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Module 3
Meaning
 Org design is concerned with making decisions about
  the forms of coordination, control and motivation that
  best fit the enterprise.
 In making these decisions it is necessary to consider
  external factors and internal factors of the enterprise.
 It is intimately concerned with the way in which
  decision making is centralised, shared or delegated
  and with the way the enterprise is governed.
Characteristics of org design
 Functionally efficient
 Economically viable
 User friendly
 Environmentally aligned
 Aesthetically appealing – mutual respect & trust
 Growth promoting
 Change responsive
Management Functions
Designing organizational structures is part of organizing, one of the
four basic management functions.


Planning        Organizing         Leading Controlling
                                                      Lead to
Defining         Determining      Directing      Monitoring    Achieving the
goals, estab-    what needs       and moti-      activities    organization’s
lishing          to be done,      vating all     to ensure         stated
strategy, and    how it will      involved       that they are    purpose
developing       be done,         parties and    accomplished
subplans to      and who is       resolving      as planned
coordinate       to do it         conflicts
activities
Determinants of org design
 Environment
 Objectives or Mission
 Strategy
 Technology
 People & culture
 Age
 Size
Components of org design
 Centralisation
 Complexity
 Formalisation
 Structure
 Division of labour
 Standardisation
 Differentiation
 Departmentalization
 Span of control
Formalization - the degree                 Centralization - the degree
   to which the organization                  to which decisions are
       has official rules,                    made at the top of the
 regulations and procedures                        organization




Hierarchy of                                             Specialization -
 Authority -                                              the degree to
the degree of                     Basic                   which jobs are
    vertical                                                 narrowly
differentiation                  Design                    defined and
    across                                                  depend on
   levels of
                               Dimensions                     unique
management                                                   expertise




 Complexity - the degree to                   Standardization - the
 which many different types                    degree to which work
  of activities occur in the                activities are accomplished
        organization                             in a routine fashion
Key Design Questions and Answers for Designing Proper
Organization Structure
Centralisation
 One of the important building blocks of org design is
  the level of Centralistion or Decentralisation in
  decision making.
 Centralisation refers to the degree to which formal
  authority for making discretionary choices is
  concentrated in an individual, unit or level allowing
  employees to work with minimal inputs.
 In simple words, it refers to the extent to which
  decision making lies at a single point in the org.
 The hierarchical structure with centralised authority at
  the top is based on command & control.
 Top of the pyramid has the right to give command and
  the subordinates have the duty to obey & follow.

 Decentralisation:
It is the process of dispersing decision making closer to
   people in the organisation.
Decentralization is the policy of delegating decision-
   making authority down to the lower levels in an
   organization.
A decentralized organization shows fewer tiers in the
   organizational structure, wider span of control, and a
   bottom-to-top flow of decision-making and flow of
   ideas.
Centralisation vs. Decentralisation-
Advantages
                               Decentralisation
Centralistion
                               1. Greater flexibility
1. Uniformity of policies,
   stds & actions.             2. Quick response to local
                                  requirements.
2. Closer control
                               3. Top mgt focus on policy
3. Maxi eco of scale
                                  issues
4. Eliminates duplication
                               4. Intra unit
5. Reduces risk in DM by          communication
   less skilled subordinates
                               5. On the job training.
                               6. Morale & commitment
                               7. Healthy competition
                                  among units
Disadvantages
 Centralisation              Decentralisation
1. Much decision load on     1. Problems of control
   top mgt.                  2. Conflicts of goals &
2. Lack of initiative from      interests among units
   top mgt                   3. Loss of economies of
3. No quick response to         scale
   local requirements.       4. Duplication of efforts
•Both has benefits and troubles to the organization.
•Manager has to bring a correct balance between
these two for effective decision making.
•Balance should be made in terms of long term
strategy making and short term flexibility and
innovation.
•As top mgt can concentrate on the former, middle
and lower managers can respond to quick changes in
the environment and be more flexible.
•Thus, leads to bringing a balance between
centralisation and decentralisation.
Complexity
 Refers to degree of differentiation that exists within an
    organisation.
   It focuses on number of specific jobs, roles,
    hierarchical levels etc in an org.
   Complexity exists due to the grouping of the tasks.
   It requires more process of managing control,
    coordination and communication with all the sections
    of task group.
   Organisations can be complex in 3 ways:
3 ways of org complexity
 Horizontal :
Refers to the degree of differentiation between the units
   in terms of nature of work, requirements of skills and
   knowledge, employees orientation etc…
It can be seen in division of labour, departmentation and
   functional specialisation.
 Vertical :
Refers to the number of hierarchical levels which exist
   between top and lowest level operators in the org.
Increase in vertical complexity leads to increase in
   horizontal also.
Number of these levels can be determined by Span of
   Control.
Spatial complexity
 Refers to the degree to which the subunits & personnel
  of an org are geographically separated.
 Additional units in different locations create
  additional requirements for control and coordination.
 Eg: FMCG co, have their marketing divisions spread
  across the country but production is done in one place.
 Technology help such org to overcome the problem of
  control and coordination.
Formalisation
 Refers to the degree to which jobs in an org are
    standardised.
   Greater formalisation reduces the employees
    discretion in dealing with their work.
   Formalisation exists in the form of detailed rules,
    meticulous work procedures & clear job descriptions.
   By this org ensure that any input is handled in a std
    manner to produce a uniform output.
   But less stdzn mean less programmed jobs & provide
    discretion to employees for work.
It benefits the org in following manner

