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Strategy Implementation Organizing for action. The three strands The configuration of Structure The processes that drive people Relationships that connect.

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Presentation on theme: "Strategy Implementation Organizing for action. The three strands The configuration of Structure The processes that drive people Relationships that connect."— Presentation transcript:

1 Strategy Implementation Organizing for action

2 The three strands The configuration of Structure The processes that drive people Relationships that connect people within and around

3 Structural Types Functional Structure CEO ProductionFinanceMarketing Operation s

4 Advantages & Disadvantage + CEO in touch with all operations + Reduces/ simplifies control + Clear definition of responsibilities - Senior managers burdened with chores - No time for strategic thinking - Coordination between functions difficult

5 The multidivisional structure Head Office Division A Function 1Function 2 Division B Function 3 Division C Function 4Function 5 Central Service

6 Advantages and Disadvantages + Flexible ( add / divest divisions ) + Control by performance + Ownership of Strategy - Additional costs for the centre - Duplication at divisional level - Fragmentation and non cooperation

7 The holding company A Holding company is an investment company consisting of shareholdings in a variety of separate business operations Holding companies are extremely flexible However little scope of synergy

8 Matrix Structure Product1 Manager EMEA Product 1 Manager AG Product 1 Manager AP Product1 Manager LA Product 2 Manager EMEA Product 2 Manager AG Product 2 Manager AP Product 2 Manager LA Product 3 Manager EMEA Product 3 Manager AG Product 3 Manager AP Product 3 Manager LA

9 Advantage and Disadvantage + Integrate knowledge + Flexible + Allow dual dimensions - Time taken to make decisions - Fuzzy job / task responsibilities - Degrees of conflict inherent

10 Transnational Structure International DivisionsGlobal Product Divisions Local subsidiariesTransnational corporations

11 Characteristics of Transnational teams Each national unit operates independently National units achieve greater scale of economies through specialization The corporate centre manages this global network Very demanding of managers

12 Team Based Structures Team based structures attempts to combine both horizontal and vertical coordination through structuring people to cross functional teams Team based structures can help organizations respond flexibly to diverse customers

13 Project Based Structures A project based structure is one where teams are created, undertake the work and are then dissolved Project based structures are very flexible and can work virtually too.

14 Comparison of Structures Chall enge Func tiona l Multi divisi onal Holdi ng Matri x Tran snati onal Tea m Proje ct Contr ol I I II II I Chan ge II I I I I I I I Kno wled ge I III I I I GlobII I I I II

15 Relationships Internal CentreStrategy External OutsourcingAllianceVirtualityNetworks

16 Relating internally Devolution concerns the extent to which the centre of an organization delegates decision making to units and managers lower down in the hierarchy Devolution is particularly important when knowledge is dispersed throughout the organization and responsiveness to customer needs is crucial

17 Relating over Strategy In a Strategic Planning style of control the relationship between the centre and the business units is one of parent who is the master planner prescribing detailed roles for departments and business units

18 Relating over Strategy In financial control the role of the centre is confined to setting financial targets, allocating resources, appraising performances, and intervening to avert or correct poor performances

19 Relating over Strategy Strategic control is concerned with shaping the behavior in Business Units and the context in which managers are operating

20 Relating externally Outsourcing – as in the IT & ITES domain Strategic Alliance Networks Virtual organisations

21 The Strategy Structure link A new strategy required a new or at least refashioned structure if the enlarged enterprise was to be operated efficiently ….Unless new structures are developed to meet new administrative needs, which result from an expansion of a firm’s activities into new areas, functions or product lines, the technological, financial & personnel economies of growth and size cannot be realized – Chandler 1962

22 Strategic Choices as Adaptation Processes Miles and Snow ( 1978 ) identified three basic problems which the organizations must identify, confront and solve Entrepreneurial problem : defining an organization's domain – the products / services it chooses to offer Engineering problem – operationalizing the management solution to the entrepreneurial problem – eg selection of appropriate technology Administrative problem – designing of appropriate org structure and systems for uncertainty reduction

