Management & Organization Behavior class Three different Discussions
Organizational Agility
Chapter Nine
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Learning Objectives
LO 1 Discuss why it is critical for organizations to be responsive.
LO 2 Describe the qualities of an organic organization structure
LO 3 Identify strategies and dynamic organizational concepts that can improve and organization’s responsiveness
LO 4 Explain how a firm can be both big and small
LO 5 Summarize how firms organize to meet customer requirements
LO 6 Identify ways that firms organize around different types of technology
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The Responsive Organization
Mechanistic organization
A form of organization that seeks to maximize internal efficiency.
Organic structure
An organizational form that emphasizes flexibility
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Organic Structure
Jobholders have broader responsibilities that change as the need arises.
Communication occurs through advice and information rather than through orders and instructions.
Decision making and influence are more decentralized and informal.
Expertise is highly valued.
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Organic Structure (cont.)
Jobholders rely more heavily on judgment than on rules.
Obedience to authority is less important than commitment to the organization’s goals.
Employees depend more on one another and relate more informally and personally.
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Two Ways to Describe an Organization
Figure 9.1(a)
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Two Ways to Describe an Organization
Figure 9.1(b)
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Organizing around Core Competencies
Identify existing core competencies.
Acquire or build core competencies that will be important for the future.
Keep investing in competencies so that the firm remains world class and better than competitors.
Extend competencies to find new applications and opportunities for the markets of tomorrow
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Question
What is a formal relationship created among independent organizations with the purpose of joint pursuit of mutual goals?
Knowledge organization
Learning organization
Strategic alliance
Wholly-owned subsidiary
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The correct answer is c – strategic alliance. See next slide
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Strategic Alliances
Strategic alliance
A formal relationship created among independent organizations with the purpose of joint pursuit of mutual goals.
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How I’s Can Become We’s
Table 9.1
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The Learning Organization
Learning organization
An organization skilled at creating, acquiring, and transferring knowledge, and at modifying its behavior to reflect new knowledge and insights.
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How do Firms Become Learning Organizations?
Engage in disciplined thinking and attention to details, making decisions based on data and evidence rather than guesswork and assumptions
Search for new knowledge and ways to apply it
Review successes and failures looking for lessons and deeper understanding
Benchmark - identify and implement best practices
Share ideas throughout the organization
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The High-Involvement Organization
High-involvement organization
A type of organization in which top management ensures that there is consensus about the direction in which the business is heading
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Organizational Size and Agility
Large organizations are typically less organic and more bureaucratic
Jobs tend to become more specialized in large organizations
With size comes greater complexity and a need for increased control
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The Case for Big
Larger size helps create scale economies
Larger size helps develop economies of scope
Economies in which materials and processes employed in one product can be used to make other related products
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The Case for Small
Large organizations can have difficulty managing relationships with customers and among its own units
Large organizations are more difficult to coordinate and control
Smaller organizations can:
Move fast
Inspire greater involvement from their people
Being small can avoid diseconomies of scale
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Being Big and Small
Downsizing
The planned elimination of positions or jobs
Rightsizing
A successful effort to achieve an appropriate size at which the company performs most effectively
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Downsizing
Survivor’s syndrome
Loss of productivity and morale in employees who remain after a downsizing.
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Customers and the Responsive Organization
The point of structuring a responsive, agile organization lies in enabling it to meet and exceed the expectations of its customers
Managers must stay focused in three key ingredients
The company itself
Competition
The customer
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The Strategy Triangle
Figure 9.2
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Customer Relationship Management
Customer relationship management (CRM)
A multifaceted process focusing on creating two-way exchanges with customers to foster intimate knowledge of their needs, wants, and buying patterns.
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Customer Relationship Management
Value chain
The sequence of activities that flow from raw materials to the delivery of a good or service, with additional value created at each step.
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Generic Value Chain
Figure 9.3
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Total Quality Management
Total quality management (TQM)
An integrative approach to management that supports the attainment of customer satisfaction through a wide variety of tools and techniques that result in high-quality goods and services.
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ISO 9001
ISO 9001
A series of quality standards developed by a committee working under the International Organization for Standardization to improve total quality in all businesses for the benefit of producers and consumers.
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Reengineering
Reengineering
Revolutionizing key organizational systems and processes to answer the question: “If you were the customer, how would you like us to operate?”
Processes are redesigned from scratch as if the organization was just starting out
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Types of Technology Configurations
Small batch
Technologies that produce goods and services in low volume.
Large batch
Technologies that produce goods and services in high volume.
Continuous process
A process that is highly automated and has a continuous production flow.
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Organizing for Flexible Manufacturing
Mass customization
The production of varied, individually customized products at the low cost of standardized, mass-produced products.
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Key Features in Mass Customization
Table 9.2
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Computer-Integrated Manufacturing
Computer-integrated manufacturing (CIM)
The use of computer-aided design and computer-aided manufacturing to sequence and optimize a number of production processes.
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Flexible Factories
Flexible factories
Manufacturing plants that have short production runs, are organized around products, and use decentralized scheduling.
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Lean Manufacturing
Lean manufacturing
An operation that strives to achieve the highest possible productivity and total quality, cost effectively, by eliminating unnecessary steps in the production process and continually striving for improvement.
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Organizing for Speed: Time-Based Competition
Time-based competition (TBC)
Strategies aimed at reducing the total time needed to deliver a good or service.
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Question
___________ is the movement of the right goods in the right amount to the right place at the right time.
Logistics
Supply chain management
Value chain analysis
Customer Service
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The correct answer is a - logistics. See next slide.
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Time-Based Competition
Logistics
The movement of the right goods in the right amount to the right place at the right time
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Time-Based Competition
Just-in-time (JIT)
A system that calls for subassemblies and components to be manufactured in very small lots and delivered to the next stage of the production process just as they are needed.
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Just-in-time (JIT)
Elimination of waste
Perfect quality.
Reduced cycle times.
Employee involvement
Value-added manufacturing
Discovery of problems and prevention of recurrence
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Time-Based Competition
Concurrent engineering
A design approach in which all relevant functions cooperate jointly and continually in a maximum effort aimed at producing high-quality products that meet customers’ needs.
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Video: Zappos Delivers Happiness
How would you describe Zappos as an organization?
Mechanistic? Organic? High-or-low involvement? Why?
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