Practical Organization Design
eBook - ePub

Practical Organization Design

Effective organizations via a structured Management System

  1. 276 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Practical Organization Design

Effective organizations via a structured Management System

About this book

This book is a source for inspiration to managers and organization designers. It describes how internal structures of an organization can be designed to enable sustainable success in a constantly changing environment. The book helps the reader to understand how to do the design of an organization. It integrates organizational theories with hands-on and practical approaches in how to get the work done.Most organizations have a great potential to improve performance and market success if they apply a systematic approach to organization design. Elements in the internal structure have to work together and interact with customers and other external stakeholders. Sustainable efficiency can be achieved if we build effective organizations by the design of a structured Management System.This book describes a systematic approach in the development of a Management Systems. It explains how the design of business logic is done in a Management System Architecture. The book then describes how this Architecture is transformed into a practical implementation by using seven Management System Building Blocks.•Purpose•Organization Structure•Process & Rules•Governing•Plans•Records•DeliverablesMore info at www.managementsystem.se

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Information

Year
2015
Print ISBN
9789174637861
eBook ISBN
9789175698045
Edition
1
Subtopic
Management

Part I

Introduction – What this book is all about

1 Why I think this book has a value

A Management System is a structured way to control activities within a company, or any other type of organization. Often people think of international ISO standards, certifications and audits when one discuss a Management System. Too often the discussion is about the burden the Management System may be to the people in the organization, documentation needs, reporting and even bureaucracy. At the same time, the same people having problem with a Management System, often search for knowledge and practical example of how to improve performance in their own organization, how to improve business results, how to decrease costs, etc. These people, often managers but not only, read books, undertake trainings, attend seminars and conferences and ask knowledgeable consultancy firms to do analyses and propose changes. This is not seen as burden to organizations, rather as opportunities to improve performance.
What is the difference between a Management System and the different concepts like Business Model Canvas, Lean, Agile, Business Balanced Scorecard, Business Process re-engineering, etc.? How come people find values from these concepts but think of Management System as a dull burden? My believe is that the Management System indent to cover the full business, all parts of the organization, and for this reason can be too complex. The above exemplified concepts covers different aspects of the full system. If it is too complex we need to find tools and we need to simplify. But if we, by doing this, excludes perspectives of the full design, we may sub-optimize or create design solutions that does not fit together in all parts. If the aim is to implement a Management System there is a risk then to move towards compliance thinking, not performance thinking. Due to lack of understanding of the possibilities of a Management System, we settled with target to comply with one of the ISO standards for Management System. And this can be done even though we have a really bad design1. This may frame our minds from the possibilities to embrace relevant concept and methods to build a structured system design on how to manage activities within an organization to reach objectives.
If we on the other hand understand the potential of a structured design of our Management System, it becomes hard to get good help when we want to build it. It is important to acknowledge the Management System as an open system that interact with the surrounding environment. It contains a set of elements like Targets, Organization Structures, Processes, Measurements, etc. And in order to design an efficient Management System, we cannot simply focus on some parts, do that good and hope to achieve excellence. As an example, we all understand that a good Organization Structure is important for any organization. But we also understand that this is not the full picture. There are more parts important to gain efficiency. For those who has done some type of technical design work, we understand that a system design need to optimize a number of, sometimes contra dictionary requirements, in order to achieve the performance from the system we need. To do this we need to understand all building blocks of the design and balance the design of each building block towards the performance need for the full system.
I have two reasons to write this book. Firstly, it has been a dream for me to one day write a book. To do this gives me the pleasure of writing and explaining things in which I have long experience. It is as well challenging and it develops my competence. We all know that when you have to explain things it often requires that you think once again to really understand what you tries to explain. Secondly, I have not yet found a book that cover how to do a full design of a Management System. A book that describes all of the building blocks needed to design a Management System, with the purpose to improve effectiveness and efficiency. A book that combines practical experience with theories. A book that covers how business logic impacts value creation chains, how it calls for specific logic in the design of internal processes, ways to find an optimal Organization Structure and how to monitor execution. All structured in a coherent design we call a Management System.
My hope is that you, the reader, find this book valuable if you want to understand:
  • What is a Management System and how does it support an organization?
  • How do I build a Management System?
  • How do I improve internal performance using a Management System?
  • How do I use a Management System to transform Strategies in to result?
I truly believe that most organizations has a great improvement potential and possibilities to achieve sustainable market successes via a true system approach in the design of its internal structures.
1 This is like doing a control of the car that it fulfill governmental regulations to ensure safety. It can be a really bad car even though it is approved to use.

