialization - technology does not automatically evolves as part of the process of industrialization Causal relationships – there is a complex chain of events involved in the relationship between technology and society Ambiguity - technological development contains a higher level of ambiguity in terms of its interrelationship with social change than does the concept of industrialization

Perspectives on technology Woodward and production technology Unit or small batch Large batch or mass Continuous process Table 11.1

Perrow’s framework of departmental technology Figure 11.3

Assessing the degree of task routine/nonroutine Figure 11.4

Thompson – resource and technology matching Task interdependence - the way in which tasks differentiated through the division of labour are operationally related to each other Mediating technology - this form of operational technology mediates what would otherwise be independent activities or needs Long-linked technology - the sequential processes most obviously found in assembly line factory operations Intensive technology - describes processes where different units interact constantly with each other during the transformation process Technical core - the central transformation processes that need to work efficiently and unperturbed by sudden changes and uncertainties Boundary spanning units - buffer the operating (technical) core from environmental uncertainty

The Aston studies In terms of technology these studies utilized three categories: Operations – reflected the nature of the transformation process, the techniques used Materials - the nature and characteristics of the things that were being processed. Knowledge - the skill and ability required to undertake the tasks necessary to achieve the objectives

Technology - Other contributions Burns and Stalker (1961) - mechanistic and organic (or organismic) structures partly reflect the technology found in the organization Lawrence and Lorsch (1967) - considered technology as an environmental contingency factor

Assumptions about technology: Neutrality Impact Modernism De-skilling Structure Efficiency

TECHNOLOGY – SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION Canonical practice - the formal, espoused and prescriptive description of how tasks should be done and how technology should be deployed Noncanonical practice - the often improvised approaches that are iteratively developed in actual ongoing work and shared and collectively improved among the interacting members of a working community Communities of practice - ongoing groups of people that interact and actively share information while engaging in an activity they are individually and collectively committed to

The politics of technology Competition Interaction Control or influence Labour process debate Rationality (or otherwise) in decision making Benefits to managers Tighter control over work processes Pace of work Skill levels required Design of work

Technology and alienation Alienation - Thompson (1989): Work performed under conditions in which the worker is estranged from his or her own activity in the act of production, through the sale of labour power and the subordination of skills and knowledge to the capitalist, or other external social forces Blauner (1964): Powerlessness Meaninglessness Isolation Self-estrangement Burnout - emotional exhaustion, lower concern about other people, and diminished personal accomplishment

The Impact of Technology Central to service technology is the direct inclusion of consumers in the value generation process - an external element into processes that have often been seen by managers as largely under their control Manufacturing, mass-customization based on: AMT FMS CAD CAM CIM

Information and communication technology Zuboff suggests that ICT can be distinguished in different stages - automation, information and transformation Konsynski & Sviokla argue that the failure by management to obtain the full value from ICT is a consequence of outdated paradigms of organizational functioning - new paradigm sees decision making being based on an appropriate allocation between humans and technical systems Competency traps – when managers delay investment in new technologies too long Informational society - is characterized by the knowledge generation and exchange through interactions between and among networks of individuals as well as economic, social, political and cultural institutions