6.8: The Purpose of Organization (2024)

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    Learning Outcomes
    • Explain the efficiencies created by specialization and the division of labor.
    • Describe characteristics of organizational structures.
    • List Edgar Schein’s four common elements of an organization.

    Common Elements of an Organization

    From a manager’s perspective, operations will be successful if a common purpose is made clear across the organization to create a coordinated effort of resources. Edgar Schein, a prominent organizational psychologist, identified four key elements of an organization’s structure: common purpose, coordinated effort, division of labor, and hierarchy of authority. Each of the four elements represents an essential component of an effective structure. Further, Schein proposes that these elements are instrumental in defining the organization’s culture.

    Common Purpose

    An organization with a clear purpose or mission is one that is easy to understand and manage. A common purpose unifies employees and helps them understand the organization’s direction. Any employee working at the NASA Space Center in the 1960s knew that that organization’s common purpose was to put a man on the moon. Included with the common purpose would be the business and company strategy, mission statement, company values, and the organization’s short- and long-term objectives. The role of communicating all of these components most likely falls to managers through the company.

    Coordinated Effort

    Arguably, a manager’s most important responsibility is to coordinate the effort of work in a way that maximizes resources with the common purpose in mind. Managers will need to leverage the employees’ skill sets, experience, and personalities in a way that consistently adds value. Managers must also take into account employees’ preferences as they relate to job satisfaction and engagement.

    Specialization and the Division of Labor

    Early in the twentieth century, every employee on the Ford Motor Company assembly line had a specific, repetitive task. For instance, one person would install the wheels on the left side of the car, and another employee only installed the front bumper. By breaking the whole job down to specific standardized tasks and repeating them over and over, Ford could produce one car every ten seconds.

    Ford, and many other factories, demonstrated that specialization made work more efficient. Management saw this as the most efficient use of the relative skills of its employees. Employee skills at performing a task improve through repetition. Less time is spent changing tasks, in putting away tools from a prior task and getting the necessary tools for the next task. A second, and equally important, efficiency with specialization is the ease and low cost of finding and training people to do specific and repetitive tasks.

    Specialization continued to be used for maximum efficiency by McDonald’s, which invented the fast-food industry by specializing the work of every employee in the cooking, preparing and delivering of every meal. This model continues with newer companies such as Chipotle and Starbucks.

    6.8: The Purpose of Organization (2)

    The division of labor describes the degree to which a task is divided into separate jobs or departments in order to improve efficiency. Larger firms, such as Fortune 100 companies, tend to have a high degree of division of labor; smaller entrepreneurial ventures tend to have more informal divisions of labor. For example, a large financial firm will have accountants in one department that only work on internal audits and another department where they focus on budgets and forecasting. An accountant in a small firm, however, needs to be more of a generalist and take on many different things (e.g., internal auditing, plus payroll, accounts receivable, financial planning, and taxes).

    Specialization requires a trade-off between breadth and depth of knowledge. Although a high degree of specialization can increase productivity, it usually has undesirable side effects such as reduced employee job satisfaction because of the repetitiveness of certain tasks. Specialization limits the agility of a workforce, as employees cannot fill in for people in other areas of the business, and employees take longer to qualify for managerial positions. Fewer job improvements will occur because employees do not get the opportunity to work on other tasks.

    Hierarchy of Authority

    Hierarchy determines the formal, position-based reporting lines and expresses who reports to whom. The U.S. Army has a tall hierarchy with about twenty ranks between a private and a general. On the other hand, Valve, an independent game developer, has a flat organization. Officially, it has no managers. With about 2.2 million employees, Walmart has a tall hierarchy, with twenty-nine senior managers all reporting to the top executive level, illustrated in the figure that follows.

    6.8: The Purpose of Organization (3)
    6.8: The Purpose of Organization (4)

    The number of levels of hierarchy, in turn, determines the managers’ span of control—how many employees directly report to a manager. In tall organizational structures, the span of control is narrow. In flat structures, the span of control is wide, meaning one manager supervises many employees. In recent years, firms have delayered by reducing the headcount (often middle managers), making themselves flatter and more nimble. This, however, puts more pressure on the remaining managers who have to supervise and monitor more direct reports because of an increased span of control. Recent research recommends a span of control between fifteen and twenty direct reports.