  Reduces variability of outputs.
  It is the best way of dealing with complexity
  Reduces the need for direct supervision and control.
  Reduces the chances of committing mistakes at work.
  Jobs can be handled by less experienced individuals
  also.
Formalisation techniques
 Selection & recruitment
 Role or Job description
 Rules & procedures
 Training
 Culture & Organisational socialisation
Implication of high formalisation
Factors                 High formal         Low formal

Nature of task          Routine             Non routine

Nature of product       Mass                Customised

Output predictability   High                Low

Cause – effect reln     High                Low

Mgt philosophy          Control & command   Consensus &
                                            commitment
Hierarchical level      Low                 High

Functional depts        Production          Marketing / sales
Structure
 Refers to the way various tasks, activities & roles are
  grouped together and relate with each other.
 It provides the basic framework for organisation to
  work.
 It establishes the relationship between various
  components of org & provides coordination and
  communication, decision making and control
  mechanisms.
 Based on the need of the org, structure can be
  designed.
Types of org structure
 Broadly speaking, there are two types of org structures.
  They are
 Mechanistic model
 Organic model
Mechanistic Vs Organic Models
Features of Mechanistic structure
 High specialisation
 Rigid departmentalisation
 Clear chain of command
 Narrow spans of control
 Centralisation
 High formalisation
Features of organic structures
 Broad specialisation
 Multi level, cross functional teams
 Multi channel command
 Wide span of control
 Decentralisation
 Low formalisation
Mechanistic                    Organic                         Boundaryless

Rigid hierarchical             Collaboration (both vertical    Collaboration (vertical,
relationships                  and horizontal)                 horizontal, customers,
                                                               suppliers, competitors)

High formalization             Low formalization               Low formalization


Top-down communication         Informal communication          Informal communication


Centralized decision           Decentralized decision          Decentralized decision
authority                      authority                       authority

Narrowly defined specialized   Broadly defined flexible jobs   Broadly defined flexible jobs
jobs

Emphasis on individuals        Emphasis on teams               Emphasis on teams that also
working independently                                          may cross organization
                                                               boundaries
Boundaryless Organization
Virtual Organization
Division of labour
 When total tasks are divided into smaller and simplified
  units for the purpose of assigning responsibilities to
  perform the job is called as Division of Labour.
 As org become more complex, breaking the work into
  various tasks become the norm.
 Also called as specialistion, refers to the distribution of
  formal duties among a number of positions.
 Specialisation can be of two types:
1. Functional
2. Role
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
Advantages                Disadvantages

 High efficiency          Routine tasks leading to
 Low skill requirement       monotony
 Less time and cost in      High cost of supervision
  training                   Full potential not utilised
 High standardisation       Low job satisfaction
 Uniform output             Lack of identification with
                              total problems
                             No new challenges
                             Increased need for
                              coordination and control
•Refers to the extent to which jobs & procedures are
precisely & clearly defined.
• rules apply invariably.
•Jobs requiring adoption of different procedures
cannot be standardised.
•It can applied to tasks that are routine, problems that
can be analysed and decision can be programmed.
•Balancing the need for standardisation is complex
task for a manager.
•Discovering new ways of doing job needs mutual
adjustment but not standardisation is the slogan of
today’s orgs.
Differentiation
 Horizontal differentiation often refers to the process of
  departmentalistion.
 Vertical differentiation refers to the levels in the
  structure of an org.
 Increased differentiation leads to greater complexity.
 It also leads to distortion of communication, delay in
  decision making and increased time lag for finishing
  the tasks.
Departmentalization
What is it?
   The process of grouping jobs according to some logical
    arrangement.
Functional Departmentalization:
   Grouping jobs involving the same or similar activities.
Product Departmentalization:
   Grouping activities
  around products or
  product groups.
Ways to Departmentalisation
 By function: arranging the business according to
 what each section or department does

