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Basic Elements of Organisation Structure

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Title: Basic Elements of Organisation Structure


1
Basic Elements ofOrganisation Structure
  • Engineering Management
  • ELE 22EMT

George Alexander G.Alexander_at_latrobe.edu.au http/
/www.latrobe.edu.au/eemanage/
Lecture 8 14 September 2005
2
1. Forming 2. Storming 3. Norming 4. Performing
3
Definition
  • Organisation structure is the formal pattern of
    interactions and co-ordination that management
    designs to link the tasks of individuals and
    groups to achieve the organisational goals
  • How would you apply the Top-Down design
    approach to organisation structure?

4
Design Process
  • The purpose and goals of the organisation must be
    very clear.
  • The design process of organisation structure
    consists of four elements
  • Assignment of tasks and responsibilities for the
    individual job positions,
  • Grouping the individual positions into units and
    departments,
  • Determining various mechanisms for the vertical
    co-ordination, and
  • Determining various mechanisms for the horizontal
    co-ordination

5
Organisation Chart
  • An organisation chart is a simple line diagram
    showing the organisations structure.
  • The organisation chart normally depict
  • major organisation positions,
  • chain of command,
  • reporting relationship, and
  • communication channels

6
Chairperson, M.D., and C.E.O.
Secretarys Office
GM Marketing
General Counsel
GM Operations
GM H.R.
GM Finance
Communication
Insurance Operations
H.R. Develop
Internal Audit
Market Support
Actuarial
Health Unit
Investment
Field Mgmt Region 1
IMS
Training
Real Estate
Field Mgmt Region 2
Financial Analysis
Tax
7
Matrix Management
  • All resources and skills are equally shared
    across the organisation
  • Suits a project oriented organisation
  • Can be very efficient way of utilising resources
  • Provides variety of projects, and hence can be
    stimulating and satisfying for employees
  • It may result in overloading of some members

8
Project 3
Project 4
Project 1
Project 2
System Engineer
Project Engineer
Tech
Installer
9
Division C
Division D
Division A
Division B
Quality Assurance
Human Resources
Finance
Product Management
10
Matrix organisation some practical experiences
  • Enforces uniform policy application across
    divisions.
  • Facilitates sharing of specialised resources.
  • Brings together functional expertise and customer
    responsiveness.
  • BUT
  • Can result in responsibility conflicts and
    confusion in responsibilities and reporting.
    (Whos my boss?)
  • Overall resource planning has to be effectively
    managed otherwise overloads and/or poor
    utilisation.

11
Informal Organisations
  • As well as formal structures, organisations do
    have informal structures not designed by
    management but emerging from common interest or
    friendship.
  • Informal organisation elements also impact on how
    organisations behave.

12
Job Design
  • As different job types require different skills
    and activities it is necessary to determine the
    areas of work specialisation.
  • Job design involves the specification of tasks
    associated with a particular job.
  • Work specification includes a collection of jobs
    necessary for achieving organisational goals.
  • A well done job design is important for the
    efficient performance of the organisation and
    motivation of its members.

13
Job Design Trends
  • Move from efficiency-driven highly defined,
    repetitive, (boring) jobs to -
  • More varied approaches to job design featuring -
  • Job rotation
  • Multi-skilling
  • Job enrichment
  • Greater autonomy especially for groups of
    workers

14
Vertical Co-ordination
  • Vertical co-ordination is the linking of
    activities at the top of the organisation with
    those at the middle and lower levels in order to
    achieve organisational goals.
  • Think in terms of information flow through a
    network, delays, bottlenecks, etc.

15
Policies Procedures
  • Formalisation is the degree to which written
    policies, rules, procedures, job descriptions,
    and other documents specify what actions are (or
    are not) to be taken under a given set of
    circumstances.
  • Most organisations need some degree of
    formalisation so that fundamental decisions do
    not have to be made more than once and so
    inequities will be less likely to occur.

16
  • Being too highly formalised can lead to
    cumbersome operations, slowness in reacting to
    change, and low levels of creativity and
    innovation.
  • It becomes then a question of balance as to how
    much formality is necessary, and should apply.
  • International quality standards ISO9001,9002
    (and common sense) demand that formal procedures
    etc. do reflect actual practice.

17
Span of Management
  • Span of management, or span of control, is the
    number of subordinates reporting directly to a
    specific manager.
  • Managers should have neither too many nor too few
    subordinates.
  • Then, what is a good balance of the span of
    management?

18
Wider Span of Management
  • Research indicates spans of management can be
    wider under certain circumstances
  • Subordinates' work is such that little
    interaction with others is required.
  • Managers and/or their subordinates are highly
    competent.
  • The work of subordinates is similar.
  • Problems are infrequent.

19
  • Subordinates are located in close physical
    proximity to one another.
  • Managers have few non-supervisory duties to
    perform.
  • Managers have additional help such as secretaries
    or assistants.
  • The work is challenging enough to motivate
    subordinates to do a good job.
  • (From GAs experience, a critical factor is the
    individual managers ability to delegate. Refer
    P282 of text Guidelines for effective
    delegating).

20
Hierarchical Levels
  • Organisational effectiveness is influenced by the
    number of its hierarchical levels.
  • Problems with very tall organisations
  • high administrative overhead,
  • slow communication and decision making,
  • more difficult to pinpoint responsibility for
    various tasks, and
  • encouragement of formation of dull, routine jobs.

21
Restructuring
  • Restructuring an organisation is the process of
    making a major change in the structure, often
    involving
  • reducing management levels, and
  • changing major organisational components through
    divestiture and/or acquisition.
  • Centralising/decentralising activities

22
Division C
Division D
Division A
Division B
Quality Assurance
Human Resources
Finance
Product Management
23
Downsizing
  • Downsizing is the process of
  • significantly reducing the layers of middle
    management,
  • expanding spans of control, and
  • shrinking the size of the work force.
  • Downsizing must be planned and implemented
    carefully.
  • Done poorly, downsizing may result in loss of
    valuable employees, demoralised survivors, and an
    ultimate decline in productivity.

24
  • Done well, downsizing may result in reduced
    costs, faster decision making, more challenging
    jobs, fewer redundancies, and increased
    innovation.
  • Voluntary redundancy, how does it work? and what
    is wrong with it?

25
Typical Characteristics of FC(Refer Economics,
Lecture 6 and Breakeven Analysis.Reduced volume
could necessitate downsizing to regain
profitability)

FC 3
FC 2
FC 1
Quantity
26
References
  • Bartol, K.M., Martin, D.C., Tein, M., Matthews,
    G., Management A Pacific Rim Focus,
    McGraw-Hill, 2002.

Thanks for your attention
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