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Slide OB 13e chapter 016 foundations of organization structure

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Work Specialization• The degree to which tasks in the organization are subdivided into separate jobs • Division of Labor – Makes efficient use of employee skills – Increases employee ski

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Robbins & Judge

Organizational Behavior

13th Edition

Chapter 16: Foundations of Organization Structure

Student Study Slideshow

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Chapter Learning Objectives

• After studying this chapter, you should be able to:

– Identify the six elements of an organization’s structure

– Identify the characteristics of a bureaucracy

– Describe a matrix organization

– Identify the characteristics of a virtual organization

– Show why managers want to create boundaryless

organizations

– Demonstrate how organizational structures differ, and

contrast mechanistic and organic structural models

– Analyze the behavioral implications of different

organizational designs

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What Is Organizational Structure?

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1 Work Specialization

• The degree to which tasks in the organization are subdivided into separate jobs

• 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

• Can create greater economies and efficiencies – but not always…

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Work Specialization Economies and

Diseconomies

• Specialization can reach a point of diminishing returns

• Then job enlargement gives greater efficiencies than does specialization

Exhibit 16-2

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2 Departmentalization

• The basis by which jobs are grouped together

• Grouping Activities by:

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3 Chain of Command

• Authority

– The rights inherent in a managerial position to give

orders and to expect the orders to be obeyed

• Chain of Command

– The unbroken line of authority that extends from the

top of the organization to the lowest echelon and clarifies who reports to whom

• Unity of Command

– A subordinate should have only one superior to

whom he or she is directly responsible

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4 Span of Control

• The number of subordinates a manager can efficiently and effectively direct

– Wider spans of management increase organizational

efficiency

– Narrow span drawbacks:

• Expense of additional layers of management

• Increased complexity of vertical communication

• Encouragement of overly tight supervision and discouragement of employee autonomy

Exhibit 16-3

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5 Centralization and Decentralization

• Centralization

– The degree to which decision making is

concentrated at a single point in the organization.

• Decentralization

– The degree to which decision making is spread

throughout the organization.

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6 Formalization

• The degree to which jobs within the organization are standardized.

– High formalization

• Minimum worker discretion in how to get the job done

• Many rules and procedures to follow

– Low formalization

• Job behaviors are nonprogrammed

• Employees have maximum discretion

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Common Organization Designs: Simple

Structure

• Simple Structure

– A structure characterized by a low degree of

departmentalization, wide spans of control,

authority centralized in a single person, and little formalization

Exhibit 16-4

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Common Organizational Designs:

Bureaucracy

• Bureaucracy

– A structure of highly operating routine tasks

achieved through specialization, very formalized rules and regulations, tasks that are grouped into functional departments, centralized authority,

narrow spans of control, and decision making that follows the chain of command

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Common Organizational Designs:

Matrix

• Matrix Structure

– A structure that creates dual lines of authority and

combines functional and product departmentalization

• Key Elements

– Gains the advantages of functional and product

departmentalization while avoiding their weaknesses – Facilitates coordination of complex and

interdependent activities

– Breaks down unity-of-command concept

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New Design Options: Virtual

Organization

– A small, core organization that outsources its major

business functions

– Highly centralized with little or no departmentalization

• Provides maximum flexibility while concentrating on what the organization does best

• Reduced control over key parts of the business

Exhibit 16-6

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New Design Options: Boundaryless

Organization

– An organization that seeks to eliminate the chain

of command, have limitless spans of control, and replace departments with empowered teams

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Four Reasons Structures Differ

Two extreme forms of organization (Exhibit 16-7)

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Why Structures Differ

2 Organizational Size

– As organizations grow, they become more mechanistic,

more specialized, with more rules and regulations

3 Technology

– How an organization transfers its inputs into outputs

structure with greater formalization

4 Environment

– Institutions or forces outside the organization that

potentially affect the organization’s performance– Three key dimensions: capacity, volatility, and complexity

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– The degree of heterogeneity and concentration

among environmental elements

Exhibit 16-9

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Organizational Designs and Employee

– The benefits of specialization have decreased rapidly as

employees seek more intrinsically rewarding jobs.

– The effect of span of control on employee performance is

contingent upon individual differences and abilities, task

structures, and other organizational factors.

– Participative decision making in decentralized organizations is positively related to job satisfaction.

• People seek and stay at organizations that match their

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Global Implications

• Culture and Organizational Structure

– Many countries follow the U.S model

– U.S management may be too individualistic

• Culture and Employee Structure Preferences

– Cultures with high-power distance may prefer mechanistic structures

• Culture and the Boundaryless Organization

– May be a solution to regional differences in global firms

– Breaks down cultural barriers, especially in strategic

alliances

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Summary and Managerial Implications

• Structure impacts both the attitudes and behaviors of the people within it

• Impact of Technology

– Makes it easier to change structure to fit

employee and organizational needs

Exhibit 16-10

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photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher Printed in the United

States of America.

Copyright ©2009 Pearson Education, Inc Publishing as

Prentice Hall

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