 By product or activity: organising according to the
 different products made

 By area: geographical or regional structure

 By customer: where different customer groups have
 different needs

 By process & market: where products have to go
 through stages as they are made
Functional structure

   This depends on the business type, size and
    structure used
   Let’s look at a

                           Chief Executive



                          Board of Directors




 Production   Marketing       Accounts         Personnel   IT
Functional Structure
   Advantages                    Disadvantages
  Specialisation – each        Closed communication
   department focuses on         could lead to lack
   its own work                  of focus
  Accountability –             Departments can
                                 become resistant
   someone is responsible
                                 to change
   for the section
                                Coordination
  Clarity – know your and       may take too long
   others’ roles                Gap between top and
                                 bottom
Product Based
Organisation by Product/Activity
  Advantages                 Disadvantages
 Clear focus on market     Duplication of functions
  segment helps meet         (e.g. different sales force
  customers’ needs           for each division)
 Positive competition
                            Negative effects of
  between divisions
                             competition
 Better control as each
  division can act as       Lack of central control
  separate profit centre     over each separate
                             division
Hewlett-Packard’s Headquarters Worldwide


                      Hewlett Packard




  Americas       Europe, Middle East, Africa   Asia Pacific
Houston, Texas       Geneva, Switzerland        Hong Kong
PRESIDENT




             MANUFAC-
MARKETING                    RESEARCH        FINANCE          PLANNING         PERSONNEL
             TURING


        LINE MANAGEMENT

  VICE-PRESIDENT                    VICE-PRESIDENT                    VICE-PRESIDENT
  DOMESTIC                          DOMESTIC                          INTERNATIONAL
  DIVISION A                        DIVISION C                        DIVISION
                   VICE-PRESIDENT                    VICE-PRESIDENT
                   DOMESTIC                          DOMESTIC
                   DIVISION B                        DIVISION D



              ASIA/PACIFIC          EUROPE/MIDDLE
                                                                 LATIN AMERICA     STAFF
                                    EAST/AFRICA



              COUNTRY           COUNTRY                         COUNTRY
              SUBSIDIARIES      SUBSIDIARIES                    SUBSIDIARIES
Organisation by Area
  Advantages                   Disadvantages

 Serve local needs better    Conflict between local and
 Positive competition         central management
 More effective              Duplication of resources
  communication between        and functions
  firm and local customers
PRESIDENT


    CORPORATE STAFF


              MANUFAC-
MARKETING                               RESEARCH                         FINANCE                        PLANNING                  PERSONNEL
              TURING


               LINE MANAGEMENT




        AREA MANAGER                                AREA MANAGER
        NORTH AMERICA                               EUROPE


                                                                                                            AREA MANAGER
                                AREA MANAGER                                AREA MANAGER                    FAR EAST
                                LATIN AMERICA                               MIDDLE
                                                                            EAST/AFRICA




                        Executives with total corporate and worldwide responsibilities. Corporate staff activities on a worldwide basis generally involve
                        policy matters, strategic planning, basic product planning, functional guidance to line geographic unit, and coordination of
                        activities between geographic units

                        Executives with line responsibility for all operations in a particular geographic area
Matrix Organization
Advantages and Disadvantages of the Matrix Approach:

