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Title: B200


1
B200
  • ORGANISATIONS MODULE
  • WEEK SEVEN

2
Themes of the Organisations Module
  • shows how and why organisations are important,
    and discusses why they take the forms and
    structures they do.
  • awareness of the core elements of organisations
    structures and cultures.
  • Introduces programmes of organisational change.

3
Student Key Learning OutcomesOrganisations Module
  • see the critical importance of business
    organisations of all kinds and sizes to the
    modern world to business itself, to
    nation-states and to individuals as employees,
    consumers and citizens
  • recognise the assumptions and elements
    historical, cultural, social on which the
    characteristic modern organisation depends
  • be familiar with the key elements of
    organisations (structures and cultures),
    understanding how they differ, some of the
    reasons for those differences, and their origins
    and implications
  • understand the forces that shape organisations
    and how organisations work
  • be able to use these different approaches to
    analyse, explain and evaluate the behaviour of
    organisations, especially in relation to
    programmes of change.
  • (more details in organisations study guide p62).

4
WEEK SEVEN (pp 97 - 122)
  • RESOURCES
  • Understanding Business Organisations
  • Chapter 7 Pages 97 113 Organisations Reader
  • Chapter 8 Pages 114 122 Organisations Reader
  • Relevant pages of Organisations Study Guide.

5
Chapter 7 Work Organisations, Managerial
Strategies and Control by Dunkerley
  • This chapter discusses Webers model of
    organisation bureaucracy. It discusses the
    limitations of bureaucracy in practice, and also
    builds on the assessment of bureaucracy as a
    model of organisation.

6
Definitions
  • An organisation is an instrument, a deliberate
    and rational means for attaining known goals.
  • An organisation is a formal analytical point of
    reference, primacy of orientation to the
    attainment of a specific goal is used as the
    defining characteristics of an organisation which
    distinguishes it from other types of social
    system.
  • An organisation is a collection of people working
    together under a defined structure for the
    purpose of predetermined outcomes through the use
    of financial, human and material resources.

7
A set of characteristics defines bureaucracy
  • The staff members are personally free, observing
    only the impersonal duties of their office.
  • There is a clear hierarchy of offices.
  • The functions of the offices are clearly
    specified.
  • Officials are appointed in the basis of a
    contract.
  • They are selected on the basis of a professional
    qualification, ideally substantiated by a diploma
    gained through examination.
  • They have a money salary and usually pension
    rights. The salary is graded according to the
    position in the hierarchy. The official can
    always leave the post, and under certain
    circumstances, it can also be terminated.
  • The officials post is his sole or major
    occupation.
  • There is a career structure and promotion is
    possible either by seniority or merit and
    according to the judgement of superiors.
  • The official may appropriate neither the post nor
    the resources which go with it.
  • He is subject to unified control and disciplinary
    system.
  • (Albrow 1970 see reader pp98-99)

8
Bureaucracy Functional or Dysfunctional
  • When members of an organisation are constantly
    pressured into reliability, certain things
    happen
  • There is a reduction in personalised
    relationship.
  • An over-internationalisation of the rules of the
    organisation may occur, suggesting that the
    function of rules is changed where rule following
    becomes an end in itself rather than as a means
    of achieving the organizational goals.
  • An emphasis on control can lead to the position
    where categorisation is so restricted that the
    search for alternatives that is essential to
    decision-making becomes self-restricted. Red
    tape.
  • Dysfunctional bureaucracy often appears to arise
    from the attempts by management to increase
    control in the organisation. Such attempts at
    control may derive from the need for greater
    efficiency or may be seen as management asserting
    its power the two are not mutually exclusive.

9
Bureaucratic Structures
  • In Weber's states that in bureaucracy the issue
    of control is central. The formal structure of
    an organisation may be designed as to maximise
    the exercise of control by those possessing
    legitimate power in the organisational structure.
    Weber regarded the modern organisation as a
    highly rational form of administration in which
    all of its characteristics are designed to
    enhance the whole.
  • Please read the basic principles of the
    contingency model points a j on page 107 of the
    Organisations Reader. Please also note figure 7.1
    on page 109.

10
TMA 05
  • The theme of bureaucracy is important for TMA 05.
  • Please ensure that you are familiar with this
    chapter and the definitions of bureaucracy.

11
Chapter 8 Studying Organisations an
Introduction by Thompson and McHugh
  • This chapter sets out two distinctly different
    ways of thinking about organisations the
    mainstream and critical approaches. These
    influence how researchers study and describe
    organisations, but also influence how managers
    try to run and change organisations.

12
Organisations as goal-seekers
  • Goals are seen as preferred states which
    organisations and their members attempt to
    achieve through collective and coordinated
    action. In such situation goals are formulated,
    policies and objectives flow from them, and
    inputs in the form of activities are created,
    which in return produce outputs that allow for
    the achievement of goals and success of the
    organisations.

13
  • This might not always produce the required
    results because
  • There are references to environmental influences.
  • Members of the organisations might have goals
    which are contradictory to senior management,
    creating gaps between the formal and informal
    official and operative goals and actual policies.
  • Workers might not have loyalty to the
    organisation resulting in the replacement of
    goals.
  • Emphasis on goals does not enable distinction
    between different forms of organisational
    activities.

14
  • Influences on The Mainstream Approach
  • 1 Organisation cooperative social systems self
    regulating bodies.
  • Tending toward both equilibrium and control.
  • The organisation is a unitary body combining the
    activities, values and interests of all
    participants.
  • The organisation is a system of interrelated
    parts or sub-units working towards an ultimate
    goal.
  • Division of labour plays a significant role to
    sustain social solidarity and the survival of the
    organisation.

15
Managerialism
  • Managers achieve rational efficiency through
    establishing harmony in the workforce.
    Organisational analysis can assist managers in
    organisations in understanding how their
    behaviour can positively influence their
    subordinates productivity.

16
  •  
  • There are two features of mainstream view of
    reality taken from the sciences
  • Emphasis on measurements of organisational
    phenomena e.g. type of structures, technologies
    and leadership style.
  • 2. Attempts to discover clear cause and effect
    relationships.

17
Main Characteristics of the Mainstream Approach
  • 1. The purposes of the organisation is clear,
    agreed and shared.
  • Decisions are taken on clear and rational
    grounds.
  • All workers agree on what they are doing and work
    co-operatively and collectively towards the
    organisational purpose.
  • The structure and processes of the organisation
    are designed to ensure efficiency.
  • 5. Management strive to ensure coordination and
    control of achievement of the organisational
    goals.

18
The Critical Approach
  • Critical perspectives must be reflexive.
  • The embeddedness of organisations - there is a
    necessity to be historical and contextual.
  • Dialectics and contradiction - (a movement from
    thesis to antithesis and synthesis).
  • Social transformation empowering employees to
    make more choices and to act more effectively to
    transform workplace relations. (Rhetoric is not
    always matched by reality).

19
Reading to be completed by NEXT WEEK
  • Re-read the relevant pages of the Organisations
    Study Guide File to reinforce your learning from
    this tutorial. Complete any relevant activities
    from this section.
  • Read Understanding Business Organisations
    Chapters 10 and 11 (chapter 9 is optional
    reading).
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