Designing Your Organization
eBook - ePub

Designing Your Organization

Using the STAR Model to Solve 5 Critical Design Challenges

Amy Kates, Jay R. Galbraith

Share book
  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Designing Your Organization

Using the STAR Model to Solve 5 Critical Design Challenges

Amy Kates, Jay R. Galbraith

Book details
Book preview
Table of contents
Citations

About This Book

Designing Your Organization is a hands-on guide that provides managers with a set of practical tools to use when making organization design decisions. Based on Jay Galbraith's widely used Star Model, the book covers the fundamentals of organization design and offers frameworks and tools to help leaders execute their strategy. The authors address the five specific design challenges that confront most of today's organizations:

· Designing around the customer

· Organizing across borders

· Making a matrix work

· Solving the centralization—and decentralization dilemma

· Organizing for innovation

Frequently asked questions

How do I cancel my subscription?
Simply head over to the account section in settings and click on “Cancel Subscription” - it’s as simple as that. After you cancel, your membership will stay active for the remainder of the time you’ve paid for. Learn more here.
Can/how do I download books?
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
What is the difference between the pricing plans?
Both plans give you full access to the library and all of Perlego’s features. The only differences are the price and subscription period: With the annual plan you’ll save around 30% compared to 12 months on the monthly plan.
What is Perlego?
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, we’ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Do you support text-to-speech?
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Is Designing Your Organization an online PDF/ePUB?
Yes, you can access Designing Your Organization by Amy Kates, Jay R. Galbraith in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Commerce & Leadership. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Jossey-Bass
Year
2010
ISBN
9781118047514
Subtopic
Leadership
Edition
1
Chapter 1
Fundamentals of Organization Design
THIS BOOK is about five of the most common organization design challenges that business leaders face today. This first chapter reviews some fundamental organization design concepts in order to provide readers a firm foundation for understanding the complex organizational forms we discuss. It also defines key terms, highlighted in italics, that we use throughout the rest of the book. (For an in-depth discussion of organization design concepts and processes, refer to Galbraith, 2002, or Galbraith, Downey, and Kates, 2002.)
The first two questions to address are: What is an organization? and What is organization design? For our purposes, the term organization is used broadly to refer to an entire firm, as well as to just one part of it. It can be made up of many thousands of people or only a handful. For a corporate leader, the organization encompasses the entire company, and from the vantage point of a unit manager, the organization may be simply that unit. Most of what we discuss in this book is applicable to the whole organization, as well as to the smaller organizations nested within the larger firm. Although we frequently refer to companies and firms, the concepts apply equally to nonprofit and government entities.
Organization design is the deliberate process of configuring structures, processes, reward systems, and people practices to create an effective organization capable of achieving the business strategy. The organization is not an end in itself; it is simply a vehicle for accomplishing the strategic tasks of the business. It is an invisible construct used to harness and direct the energy of the people who do the work. We believe that the vast majority of people go to their jobs each day wanting to contribute to the mission of the organization they work for. Too often, however, the organization is a barrier to, not an enabler of, individual efforts. We have observed that when left to their own devices, smart people figure out how to work around the barriers they encounter, but they waste time and energy that they could direct instead to improving products and services, creating innovations, or serving customers. One of the main purposes of organizational design is to align individual motivations with the interests of the organization and make it easy for individual employees to make the right decisions every day. Furthermore, a well-designed organization makes the collective work of accomplishing complex tasks easier.
This chapter begins with an overview of the Star Model,™ which provides a decision-making framework for organization design. We highlight the key concepts associated with each point on the star, which we expand on in the other chapters. The chapter concludes with a summary of themes that serve as our design principles.

