Chapter I
Chapter I
Organizational theory
Credit Hours: 3
effectively.
Current Challenges
The world is changing more rapidly than ever
before, and managers are responsible for
positioning their organizations to adapt to new
needs.
Some specific challenges today’s managers and
organizations face are
Globalization,
Intense competition,
Rigorous ethical scrutiny,
The need for rapid response,
The digital workplace, and
Increasing diversity
Historical Perspectives
Organizational design and management practices
have varied over time in response to changes in the
larger society
Classical Organization Theory
Neoclassical Theory
Scientific Weber's
Management Bureaucratic Administra
Theory Theory tive theory
Scientific Management Theory
Introduced by Frederick W. Taylor to encourage
production efficiency and productivity.
He postulates that decisions about organizations and
job design should be based on precise, scientific study
of individual situations.
To use this approach, managers develop precise,
standard procedures for doing each job; select workers
with appropriate abilities; train workers in the
standard procedures; carefully plan work; and provide
wage incentives to increase output.
Concerned with knowing exactly what you want
men to do and then see in employers,
Commanding
Controlling Coordinating
Fayol’s 14 Principles of Management
1. Division of Work
2. Authority and Responsibility
3. Discipline
4. Unity of Command
5. Unity of Direction
6. Subordination of Individual Interest to General
Interest
7. Remuneration/ Compensation
8. Centralization
9. Scalar Chain
10.Order
11. Equity
13. Initiative
Participative management
The individual
Not a mechanical tool but a distinct social being,
with aspirations beyond mere fulfilment of a few
economic and security works.
The neoclassical
Taylor's 'scientific approach focuses on
management‘ focuses workers.
on work
Modern Organization Theory
Tend to be based on the concept that the
organization is a system which has to adapt to
changes in its environment.
Open Closed
System System
3. Quantitative approach
MIS
Management
Science
Operations
Management
2. are goal-directed
3. are designed as deliberately structured and
coordinated activity systems
• and
empower employees
with greater opportunities to learn and
contribute as they work together toward
common goals
Importance of Organizations
Organizations exist to do the following:
Bring together resources to achieve desired goals and
outcomes
Produce goods and services efficiently
Facilitate innovation
Use modern manufacturing and information technologies
Adapt to and influence a changing environment
Create value for owners, customers, and employees
Accommodate ongoing challenges of diversity, ethics, and the
motivation and coordination of employees
Dimensions of organization design
Organizations shape our lives, and well-informed
managers can shape organizations.
Goals and
Strategy
Size
Environment
Structure Technology
1. Formalization
Culture 2. Specialization
3. Hierarchy of
authority
4. Centralization
5. Professionalism
6. Personnel ratios
Interacting Contextual and Structural Dimensions of Organization Design
Organizational dimensions fall into two types:
1. Structural 2. Contextual
2. Organizational technology:
Refers to the tools, techniques, and actions
used to transform inputs into outputs
3. Environment:
the organization.
Technical
Administrative
Support
Staff
Middle Support Staff
Management
Technical Core
Technical Core:
The technical core includes people who do the
basic work of the organization.
This part actually produces the product and
service outputs of the organization.
This is where the primary transformation from
inputs to outputs takes place.
Technical Support
The technical support function helps the
organization adapt to the environment.
Technical support employees scan the
environment for problems, opportunities, and
technological developments.
Technical support is responsible for creating
innovations in the technical core, helping the
organization change and adapt.
Administrative Support
The administrative support function is responsible for the
smooth operation and upkeep of the organization,
including its physical and human elements.
Management
Management is a distinct function, responsible for
directing and coordinating other parts of the
organization.
Top management provides direction, planning, strategy,
goals, and policies for the entire organization or major
divisions.
Middle management is responsible for implementation
and coordination at the departmental level.
Discussion Questions
1. What is the definition of organization? Briefly explain each
part of the definition.
2. Explain how Mintzberg’s five basic parts of the organization fit
together to perform needed functions.
3. What is the difference between formalization and
specialization? Do you think an organization high on one
dimension would also be high on the other? Discuss.
4. What does contingency mean? What are the implications of
contingency theory for managers?
5. Discuss about the criticism of organizational theories.
6. Discuss through detail about dimension of organization design.