2 My background

Back in the mid 80’s I became interested in Quality. I remember the structure of IEEE’s2 Quality Assurance Plan explained in a training course. For me this was like the truth had been given to me. The structure of this Quality Assurance Plan explained what you need to do in order to achieve Quality in product development. In those days I was a System Engineer and Project Leader for development of software solutions and products for petrol stations. I was working for a successful mid-size company. But as a consequence of the success it had growth-problems in the development department.
The structure of the IEEE Quality Assurance Plan gave me a Reference Model for product development. I took the knowledge back home and started to implement all parts of this Reference Model in hour development organization. We learnt a language, we collected our ways of working in a common structure, and we shared experience, planned and executed development projects according to the content of our Reference Model. We called it the SW Quality Assurance Plan.
Today, 30 years later, I still work with implementation of a Reference Model for organizations. But today I have the scope of a full Company. I am no longer a System Engineer for SW development project but rather a ā€œSystem Engineerā€ for development of Organization Architecture or Organizations Design. Over the year I have worked with all between small (5 persons) to big (600+ persons) product development projects. I have worked with business organizations in Production Industries, Service Industries, Governmental societies, Telecommunication Industry. I have worked with local companies and companies with operations spread over the world in different time zones. The leading star for my professional carrier has been to bring order and efficiency in the ways of working.
Similar to the experience from the IEEE Quality Assurance Plan I have over the years developed a structure of Building Blocks for any type of Organization. It is obvious, thinking of it, that efficiency in an organization cannot be fully achieved only working with definition of roles and responsibilities. Furthermore efficiency cannot only be achieved by Process Management or by applying internal governance structures. To achieve improved efficiency one has to work with a full set of building blocks, covering all relevant part of an organizations design. The building blocks has each a specific purpose, yet they all together form a system containing the building blocks and their interrelationships.
With the understanding of the Building Blocks top management can design an organization that fulfill operational needs from customers and other stakeholders. Middle managers may use the building blocks to design their part of the organization, still being a part of the complete organization. By understanding the building blocks, employees in the organization may find answers to question related to ways of working. Altogether, with good knowledge of the building blocks defined for the organization, performance can be measured and efficiency improved in a structured and systematic way.
In my latest professional years I find more and more possibilities for any type of organization to improve effectiveness by aligning internal structures with the external business environment. An organization that works with strategies and business models has to also work with the design of internal structures and ways of working to enable full use of strategies. Furthermore it is generally understood that strategies are all about execution and that today’s business environment are constantly and rapidly changing. This puts strong requirements on adaptive changes of the organization in order to maintain sustainable business. This can, in my view not be achieved unless you design your organization as an open and adaptive system towards the business environment you select to add value into. For this you have to understand the design mechanism of the building blocks and how different design parameters may impact internal structures.
2 IEEE = Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers

3 The dilemma with the term Organization

When I started to write this book I immediately struggled with the use of the term Organization. Talking about Management System it is of course impossible not to use the term Organization. But the term has different meanings, and it is important to correctly understand this and to use them wisely. It is furthermore important that you as a reader understand how I have used the word.
From the Cambridge Dictionary3 we find three different usages of the term Organization.
  • It is a group
    ā€œOrganization is a group of people who work together in a structured way for a shared purposeā€.
  • It is an arrangement
    ā€œThe planning of an activity or eventā€.
  • It is a system
    ā€œThe way in which something is done or arrangedā€.
You will later in this book read that Organization, in the meaning of a System, is one important element in the Management System. This usage would be confusing as Organization also could be used for a Group. With this later meaning we use Organization as a noun for a company, non-profit organization, administration, etc. And this Organization needs a Management System that has one element, which is an Organization. This is truly confusing. My solution has been to use the term Organization Structure when I use the term being one of the elements in a Management System. I use the term Organization for companies, non-profit organizations, administrations or different kind of Groups set up to reach a purpose.
To minimize the risk for further confusion I have not used the term Organization in the meaning of an Arrangement.
3 (Cambridge, n.d.)

4 Technocratic approach to the design of a Management System

A Management System should be designed based on a generic model on what it should contain. You may think of this as the generic building blocks of an Organization. The ISO Management System standards put explicit requirements on the content and has a generic definition of a Management System. But the ISO standards does not tell us how to do the specific design of a Management System.
If we search in the literature to find examples of such generic models we should include the term Organization Model in the search. A Management System I view as a part of the wider term Organization Model. This term is more commonly used compared to Management System, in the context of how to design internal structures of an Organization. There exists a number of different models for Organization Design. In the book "Guide to Organizational Designā€4 Naomi Stanford presents an overview of seven different system models of organization design. Certainly two of the models, Mc-Kinsey 7-S model, Galbraith’s Star Model, has a big impact on the way many think of organization models. All models described by Stanford includes ā€œsoftā€ elements, e.g. people, behavior, leadership, culture, etc. In the case of the McKinsey model four elements are soft. These four are style, shared values, staff and skills. Three of the element are ā€œhardā€ elements. These are system, strategy and structure.
In my approach to design of a Management System, I do not include any ā€œsoftā€ elements. This is because I have a technocratic approach to the design of Management Systems. I think of the Management System as the tangible building blocks one should use to build an Organization. It may be an Organization Structure, Competences, Processes, etc. These you can design, develop and implement in an organization. As such building blocks are tangible, everyone working in an organization can relate to them and use them. This means that the Management System can be made visible and explicit. And I believe that explicit building blocks has direct impact on the people’s behavior in an organization and enables control of executions. The design of explicit building blocks enables management of an Organization.
I think of the Management System as the tangible building blocks one should use to build an Organization.
This approach to organization development or design of Organization Structures is a rather technocratic approach, and I find it important to understand for any manager. But I like to make it very clear that I do not neglect the importance of ā€œsoftā€ elements of an Organization Model. People, behavior, styles, culture, leadership, etc. are of course very important for any organization in order to reach its objectives and amb...

Table of contents

  1. Introduction
  2. Table of Contents
  3. Part I Introduction – What this book is all about
  4. Part II A design concept of the Management System
  5. Part III How to establish a Management System
  6. Part IV Improve internal performance
  7. Part V Make strategy happen
  8. Part VI References
  9. Copyright

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