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11-1 Session 10 – Session 10 – Part 2 Part 2 Organizational Structure

Session 10 – Part 2

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Session 10 – Part 2. Organizational Structure. Learning Objectives. 1.Identify five traditional organizational structures and the pros and cons of each Explain the product-team structure and how it is a prototype of more open/agile structures. What is meant by agile, virtual organizations - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Session  10 –  Part 2

11-1

Session 10 – Session 10 – Part 2Part 2

Organizational Structure

Page 2: Session  10 –  Part 2

11-2

Learning Objectives

1. Identify five traditional organizational structures and the pros and cons of each

2. Explain the product-team structure and how it is a prototype of more open/agile structures.

3. What is meant by agile, virtual organizations4. Explain what is meant by boundaryless

organizations and why they are important

Page 3: Session  10 –  Part 2

11-3Traditional Organizational Structures

• Organizational structure refers to the formalized arrangement of interaction between and responsibility for the tasks, people, and resources in an organization

• It is most often seen as a chart, often a pyramidal chart, with

positions or titles and roles in cascading

fashion

Page 4: Session  10 –  Part 2

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New Winthrop Organization Chart

February 20, 2007February 20, 2007

InternalAudit

PublicAffairs

PublicEvents

University Development Finance & Academic Student & Alumni Relations Business Affairs Life

Enrollment Facilities Design College of Library Residence Student Management and Development Arts & Sciences Services Life Affairs

Real Estate College of Institutional DiningFoundation Business Administration Effectiveness Services

Marketing Financial College of Records &

Aid Education Registration

Winthrop Real Estate College of Visual Sponsored ProgramsManagement & Performing Arts & Research

UniversityCollege

Graduate Studies

UniversityAdvancement

Printing

Services

Relations

Admissions

University

RelationsInformation Technology

Financial Accounting

Alumni

Educational Foundation

StudentRecruitment

IntercollegiateAthletics

Lifelong Learning Institute

Human Resources

Management

Bookstore

CampusPolice

Budgeting &

Procurement &

Post Office

Development

Career Development

Health & Counseling Services

Board Of Trustees

Office of the President

Trustee & Presidential Support

Risk Management

UniversityEvents

Facilities

Page 5: Session  10 –  Part 2

11-5

Traditional Structures

• Simple• Functional• Divisional• Matrix• Product-Team

Page 6: Session  10 –  Part 2

11-6

Simple Organizational Structure• A simple organizational structure is one where

there is an owner and a few employees and where the arrangement of tasks, responsibilities, and communication is highly informal and accomplished through direct supervision

• This type of structure can be very demanding on the owner-manager

• Most businesses in this country and around the world are of this type

Page 7: Session  10 –  Part 2

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Functional Organizational Structure

• A functional organizational structure is one on which the tasks, people, and technologies necessary to do the work of the business are divided into separate “functional” groups (such as marketing, operations, and finance) with increasingly formal procedures for coordinating and integrating their activities to provide the business’s products and services

Page 8: Session  10 –  Part 2

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Functional Organization Structures

Page 9: Session  10 –  Part 2

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Divisional Structure

• A divisional organizational structure is one in which a set of relatively autonomous units, or divisions, are governed by a central corporate office but where each operating division has its own functional specialists who provide products or services different from those of other divisions

• This expedites decision making in response to varied competitive environments

• The division usually is given profit responsibility

Page 10: Session  10 –  Part 2

11-10

Divisional Organization Structure

Page 11: Session  10 –  Part 2

11-11

Strategic Business Unit• The strategic business unit (SBU) is an

adaptation of the divisional structure whereby various divisions or parts of divisions are grouped together based on some common strategic elements, usually linked to distinct product/market differences

• The advantages and disadvantages of the SBU form are very similar to those identified for divisional structures

Page 12: Session  10 –  Part 2

11-12

Holding Company Structure• A final form of the divisional organization is the

holding company structure, where the corporate entity is a broad collection of often unrelated businesses and divisions such that it (the corporate entity) acts as financial overseer “holding” the ownership interest in the various parts of the company but has little direct managerial involvement

Page 13: Session  10 –  Part 2

11-13

Matrix Organizational Structure• The matrix organizational structure

is one in which functional and staff personnel are assigned to both a basic functional area and to a project or product manager

• The matrix form is intended to make the best use of talented people within a firm by combining the advantages of functional specialization and product-project specialization

Page 14: Session  10 –  Part 2

11-14

Matrix Organizational Structure

Page 15: Session  10 –  Part 2

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Product-Team Structure • The product-team structure seeks to simplify

and amplify the focus of resources on a narrow but strategically important product, project, market, customer, or innovation

• The product-team structure assigns functional managers and specialists to a new product, project, or process team that is empowered to make major decisions about their product

Page 16: Session  10 –  Part 2

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The Product-Team Structure

Page 17: Session  10 –  Part 2

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What a Difference a Century Makes

Page 18: Session  10 –  Part 2

11-18Trends Affecting Organizationsin the 21st Century

• Globalization

• The Internet

• Speed

Page 19: Session  10 –  Part 2

11-19Efforts to Improve Traditional Structures

• Redefine the role of corporate headquarters from control to support and coordination

• Balance the demands for control/differentiation with the need for coordination/integration

• Restructure to emphasize and support strategically critical activities

• Reengineer strategic business processes • Downsize and self-manage

Page 20: Session  10 –  Part 2

11-20Creating Agile, Virtual Organizations

• Virtual organization: a temporary network of independent companies—suppliers, customers, subcontractors, even competitors—linked primarily by information technology to share skills, access to markets, and costs

• An agile organization is one that identifies a set of business capabilities central to high-profitability operations and then builds a virtual organization around those capabilities

Page 21: Session  10 –  Part 2

11-21Outsourcing—Creating a Modular Organization

• Outsourcing is simply obtaining work previously done by employees inside the companies from sources outside the company

• A modular organization provides products or services using different, self-contained specialists or companies brought together—outsourced—to contribute their primary or support activity to result in a successful outcome

• Business process outsourcing (BPO) is the most rapidly growing segment of the outsourcing services industry worldwide

Page 22: Session  10 –  Part 2

11-22

Types of Boundaries• Horizontal boundaries—between different

departments or functions in a firm. • Vertical boundaries—between operations and

management, and levels of management, between “corporate” and “division”

• Geographic boundaries—between different physical locations; between different countries or regions of the world and between cultures

• External interface boundaries—between a company and its customers, suppliers, partners, regulators, and competitors

Page 23: Session  10 –  Part 2

11-23

Becoming Boundaryless• Jack Welch coined the term “boundaryless” to

illustrate his vision for GE• Outsourcing, strategic alliances, product-team

structures, reengineering, restructuring—all are ways to move toward boundaryless organization

• Technology, particularly driven by the Internet, has and will be a major driver of the boundaryless organization

Page 24: Session  10 –  Part 2

11-24Ambidextrous Learning Organization

• The evolution of the virtual organizational structure as an integral mechanism managers use has brought with it recognition of the central role knowledge plays in implementation

• The shift from exploitation to exploration (Ragan) indicates the growing importance of organizational structures that enable a learning organization to allow global companies the chance to build competitive advantage

• An ambidextrous organization emphasizes coordination over control as well as flexibility