           Advantages                         Disadvantages
 Efficient utilization of scarce,    Employee frustration and
  expensive specialists                confusion as a result of the dual
 Flexibility that allows new          chain of command
  projects to start quickly           Conflict between product and
 Development of cross-functional      functional managers over
  skills by employees                  deadlines and priorities
 Increased employee involvement      Too much time spent in meetings
  in management decisions              to coordinate decisions
  affecting project or product
  assignments
Establishing Reporting
Relationships – Span of control
  What needs to be
   clarified?
    Chain of Command:
      Clear and distinct lines of
       authority among all positions
       in an organization.
    Span of Management:
     What is it?
        The number of people who
         report to each manager.
Tall Versus Flat Organizations
   What is the difference?
     Flat organizational
      structure leads to higher
      levels of employee morale
      and productivity.
     Tall organizational
      structures usually tend to
      be more expensive
      requiring more managers.
Tall Versus Flat Organizations
Factors Influencing the Span of
Management
    Competence of supervisor
       and subordinates.
      Dispersion of subordinates.
      Extent of non-supervisory
       work.
      Degree of required
       supervision.
      Extent of standard
       procedures.
      Similarity of tasks.
      Frequency of new problems.
      Preferences of supervision.
Flexibility
 Design should be flexible enough to allow for
  adaptation to changing demands of the environment.
 Design based on narrow specialistion places
  constraints on the flexibility in redeployment of HR.
 Structure shd encourage innovation thro
  rearrangement of org resources.
 Structure shd change in response to environment and
  the needs of the org as orgs cannot be static and
  constant.