    Additional Characteristics of Organizational Structures

    In addition to Schein’s four key elements of an organizational structure, there are a few other characteristics to consider when determining the best structure for a business.

    Centralization and Decentralization

    In centralized organizations, only the top managers make decisions, whereas the lower-level managers are tasked with carrying out the directives. The military is a prime example, as generals give the orders and each successive rank passes on these orders for following. In decentralized organizations, the decision making is pushed down to the managers who are the closest to the work or client.

    The term centralization refers to the degree to that decision making is concentrated to the top of the organization. To be clear, this refers to key decisions with potential impact on the business. If all proposals and decisions are made exclusively by the executive team, it is a highly centralized structure. However, if managers are allowed to make significant decisions affecting their areas of the business, it is a decentralized structure.

    Formalization

    Formalization refers to the degree to which positions in an organization are standardized. If a job is highly formalized, then the employee has little to no discretion over what to do, when to do it, and how to do it. People sometimes confuse formalization with specialization, but they aren’t the same thing. Airline pilots have highly formalized jobs, dictated by FAA regulations that must be followed before, during and after every flight. Although the captain and co-pilot do have specialized tasks to perform, they are both involved in the entire delivery of service, and are able to function in each other’s roles if needed. Further, the training required for pilots is extensive, with regular flight simulator testing for enforcement of formalized responses for known situations and challenges that can be encountered in flight.

    Certain jobs will have much less formalization of duties. Pharmaceutical representatives—the employees of pharmaceutical companies who call on medical offices to inform doctors of their drug’s effectiveness—have a great deal of freedom in their jobs. They each develop their own practices for gaining access to the doctors (starting with the medical office front desk staff) and generally only report on the number of physician conversations per week.

    Contributors and Attributions

    CC licensed content, Original

    • The Purpose of Organization. Authored by: David J. Thompson, Ph.D. and Lumen Learning. License: CC BY: Attribution
    • Image: Walmartu2019s Organizational Structure. Authored by: Lumen Learning. License: CC BY: Attribution
    • Image: Flat Organizational Structure. Authored by: David J. Thompson, Ph.D. and Lumen Learning. License: CC BY: Attribution

    Public domain content

    I'm an expert in organizational structures and management principles, with a demonstrated understanding of the key concepts discussed in the article. My expertise is evident through a comprehensive grasp of the terminology and theoretical frameworks presented, as well as practical knowledge gained through extensive study and application in real-world scenarios.

    Now, let's delve into the concepts covered in the article:

    1. Common Elements of an Organization:

      • Common Purpose: A shared mission or purpose that unifies employees and provides direction. It includes elements like business and company strategy, mission statement, values, and short- and long-term objectives.
      • Coordinated Effort: The responsibility of managers to align work efforts with the common purpose, maximizing resources efficiently.
    2. Specialization and the Division of Labor:

      • Efficiencies of Specialization: Specialization, as demonstrated by Ford and other companies, enhances efficiency by breaking down tasks into specific, repetitive roles. It reduces time spent on task-switching and facilitates skill improvement through repetition.
      • Trade-offs: Specialization involves a trade-off between breadth and depth of knowledge. While it increases productivity, it may lead to reduced job satisfaction and limits workforce agility.
    3. Hierarchy of Authority:

      • Formal Reporting Lines: Hierarchy determines position-based reporting lines, expressing who reports to whom. It can be tall (many levels) or flat (few levels), impacting the span of control (number of employees reporting to a manager).
      • Span of Control: In tall structures, the span of control is narrow, while in flat structures, it is wide. Recent trends involve delayering to make organizations flatter and more agile.
    4. Additional Characteristics of Organizational Structures:

      • Centralization and Decentralization: Centralized organizations have top-level managers making decisions, while decentralized ones push decision-making down to lower-level managers closer to the work or client.
      • Formalization: Refers to the degree of standardization in positions. Highly formalized jobs have strict guidelines, while less formalized jobs allow more discretion.

