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ORGANIZATION, TEAMWORK

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Title: ORGANIZATION, TEAMWORK


1
ORGANIZATION, TEAMWORK COMMUNICATION
2
The Changing Structure of Organizations
  • Canadian business adapts to competition and
    becomes more responsive to customer needs
  • Changing organizational design from a
    bureaucratic system to one of employee
    empowerment
  • Top-down management worked well in the past - it
    is not flexible enough for the new global economy

3
Organizational Structure has Evolved
  • To understand the evolution of the organizational
    structure, we must study the history of
    organizational theory

4
Henri Fayols Ten Principles
  • Unity of command
  • Hierarchy of authority
  • Authority
  • Degree of centralization
  • Equity
  • Clear communication channels
  • Division of labor
  • Subordination of individual to the group
  • Esprit de corps
  • Order

5
Max Weber and Organizational Theory
  • Three Layers of Authority
  • Top Managers who are decision makers
  • Middle Managers who develop rules and procedures
  • Supervisors and Workers who do the work

6
Max Webers Principles
  • Webers Principles were similar to Fayols with
    the addition of the following
  • Job descriptions
  • Written rules
  • Consistent policies, procedures and regulations
  • Staffing and promotions based on qualifications

7
Joan Woodwards Research
  • She studied Fayols and Webers principles at
    work in the real world and found
  • There is no best way to structure all companies
  • Labor-intensive organizations function better
    with a more democratic management style
  • Highly-automated companies are more successful
    when a more bureaucratic style of management is
    used

8
Designing More Responsive Organizations
  • Use an Organization Chart to visually illustrate
    departmental relationships
  • Tall Organizations have many layers of Management
  • Flat Organizations have few layers of management
    they expand sideways
  • Flat Organizations are the current trend

9
Purpose of an Organization Chart
  • 1. Show the activities of the organization.
  • 2. Highlight subdivisions of the organization.
  • 3. Identify different types of work performed.
  • 4. Provide information about different
    management levels.
  • 5. Show the lines of authority in the
    organization and the flow of organizational
    communications.

10
Departmentalization - dividing organizational
functions into separate units
  • Advantages
  • Easier to lead and control
  • Resources can be centralized
  • Skills can be perfected
  • Disadvantages
  • Lack of communication
  • Response to change is slow
  • Employees identify with the department
  • Employees become narrow specialists

11
Departmentalization
Functional Departmentalization
8-2a
12
Departmentalization
Product Departmentalization
8-2b
13
Departmentalization
Geographical Departmentalization
8-2c
14
Departmentalization
Customer Departmentalization
8-2d
15
Span of Control
  • Variables in Span of Control
  • Capabilities of the manager
  • Capabilities of the subordinates
  • Complexity of the job
  • Functional complexity
  • Need for coordination
  • Planning demands
  • Functional similarity
  • Geographical closeness

16
Span of ManagementWide Span and Narrow Span
Wide Span Flat Organization
Narrow Span Tall Organization
17
Centralization vs. Decentralization
  • Centralized means authority and decision-making
    remains at the top of the Organization
  • Decentralized authority means decision-making is
    delegated down to the lower levels of management
  • The trend is toward more decentralized
    organizations

18
ORGANIZATIONAL MODELS
  • Line Organizations have direct lines of
    communication, authority and responsibility
  • Line / Staff Organizations have the line people
    do the job and the staff people to advise and
    assist the line personnel
  • Multidivisional Organization organize departments
    into large groups called divisions
  • Matrix Organizations bring experts from various
    parts of the organization together to work on
    projects

19
Line Structure
Convenience Store
20
Line-and-Staff Structure
21
An Example of Multidivisional Structure The Walt
Disney Company
Source The Walt Disney Company Annual Report
22
Matrix Structure
23
ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES OF MATRIX ORGANIZATIONS
  • ADVANTAGES
  • Flexibility
  • Teamwork
  • Creative solutions
  • DISADVANTAGES
  • Costly complex
  • Conflict of 2 bosses
  • FOR MATRIX TO WORK NEED GOOD HR SKILLS

24
A New Organization Model
  • Cross-functional, Self-managed Teams
  • The Team manages itself
  • The Team is made of staff from different
    functional areas
  • The Team often networks internally and externally
    across across corporate or national boundaries

25
Differences between Groups and Teams
Team
Working Group
  • Shared leadership roles
  • Individual and group accountability
  • A specific purpose that the team itself delivers
  • Creates collective work products
  • Encourages open-ended discussion and active
    problem-solving meetings
  • Measures performance directly by assessing
    collective work products
  • Discusses, decides, and does real work together
  • Strong, clearly focused leader
  • Individual accountability
  • The same purpose as the broader organizational
    mission
  • Creates individual work products
  • Runs efficient meetings
  • Measures its effectiveness indirectly by its
    effects on others (e.g., financial performance of
    the business
  • Discusses, decides, and delegates

Source Robert Gatewood, Robert Taylor, O.C.
Ferrell,Management Comprehension, Analysis, and
Application(Homewood, IL Austen Press, 1995),
427.
26
FILM THE TROUBLE WITH TEAMS
  • What are the driving forces that you see for the
    adoption of teams in the workplace?
  • When is it better to use teams rather than a
    strong leader?
  • Why would a manufacturing business like Ford not
    be successful with teams, but the five partners
    in the technical business were when they started
    out?

27
Organizational Culture
  • Corporate culture is the widely-shared values
    within an organization
  • It is created by the organization's leaders
  • It should emphasize customer service
  • The best ones stress moral and ethical values

28
COMMUNICATION IN AN ORGANIZATION
29
The Flow of Communication in an Organizational
Hierarchy
Upward
Downward
Horizontal
Diagonal
30
The Informal Organization
  • The Formal Organization appears on the
    Organizational Chart
  • The Informal Organization is the system of
    relationships amongst the employees
  • The Informal Organization can
  • Adapt quickly
  • Help to foster group cohesiveness
  • Aid in communications - the Grapevine

31
Examples of Informal Group Norms
  • Do your job, but dont produce more than the rest
    of the group.
  • Dont tell off-color jokes or use profane
    language among group members.
  • Listen to the boss and use his/her expertise, but
    dont trust him/her.
  • Everyone is to be clean and organized at their
    work stations.
  • Never side with managers in a dispute involving
    group members.
  • Respect and help your fellow group members on the
    job.
  • Criticize the organization only among group
    members. Never among strangers.
  • Drinking is done off-the-job. Never at work!

32
CLASS ON 31/10/2005
  • TOPIC Production Operations Management
  • Read chapter 8 before class
  • Class Activity Diamonds on Ice (video), read
    case think about questions (p. 216)
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