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Od mod2

  • 2. Meaning  Org design is concerned with making decisions about the forms of coordination, control and motivation that best fit the enterprise.  In making these decisions it is necessary to consider external factors and internal factors of the enterprise.  It is intimately concerned with the way in which decision making is centralised, shared or delegated and with the way the enterprise is governed.
  • 3. Characteristics of org design  Functionally efficient  Economically viable  User friendly  Environmentally aligned  Aesthetically appealing – mutual respect & trust  Growth promoting  Change responsive
  • 4. Management Functions Designing organizational structures is part of organizing, one of the four basic management functions. Planning Organizing Leading Controlling Lead to Defining Determining Directing Monitoring Achieving the goals, estab- what needs and moti- activities organization’s lishing to be done, vating all to ensure stated strategy, and how it will involved that they are purpose developing be done, parties and accomplished subplans to and who is resolving as planned coordinate to do it conflicts activities
  • 5. Determinants of org design  Environment  Objectives or Mission  Strategy  Technology  People & culture  Age  Size
  • 6. Components of org design  Centralisation  Complexity  Formalisation  Structure  Division of labour  Standardisation  Differentiation  Departmentalization  Span of control
  • 7. Formalization - the degree Centralization - the degree to which the organization to which decisions are has official rules, made at the top of the regulations and procedures organization Hierarchy of Specialization - Authority - the degree to the degree of Basic which jobs are vertical narrowly differentiation Design defined and across depend on levels of Dimensions unique management expertise Complexity - the degree to Standardization - the which many different types degree to which work of activities occur in the activities are accomplished organization in a routine fashion
  • 8. Key Design Questions and Answers for Designing Proper Organization Structure
  • 9. Centralisation  One of the important building blocks of org design is the level of Centralistion or Decentralisation in decision making.  Centralisation refers to the degree to which formal authority for making discretionary choices is concentrated in an individual, unit or level allowing employees to work with minimal inputs.  In simple words, it refers to the extent to which decision making lies at a single point in the org.
  • 10.  The hierarchical structure with centralised authority at the top is based on command & control.  Top of the pyramid has the right to give command and the subordinates have the duty to obey & follow.  Decentralisation: It is the process of dispersing decision making closer to people in the organisation. Decentralization is the policy of delegating decision- making authority down to the lower levels in an organization. A decentralized organization shows fewer tiers in the organizational structure, wider span of control, and a bottom-to-top flow of decision-making and flow of ideas.
  • 11. Centralisation vs. Decentralisation- Advantages Decentralisation Centralistion 1. Greater flexibility 1. Uniformity of policies, stds & actions. 2. Quick response to local requirements. 2. Closer control 3. Top mgt focus on policy 3. Maxi eco of scale issues 4. Eliminates duplication 4. Intra unit 5. Reduces risk in DM by communication less skilled subordinates 5. On the job training. 6. Morale & commitment 7. Healthy competition among units
  • 12. Disadvantages  Centralisation  Decentralisation 1. Much decision load on 1. Problems of control top mgt. 2. Conflicts of goals & 2. Lack of initiative from interests among units top mgt 3. Loss of economies of 3. No quick response to scale local requirements. 4. Duplication of efforts
  • 13. •Both has benefits and troubles to the organization. •Manager has to bring a correct balance between these two for effective decision making. •Balance should be made in terms of long term strategy making and short term flexibility and innovation. •As top mgt can concentrate on the former, middle and lower managers can respond to quick changes in the environment and be more flexible. •Thus, leads to bringing a balance between centralisation and decentralisation.
  • 14. Complexity  Refers to degree of differentiation that exists within an organisation.  It focuses on number of specific jobs, roles, hierarchical levels etc in an org.  Complexity exists due to the grouping of the tasks.  It requires more process of managing control, coordination and communication with all the sections of task group.  Organisations can be complex in 3 ways:
  • 15. 3 ways of org complexity  Horizontal : Refers to the degree of differentiation between the units in terms of nature of work, requirements of skills and knowledge, employees orientation etc… It can be seen in division of labour, departmentation and functional specialisation.  Vertical : Refers to the number of hierarchical levels which exist between top and lowest level operators in the org. Increase in vertical complexity leads to increase in horizontal also. Number of these levels can be determined by Span of Control.
  • 16. Spatial complexity  Refers to the degree to which the subunits & personnel of an org are geographically separated.  Additional units in different locations create additional requirements for control and coordination.  Eg: FMCG co, have their marketing divisions spread across the country but production is done in one place.  Technology help such org to overcome the problem of control and coordination.
  • 17. Formalisation  Refers to the degree to which jobs in an org are standardised.  Greater formalisation reduces the employees discretion in dealing with their work.  Formalisation exists in the form of detailed rules, meticulous work procedures & clear job descriptions.  By this org ensure that any input is handled in a std manner to produce a uniform output.  But less stdzn mean less programmed jobs & provide discretion to employees for work.
  • 18. It benefits the org in following manner  Reduces variability of outputs.  It is the best way of dealing with complexity  Reduces the need for direct supervision and control.  Reduces the chances of committing mistakes at work.  Jobs can be handled by less experienced individuals also.
  • 19. Formalisation techniques  Selection & recruitment  Role or Job description  Rules & procedures  Training  Culture & Organisational socialisation
  • 20. Implication of high formalisation Factors High formal Low formal Nature of task Routine Non routine Nature of product Mass Customised Output predictability High Low Cause – effect reln High Low Mgt philosophy Control & command Consensus & commitment Hierarchical level Low High Functional depts Production Marketing / sales
  • 21. Structure  Refers to the way various tasks, activities & roles are grouped together and relate with each other.  It provides the basic framework for organisation to work.  It establishes the relationship between various components of org & provides coordination and communication, decision making and control mechanisms.  Based on the need of the org, structure can be designed.
  • 22. Types of org structure  Broadly speaking, there are two types of org structures. They are  Mechanistic model  Organic model