23 Differences in Adaptation problems of the Three Strategic types Adaptation problem DefenderAnalyzerProspector Entreprene urial How to seal off market How to locate new market keeping base intact How to locate and exploit new market

24 Differences in Adaptation problems of the Three Strategic types Adaptation problem DefenderAnalyzerProspector Engineerin g How to produce and distribute goods How to be efficient in the stable domain and flexible in the rest How to avoid commitmen t to a single technology process

25 Differences in Adaptation problems of the Three Strategic types Adaptation processes DefenderAnalyzerProspector Administrati ve How to achieve strict control to ensure efficiency How to differentiate the org structure to accommod ate all How to facilitate rather than control organizatio n operation

26 Types of Organizational Structures Bases of Structural Configurations A.The Strategic Apex – this consists of the top level management B.The Operating Core – this consists of employees who perform the basic work related to the production of goods. C.The Middle Line- who connect the strategic apex to the operating core – intermediate managers

27 Types of Organizational Structures D. The Technostructure – consists of staff functionaries and analysts who design systems for regulating and standardizing the formal planning of work. Departments such as finance, production planning, personnel E. The Support Staff – those who provide indirect support eg cafeteria, mailing, transport etc

28 Simple Structures Where the power is centralized in the hand of the hands of one or few managers to whom everybody reports directly eg Nirma, Super Cassettes + Facilitates rapid decision making + Has the capability to innovate - Very demanding on the owner / manager - increasingly inadequate as volumes increase

29 Machine Bureaucracy Characterized by coordination of work through a high degree of standardization of work resulting in low skilled, highly specialized jobs eg the railways, postal department +Achieve efficiency through specialization +Low cost operational and managerial +Large size & standardization provide stability

30 Machine Bureaucracy - Experience difficulty in inter-functional coordination and decision making - High cost of coordination and support - Find difficult to innovate and adequately respond to environmental changes

31 Professional Bureaucracy While the machine bureaucracies coordinates through standardization of work the professional bureaucracy runs by standardizing skills eg Hospitals, Universities + Can accomplish complex but known tasks efficiently on a large scale - Internal politics and rivalry among professionals may lead to loss in synergy

32 Divisionalized Form This structural form is most appropriate when the organization starts producing new products in new markets or new locations eg ITC, UB Group, Tata Sons + Allows division to develop + Ensures performance by making divisions accountable for it - Fosters potentially dysfunctional competition for corporate resources

33 Adhocracy Adhocracies are characterized by a high amount of complexity, non standardization and a fluidization of processes eg Adlabs, consultancy firms, moviemaking units + Encourage innovation and initiative + Flexible, discourages empire building - Weak control structure, low personal accountability - Are inefficient in utilization of resources

34 Relationships between coordinating mechanisms ( Mintzberg ) Coordinating mechanisms Key part of the organization Configuration Direct supervision Strategic ApexSimple Structure Standardization of activities TechnostructureMachine bureaucracy Standardization of skills Operating CoreProfessional bureaucracy Standardization of output Middle lineDivisionalised form Mutual adjustSupport StaffAdhocracy

35 The 7S Framework Beyond Structure and Strategy there are at least five other identifiable elements. The factors are interconnected There is no starting point or implied hierarchy of the factors

36 The 7S Framework Structure – what will the org be like Strategy – the way a company aims to improve its position vis a vis competition Systems – all the procedures formal and informal that make the organization go day by day

37 The 7S Framework Style – basic personality of top management team Staff – people as a pool of resources Skill – dominating attributes or capabilities Superordinate Goals- the fundamental ideas around which a business is built.

38 The 7S Framework Suggests the wisdom of taking the ‘ soft informal’ variables in the purview of top management interest Framework forces us to concentrate on the fit. Real energy comes when all the variables in the model are aligned.


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