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Principles
of Management MGT503
VU
Lesson
10.30
JOB
DESIGN/SPECIALIZATION AND
DEPARTMENTALIZATION
Building
Blocks of Organizing
1.
Job
design
A.
Job
design is an essential part of
organizational structure.
1.
Job
design is the
specification of task activities, usually
repeated on a regular
basis,
associated with each particular
job.
a.
Task
activities need to be grouped in reasonably logical
ways for each
job.
b.
The
way the jobs are configured
influences employee
motivation.
2.
Work
specialization is the
degree to which the work necessary to
achieve
organizational
goals is broken down into
various jobs.
In
Work specialization the
tasks in an organization are divided
into separate jobs. Another
term for this is
division
of labor.
1.
Work
specialization can be traced
back to the writings of Adam
Smith.
2.
Work
specialization was seen as a
way to make the most
efficient use of workers' skills
because
workers
would be placed in jobs
according to their skills
and paid accordingly.
3.
Other
advantages of work specialization
included improvement in employees' skills
at performing a
task,
more efficient employee
training, and encouragement of
special inventions and
machinery to
perform
work tasks.
4.
Work
specialization was viewed as a source of
unending productivity improvements. And it
was--
up
to a certain point.
5.
The
human diseconomies from work
specialization included boredom, fatigue, stress,
lowered
productivity,
poor quality of work,
increased absenteeism, and higher
job turnover.
B.
There
are four approaches to job
design.
1.
Job
simplification is the
process of configuring or designing jobs
so that job
holders
have only a small number of
narrow, repetitive, activities to
perform.
a.
The
concept of job simplification
was championed by economist
Adam
Smith
and by Frederick Taylor
b.
Training
new workers becomes relatively
easy and workers become
almost
interchangeable.
c.
The
advantage is that major production
efficiencies may be
gained.
d.
The
disadvantages are that, if carried
too far, job satisfaction
may be
destroyed
by narrow, repetitive, boring jobs
and the firm may become
too
inflexible
to serve customers with varying
needs.
Types
of Departmentalization
Departmentalization
is the
clustering of individuals into units
and units into departments
and larger units
in
order to facilitate achieving organizational
goals.
1.
An
organization design is an overall pattern of
departmentalization.
2.
There
are four major patterns of
departmentalization.
a.
The
functional structure groups
jobs into units based upon
similarity of
expertise,
skills, and work activities,
e.g., marketing, accounting.
b.
The
divisional structure groups
jobs into units according to the
similarity
of
products or markets.
c.
The
hybrid structure combines
aspects of both the functional
and
divisional
forms, with some jobs grouped
into departments by
functions
and
other grouped by products or
markets.
d.
The
matrix structure superimposes a
horizontal set of divisional
reporting
relationships
onto a hierarchical functional
structure.
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Principles
of Management MGT503
VU
Assessing
Structural Alternatives
A.
Each
of the four most common types of
departmentalization has major advantages
and
disadvantages.
B.
Functional
structure is a type of
departmentalization in which positions are
grouped
according
to their main functional (or
specialized) area.
1.
Typical
functional form of organization has
several major advantages.
2.
The
functional form of organization has
several major advantages.
a.
In-depth
development of expertise is
encouraged.
b.
Employees
have clear career paths
within their
function.
c.
Resources
are used more
efficiently.
d.
Economies
of scale may be possible
because of specialized people
and
equipment.
e.
Intradepartmental
coordination is facilitated.
f.
Specialized
technical competencies may be developed
and may constitute
a
competitive advantage.
3.
The
functional form of origination
has several
disadvantages.
a.
Response
time on multifunctional problems may be
slow due to
coordination
problems.
b.
Major
issues and conflicts between
departments may have to be
resolved
by
top management, with
resultant delays.
c.
Bottlenecks
due to sequential
tasks.
d.
Over
specialization may lead to a
restricted view of the department's
and
the
organization's needs.
e.
Performance
may be difficult to measure
because several functions
are
responsible
for organizational results.
f.
Managers
may be trained too narrowly in a
single department.
4.
The
functional form of departmentalization is
more appropriate under certain
circumstances.
a.
The
organization is small or
medium-sized.
b.
There
is a limited number of related products or
services, or a relatively
homogeneous
set of customers or
clients.
c.
The
organization is large and diverse,
but the environment is
stable.
C
Divisional
structure is a type of
departmentalization in which positions are grouped
according to
similarity
of products, services, or
markets.
1.
Divisional
structures are also called
"self-contained structures" because
each
division
contains the major functional resources
it needs to pursue its own
goals
with
little or no reliance on other
divisions.
2.
The
three major forms of divisional structure
differ according to the rationale
for
forming
the divisions.
a.
Product
divisions are
divisions created to concentrate on a
single
product
or service or at least a relatively
homogeneous set of products or
services.
Geographic
divisions are
divisions designed to serve
different
b.
geographic
areas.
c.
Customer
divisions are
divisions set up to service particular
types of
clients
or customers.
3.
Divisional
structure has several major
advantages.
a.
Divisions
can react quickly to changes
in the environment.
83
Principles
of Management MGT503
VU
b.