The Star Model™: A Framework for Decision Making

Organization design is a decision-making process with numerous steps and many choices to make. A decision made early in the process will constrain choices made later, foreclose avenues of exploration, and eliminate alternatives, resulting in far-reaching impacts on the ultimate shape of the organization. Making sound decisions at these early, critical junctures requires a theoretical framework that gives credence to one choice over another. Yet many leaders and their teams still make organization design decisions based largely on their own individual experience and observation. A common framework for decision-making has a number of benefits. It:
• Provides a common language for debating options and articulating why one choice is better than another in objective, impersonal terms
• Forces design decisions to be based on longer-term business strategy rather than the more immediate demands of people and politics
• Provides a clear rationale for the choices considered and an explanation of the implications of those choices as the basis for communication and successful change management
• Allows decision makers to be able to evaluate outcomes, understand root causes, and make the right adjustments during implementation
The Star Model (Figure 1.1), which serves as our framework, has been used and refined over the past thirty years. Its basic premise is simple but powerful: different strategies require different organizations to execute them. A strategy implies a set of capabilities at which an organization must excel in order to achieve the strategic goals. The leader has the responsibility to design and influence the structure, processes, rewards, and people practices of the organization in order to build these needed capabilities.
FIGURE 1.1 Star Model.
004
Although culture is an essential part of an organization, it is not an explicit part of the model because the leader cannot design the culture directly. An organization’s culture consists of the common values, mind-sets, and norms of behavior that have emerged over time and that most employees share. It is an outcome of the cumulative design decisions that have been made in the past and of the leadership and management behaviors that result from those decisions.
The idea of alignment is fundamental to the Star Model. Each component of the organization, represented by a point on the model, should work to support the strategy. The more that the structure, processes, rewards, and people practices reinforce the desired actions and behaviors, the better able the organization should be to achieve its goals. Just as important as initial alignment is having the ability to realign as circumstances change. The configuration of resources, the processes used, and the mental models that contribute to today’s success will influence the plans made for the future. In a time of stability, this creates efficiency. In a time of change, such static alignment can become a constraint. The organization must have alignment, but it also needs the flexibility to recognize and respond to opportunities and threats.
It is always easier to change a business strategy than to change an organization, just as it is easier to change a course beforehand than it is to turn a large ship that is already under way. The more rapidly the organization can be realigned, the faster the leaders can “turn the ship” and execute new strategies and opportunities as they arise. This is especially important for large companies that must compete against smaller, nimbler organizations. Therefore, alignment is best thought of as an ongoing process rather than a one-time event.
The ideas of strategy dictating organizational form and of organizational elements aligning with strategy are based on a body of thought called contingency theory (Lawrence and Lorsch, 1967). Contingency theory does not prescribe any one best way to organize, but rather suggests that organization design choices are contingent on both the strategy selected and the environment in which the business is operating. Contingency theory has been extended with complementary systems theory, which comes to organization design from the field of economics (Milgrom and Roberts, 1995). The notion of complementarity holds that design choices work as coherent systems and that the application of one practice will influence the results of a corresponding practice—whether positive or negative. This underscores the practical application of the Star Model. For example, if a strategy depends on cross-unit coordination, contingency theory suggests it would be wise to formally link those units with processes and create measures and rewards that encourage teamwork. Research into complementary systems goes further, suggesting that in order to derive the full benefit of these choices, they should be employed as a system, and that negative consequences may occur if the practices are employed individually and not together (Whittington and others, 1999). This research confirms what many suspect: piecemeal adoption of management practices has little impact on business performance. It also means that simple benchmarking and copying of another company’s structures and processes has little useful application in organization design. For example, using a matrix is neither a good nor a bad practice in itself. But when a matrix is installed without the appropriate and corresponding role clarity, governance processes, reward systems, performance management methods, and training that are needed to make it effective, its introduction can actually have a negative impact on the organization.
Thinking of organization design choices as complementary systems also has implications for the organization design process. While each point on the star in the model represents many choices, they are not as unlimited, and thus not as overwhelming, as they first seem. Once the strategy is set, there are then sets of complementary options available to support that strategy. As we address each major topic in this book, we have structured the discussion around the Star Model and have highlighted the set of complementary choices and considerations that align with each strategy.
Another concept underlying the Star Model is complexity. In this context, it refers to the idea that complex business models cannot be executed with simple organizations (Ashby, 1952). The more dimensions a business has—for example, number of products, business units, or customer sets—and the larger its size, the greater the number of interfaces that will need to be managed internally. In addition, when the company is geographically dispersed, new challenges of national culture, time, and distance are introduced. Many strategies today require high levels of cross-organization collaboration at multiple levels. As a result, units tend to have more “surface area” and a greater number of interactions between units required to get work done (Lawler and Worley, 2006). Such organizations will not spontaneously self-organize. Employees in large companies, no matter how good their intentions, are unlikely to be able to gain a broad enough view to make the right decisions about how units should be configured and who should interact with whom. Complex strategies and organizations need firm and clear guidance, and this is an activity for senior leadership.
The design goal should be to keep the organization clear and simple for customers and the majority of employees. It is the job of leaders and managers to manage the complexity that is created by the organization’s design. The different elements of a design that will need to be managed—the points on the Star Model—are explained in further detail below.

Strategy

Strategy is a company’s formula for success. It sets the organization’s direction and encompasses the company’s vision and mission, as well as its short-and long-term goals. The strategy derives from the leadership’s understanding of the external factors (competitors, suppliers, customers, and emerging technologies) that bear on the firm, combined with their understanding of the strengths of the organization in relationship to those factors. The organization’s strategy is the cornerstone of the organization design process. Without knowledge of the goal, no one can make rational choices along the way. In other words, if you do not know where you are going, any road will get you there.
The purpose of a strategy is to gain competitive advantage: the ability to offer a customer better value through either lower prices or greater benefits and services than competitors can (Porter, 1998). These advantages can be gained through external factors such as location or favorable government regulation. They can also be secured through superior internal organizational capabilities. We define organizational capabilities as the unique combination of skills, processes, technologies, and human abilities that differentiate a company. They are created internally and are thus difficult for others to replicate. Creating superior organizational capabilities in order to gain competitive advantage is the goal of organization design. We will also refer to transferring capabilities. To transfer and, when necessary, adapt a company’s capabilities or advantages is one of the key jobs of any manager when opening up a new location or unit.
Business model is a broad term used to encompass the internal logic of a company’s method of doing business. It encompasses the business’s value proposition, target customer segments, distribution channels, cost structure, and revenue model. For example, an Internet music site may operate on a subscription basis (unlimited songs available for a monthly fee) or on a straight fee-per-song basis. Each approach represents a different business model, although both companies are in the same business. Each model is built on a different revenue and cost structure, and therefore each company requires a different set of organizational capabilities to succeed.
A business portfolio is the set of pr...

Table of contents