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Change
Management MGMT625
VU
LESSON
# 19
ORGANISATION
ECOLOGY
Leading
proponents organization ecology school of
thought are Glenn and
Carroll, and Hannan and
Freeman.
In this theory population of
organization is taken as a unit of
analysis rather than single
organization.
The dominant theme of
population ecology is that effects of
organization's
environment
is critical in organization's survival
and (performance) believe that
forces internal to
the
organization are less
important. Principally, population
ecologist think that
organization do not
change
and adapt; and consider that each time a
new organization is born
after a significant level
of
change.
Pfeffer and Salancik published
their work as "The external
control of organizations".
This
has
led to the analogy of natural selection
processes as determining some
aspects of organization.
Miller
and Mintzberg referred to "the
survival of organizational forms as being
encouraged by
Darwinian
forces" (e.g. Weberian of
organization-dominance-of functional structure).
Three issues
are
considered central in population ecology
model of change
management:
1.
Role of structural inertia in
constraining adaptation
2.
The classification of organizational
species
3.
The salience of the environment in
determining organizational
survival
1.
Structural Inertia
Population
ecology models of organization-environment
relationship are considered alternative
to
the
dominant adaptation perspective. Though
there are a variety of ecological
perspectives yet they
all
focus on selection phenomenon. The attribute
patterns in nature to the action
processes. Astley
and
Van de Ven highlighted this
adaptation versus selection as central
debate in organization
theory
(OT).
Selection of new or changed
organization forms occurs as a result of
environmental
constraints
and inertia is referred as an
explanation for the lack of
adaptive change.
Therefore
structural
inertia limits the ability of
organization to change. Hanna and
Freeman identified a
number
of processes that generate
inertial pressures both from
internal structural arrangements
and
from
environmental constraints.
A.
Internal Structural
Arrangements
One
of the biggest inhibiting factors for
organizational change is sunk cost.
Sunk cost of the firm
which
means broadly any amount of
time, money and efforts
(plant & equipment or cost of
R&D
and
trained personnel) develops a restraining
force within an entity to
freely look for
alternative
options.
Structural arrangements refer to the
rules and resources which an organization
deploys
manifesting
its commitment levels. A
communication structure in organization
like barriers
misperception
amongst various players at
vertical and horizontal
levels also facilitates
inertial
process.
Internal politics for vested
interests amongst organizational
members act as
restraining
force.
The existing institutional
norms rules and regulations
remain status quo oriented
to inhibit
organizational
change
B.
External Factors
Not
only internal factor inhibit
change but at times external factors
like government and
industry
creates
barriers in smooth and consistent
change management process.
For instance there may be
a
very
high cost associated with a
firm's decision to enter or exit
any particular industry or
market.
Bounded
rationality, a concept given by
Herbert Simon means managers
are rationalizing not
rational,
meaning thereby that decisions on the
part of managers are always
bounded by constraints
like
time, space, cost and
information. Therefore the choice of
decision makers to go for
alternative
options
is extremely limited. Another
relevant concept is of social legitimacy
which imposes
restriction
in the decision outcome for change or
status quo. Managers will go
for such decisions
which
are considered legitimate and acceptable
by society or by the members of the
organization
socially.
Most of the time society is
slow to recognize and accept change, and
more often it is
44
Change
Management MGMT625
VU
conservative
to accept change. So what
happens practically is that
organization try to
initiate
change
but then do not intend to go
for complete transformation. Miller and
Freisen identified this
kind
of response to environmental changes as
sluggish adaptation. Miller
also used the term
adaptive
rigidities caused by the avoidance of
uncertainties, and the fragmentation of the
political
coalition
and its goals cushion organizations from
the need for adaptation. All
these issues of
structural
inertia (and in a way with
organization adaptation phenomenon as
well) explain the
relative
superiority of natural selection process
over adaptation in the survival of
organization.
Therefore,
population ecologists believe that
environmental selection replaces
adaptation as the
vehicle
of change. Hannan and Freeman
formulated theory well supported by
empirical evidence
that
"stronger the inertial pressures
lower the adaptive flexibility and the
more likely that the
logic
of
environmental selection is appropriate". Hence the
proposition is the survival of
organizations is
determined
by environmental variations
By
implications, we see population
ecologists maintain lesser role
for management, wise
governance,
organization structure and bench marked
managerial practices. There is
paradox in this
thinking.
The paradox with population
ecology is that methodologically, the
study deals with
small
organizations
with simple organization structure
which were free from issues
of sunk cost &
politics
(non-chain small restaurant in 18
cities of California State). External
constraints were not
strong
either. The paradox is that
inertia is, somewhat, largely a
phenomenon associated with the
complex
department structures of large
organization.
To
Astley and van de Ven,
"Natural selection model fits
small, powerless organizations
operating
in
environment with dispersed
resources better than large
well connected organizations
operating in
environment
with concentrated resources". For
Aldrich, the structural inertia
depends on the size of
organizations.
The larger an organization, the greater
the structural inertia and the more
control the
organization
can exercise over the
environment (in-real life
large organizations seem
quite powerful
to
shape or influence environment).
Another scholar empirically says
"the few organizations
that
survive
infancy owe their above
average longevity to wise
governance"
Therefore
ecologist claim that inertia
restricts adaptation and consequently
enables selection forces
to
dominate over adaptive strategy of the
organization somewhat holds
less ground. Going by
this
concern
that small organizations
lack inertia and should have
better adaptability to
environmental
changes.
The question then is whether
this so in real life? How
these dynamics are going to be
in
developing
countries.
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