Coordination
across functions is
simplified.
c.
Each
division can focus upon
serving its
customers.
d.
The
division's goals can be
emphasized.
e.
Performance
is more easily
measured.
f.
Managers
can be trained in general management
skills.
4.
Divisional
structure has several
disadvantages.
a.
Duplication
of resources in each division
often occurs.
b.
In-depth
expertise may be
sacrificed.
c.
Divisions
may compete for limited
resources.
d.
Expertise
across divisions may not be
shared.
e.
Innovations
may be restricted to single
divisions.
f.
Divisional
goals may take priority
over overall organizational
goals.
5.
The
divisional structure is likely to be
used in large organizations
where substantial
differences
exist among products or
services, geographic areas, or
customers
served.
D.
Hybrid
structure is a
form of departmentalization that adopts
parts of both functional
and
divisional
structures at the same level of
management.
1.
Hybrid
structures are adopted by large
organizations to gain the advantages
of
functional
and divisional
structures.
a.
Functional
departments are created to
take advantage of
resource
utilization
efficiencies, economies of scale, or
in-depth expertise.
b.
Divisional
departments are usually
created to benefit from a
stronger
focus
on products, services, or
markets.
2.
The
hybrid structure has several
advantages.
a.
Corporate
and divisional goals can be
aligned.
b.
Specialized
expertise and economies of
scale can be achieved in
major
functional
areas.
c.
Adaptability
and flexibility may be
achieved in handling diverse
product or
service
lines, geographic areas, or
customers.
3.
The
hybrid structure has several
disadvantages.
a.
Conflict
may arise between
departments and divisions.
b.
Hybrid
organizations tend to develop excessively
large staffs in the
corporate-level
functional departments.
c.
There
may be a slow response to exceptional
situations requiring
coordination
between a division and a corporate
functional department.
4.
The
hybrid structure is best
used under particular conditions.
a.
The
organization faces environmental uncertainty
best met by a
divisional
structure.
b.
The
organization requires functional
expertise and/or efficiency.
c.
The
organization has sufficient resources to
justify the structure.
E.
A
matrix
structure is a type of
departmentalization that superimposes a
horizontal set of
divisional
reporting
relationships onto a hierarchical
functional structure.
1.
An
organization with a matrix structure
has a functional and a
divisional structure
at
the same time.
2.
Employees
who work in a matrix organization
report to two "bosses,"
thus, the
unity-of-command
principle is violated.
3.
Organizations
that adopt a matrix
structure usually go through
several identifiable
structural
stages.
84
Principles
of Management MGT503
VU
a.
Stage
1 is a traditional structure, usually a
functional structure,
which
follows
the unity-of-command principle.
b.
Stage
2 is a temporary overlay in which managerial
integrator positions are
created
to handle issues of finite
duration that involves
coordinating
across
functional departments.
c.
Stage
3 is a permanent overlay in which the
managerial integrator
positions
become permanent.
d.
Stage
4 is a mature matrix, in which
matrix bosses have equal
power.
4.
As
an organization passes through the matrix
stages, horizontal
integration
increases
at the cost of greater administrative
complexity. The matrix form
of
organization
has several
advantages.
5.
The
matrix form of organization has
several advantages.
a.
Decision
making can be decentralized.
b.
Horizontal
coordination is strengthened.
c.
Environmental
monitoring is improved.
d.
Responses
to environmental changes are
quickly made.
e.
Functional
specialists can be added to or
resigned to projects as
needed.
f.
Support
systems can be allocated to
projects as needed.
6.
Matrix
designs have several
disadvantages.
a.
Administrative
costs are increased.
b.
Lines
of authority and responsibility may
not be clear to
individual
employees.
c.
Possibilities
of conflict are
increased.
d.
Individuals
can become preoccupied with
internal relations at the expense
of
clients and project
goals.
e.
All
decisions may become group
decisions, leading to gross
inefficiency.
f.
Reactions
to change may be slowed if interpersonal
skills are lacking or
top
management fights for
control.
7.
Matrix
designs are usually appropriate when the
following three conditions
are
met:
a.
The
considerable pressure from the
environment that necessitates
a
simultaneous
and strong focus on both
functional and
divisional
dimensions.
b.
The
demands placed on the organization are
changing and unpredictable,
making
it important to have a large
capacity for processing
information
and
coordinating activities quickly.
c.
There
is pressure for shared
resources.
8.
Research
indicates some of the factors
that may be necessary to the
success of a
matrix
systems
a.
The
organizational culture may need to be
changed to support
collaboration.
b.
Managers
may need special training,
especially in interpersonal
relations.
F.
Of
particular interest are two
new types of organizational structure
that have recently emerged:
the
process
structure and
the networked
structure.
1.
A
process structure is a type of departmentalization
which groups positions into process
team
which
are given beginning-to-end responsibility
for that process or that
specified work flow. The
process
structure
is sometimes called the horizontal
organization.
2.
The
networked structure is a form of
organizing in which many functions
are
contracted
out to other independent firms and
coordinated through the use of
information
technology networks. Sometimes the networked
structure is called the
virtual
corporation because it performs as
virtually one
corporation.
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