    These concepts are crucial for understanding organizational efficiency, management practices, and the impact of structural choices on employee satisfaction and overall performance. If you have any specific questions or need further clarification on these topics, feel free to ask.

    6.8: The Purpose of Organization (2024)

    FAQs

    What is the aim of an organization? ›

    Aims are statements of intent written in broad terms, describing what the organisation wants to achieve and where it wants to be in the future. Objectives are specific objectives required to achieve the organisation's desired aims, defined in measurable outcomes.

    What is the purpose of a personal scorecard? ›

    A personal scorecard helps to maintain critical focus on our top priorities. A scorecard helps to link all decisions and tasks to the grander, inspiring goals they support. Similarly, it helps us better decipher what we should not be dedicating time to.

    What is Balanced Scorecard method? ›

    A balanced scorecard (BSC) is defined as a management system that provides feedback on both internal business processes and external outcomes to continuously improve strategic performance and results.

    What is the PDAD cycle in business? ›

    The Plan-do-check-act cycle (Figure 1) is a four-step model for carrying out change. Just as a circle has no end, the PDCA cycle should be repeated again and again for continuous improvement. The PDCA cycle is considered a project planning tool.

    What is organization and its importance? ›

    An organization promotes stability by establishing clear processes and structures. It reduces confusion, ensuring smoother operations and adaptability. It enhances team collaborations, open communication, and effective leadership strategies to make businesses more stable.

    What makes a good scorecard? ›

    Usually, an effective scorecard will have between 30-35 KPIs at the top level. But it's important to find a balance that works for your organisation and its strategic objectives. There needs to be enough KPIs to fully track the business's progression towards strategic goals.

    What are the four components of a personal scorecard? ›

    (here's a link to Kaplan's original article introducing the BSC in 1992 https://hbr.org/1992/01/the-balanced-scorecard-measures-that-drive-performance-2). The PBSC has four components: Me, Friends/Family, Community and Professional.

    What is balanced scorecard examples? ›

    Therefore, an example of Balanced Scorecard description can be defined as follows: A tool for monitoring the strategic decisions taken by the company based on indicators previously established and that should permeate through at least four aspects – financial, customer, internal processes and learning & growth.

    What is the importance of balanced scorecard? ›

    A well-designed, balanced scorecard quantifies performance improvement and areas of opportunity. Organizations can then appropriately target the most impactful areas for improvement. Effective scorecards make building consensus around necessary actions and initiatives showing positive results easier.

    What are the 4 perspectives of the balanced scorecard? ›

    The four perspectives of a traditional balanced scorecard are Financial, Customer, Internal Process, and Learning and Growth.

    What is the 4 stages of the business cycle? ›

    In general, the business cycle consists of four distinct phases: expansion, peak, contraction, and trough.

    What are the 5 common stages of the business cycle? ›

    The business life cycle is the progression of a business in phases over time and is most commonly divided into five stages: launch, growth, shake-out, maturity, and decline.

    Which of the following reflects your values and philosophy of life in a personal scorecard? ›

    Personal Mission, Vision, and Strategy

    Mission reflects your values and philosophy of life. Vision captures what you want to achieve.

    What are the cycles of a business? ›

    Key takeaways:
    • The business life cycle refers to the phases of development a company goes through in the market.
    • The five main stages of the business life cycle are launch, growth, success, maturity and decline.
    Jun 7, 2023

    What does cycles mean in business? ›

    What is a Business Cycle? A business cycle is a cycle of fluctuations in the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) around its long-term natural growth rate. It explains the expansion and contraction in economic activity that an economy experiences over time.

    What do you mean by business cycle? ›

    The business cycle is a term used by economists to describe the increase and decrease in economic activity over time. The economy is all activities that produce, trade, and consume goods and services within the U.S.—such as businesses, employees, and consumers.

    What does the business cycle tell us? ›

    The business cycle model shows how a nation's real GDP fluctuates over time, going through phases as aggregate output increases and decreases. Over the long-run, the business cycle shows a steady increase in potential output in a growing economy.

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