  • 24. Features of Mechanistic structure  High specialisation  Rigid departmentalisation  Clear chain of command  Narrow spans of control  Centralisation  High formalisation
  • 25. Features of organic structures  Broad specialisation  Multi level, cross functional teams  Multi channel command  Wide span of control  Decentralisation  Low formalisation
  • 26. Mechanistic Organic Boundaryless Rigid hierarchical Collaboration (both vertical Collaboration (vertical, relationships and horizontal) horizontal, customers, suppliers, competitors) High formalization Low formalization Low formalization Top-down communication Informal communication Informal communication Centralized decision Decentralized decision Decentralized decision authority authority authority Narrowly defined specialized Broadly defined flexible jobs Broadly defined flexible jobs jobs Emphasis on individuals Emphasis on teams Emphasis on teams that also working independently may cross organization boundaries
  • 29. Division of labour  When total tasks are divided into smaller and simplified units for the purpose of assigning responsibilities to perform the job is called as Division of Labour.  As org become more complex, breaking the work into various tasks become the norm.  Also called as specialistion, refers to the distribution of formal duties among a number of positions.  Specialisation can be of two types: 1. Functional 2. Role
  • 30. 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
  • 31. Advantages Disadvantages  High efficiency  Routine tasks leading to  Low skill requirement monotony  Less time and cost in  High cost of supervision training  Full potential not utilised  High standardisation  Low job satisfaction  Uniform output  Lack of identification with total problems  No new challenges  Increased need for coordination and control
  • 32. •Refers to the extent to which jobs & procedures are precisely & clearly defined. • rules apply invariably. •Jobs requiring adoption of different procedures cannot be standardised. •It can applied to tasks that are routine, problems that can be analysed and decision can be programmed. •Balancing the need for standardisation is complex task for a manager. •Discovering new ways of doing job needs mutual adjustment but not standardisation is the slogan of today’s orgs.
  • 33. Differentiation  Horizontal differentiation often refers to the process of departmentalistion.  Vertical differentiation refers to the levels in the structure of an org.  Increased differentiation leads to greater complexity.  It also leads to distortion of communication, delay in decision making and increased time lag for finishing the tasks.
  • 34. Departmentalization What is it?  The process of grouping jobs according to some logical arrangement. Functional Departmentalization:  Grouping jobs involving the same or similar activities. Product Departmentalization:  Grouping activities around products or product groups.
  • 35. Ways to Departmentalisation  By function: arranging the business according to what each section or department does  By product or activity: organising according to the different products made  By area: geographical or regional structure  By customer: where different customer groups have different needs  By process & market: where products have to go through stages as they are made
  • 36. Functional structure  This depends on the business type, size and structure used  Let’s look at a Chief Executive Board of Directors Production Marketing Accounts Personnel IT
  • 37. Functional Structure Advantages Disadvantages  Specialisation – each  Closed communication department focuses on could lead to lack its own work of focus  Accountability –  Departments can become resistant someone is responsible to change for the section  Coordination  Clarity – know your and may take too long others’ roles  Gap between top and bottom
  • 39. Organisation by Product/Activity Advantages Disadvantages  Clear focus on market  Duplication of functions segment helps meet (e.g. different sales force customers’ needs for each division)  Positive competition  Negative effects of between divisions competition  Better control as each division can act as  Lack of central control separate profit centre over each separate division
  • 40. Hewlett-Packard’s Headquarters Worldwide Hewlett Packard Americas Europe, Middle East, Africa Asia Pacific Houston, Texas Geneva, Switzerland Hong Kong
  • 41. PRESIDENT MANUFAC- MARKETING RESEARCH FINANCE PLANNING PERSONNEL TURING LINE MANAGEMENT VICE-PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT DOMESTIC DOMESTIC INTERNATIONAL DIVISION A DIVISION C DIVISION VICE-PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT DOMESTIC DOMESTIC DIVISION B DIVISION D ASIA/PACIFIC EUROPE/MIDDLE LATIN AMERICA STAFF EAST/AFRICA COUNTRY COUNTRY COUNTRY SUBSIDIARIES SUBSIDIARIES SUBSIDIARIES
  • 42. Organisation by Area Advantages Disadvantages  Serve local needs better  Conflict between local and  Positive competition central management  More effective  Duplication of resources communication between and functions firm and local customers
  • 43. PRESIDENT CORPORATE STAFF MANUFAC- MARKETING RESEARCH FINANCE PLANNING PERSONNEL TURING LINE MANAGEMENT AREA MANAGER AREA MANAGER NORTH AMERICA EUROPE AREA MANAGER AREA MANAGER AREA MANAGER FAR EAST LATIN AMERICA MIDDLE EAST/AFRICA Executives with total corporate and worldwide responsibilities. Corporate staff activities on a worldwide basis generally involve policy matters, strategic planning, basic product planning, functional guidance to line geographic unit, and coordination of activities between geographic units Executives with line responsibility for all operations in a particular geographic area
  • 45. Advantages and Disadvantages of the Matrix Approach: Advantages Disadvantages  Efficient utilization of scarce,  Employee frustration and expensive specialists confusion as a result of the dual  Flexibility that allows new chain of command projects to start quickly  Conflict between product and  Development of cross-functional functional managers over skills by employees deadlines and priorities  Increased employee involvement  Too much time spent in meetings in management decisions to coordinate decisions affecting project or product assignments
  • 46. Establishing Reporting Relationships – Span of control  What needs to be clarified?  Chain of Command:  Clear and distinct lines of authority among all positions in an organization.  Span of Management: What is it?  The number of people who report to each manager.
  • 47. Tall Versus Flat Organizations  What is the difference?  Flat organizational structure leads to higher levels of employee morale and productivity.  Tall organizational structures usually tend to be more expensive requiring more managers.
  • 48. Tall Versus Flat Organizations
  • 49. Factors Influencing the Span of Management  Competence of supervisor and subordinates.  Dispersion of subordinates.  Extent of non-supervisory work.  Degree of required supervision.  Extent of standard procedures.  Similarity of tasks.  Frequency of new problems.  Preferences of supervision.
  • 50. Flexibility  Design should be flexible enough to allow for adaptation to changing demands of the environment.  Design based on narrow specialistion places constraints on the flexibility in redeployment of HR.  Structure shd encourage innovation thro rearrangement of org resources.  Structure shd change in response to environment and the needs of the org as orgs cannot be static and constant.