The Organizing Function. Organizing Distributing or allocating resources toward the accomplishment of the objectives defined in the plans –Requires the.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Managing Organizations
Advertisements

CHAPTER 7 Business Management.
Basic Elements of Organizing
Designing Adaptive Organizations
* * Chapter Eight Adapting Organizations to Today’s Markets McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Basic Characteristics of Organizational Structure Division of labor: dividing up the many tasks of the organization into specialized jobs Hierarchy of.
Organizational Structure
Understanding Management First Canadian Edition Slides prepared by
Organization Structure and Design
Nursing management FUNCTION NURSING MANAGEMENT PROCESS
Chapter 7 Administration of the Fire Department
Organizing and Authority
Structure and Fundamentals of Organizing
Copyright ©2011 Pearson Education
Chapter 7 and 8 Organizational Structure and Managing Change.
Foundation of Organizational Design
O RGANIZATIONAL S TRUCTURE & D ESIGN. Organizational Structure How job tasks are formally divided, grouped, & coordinated Organizational Design How organizational.
6–16–1Copyright © 2006 Thomson Business and Economics. All rights reserved. Agenda and Announcements Agenda –Team Training Presentation –Review Chapter.
Chapter 16 Organizing.
Job Analysis and Job Design
Chapter 13 Planning & Organizing
Departmentalization by simple numbers
Management organization
McGraw-Hill© 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Planning and Organizing
Chapter 14 Foundations of Organization Structure
Organizational Structure, Design & Culture. Organizational Structure  How job tasks are formally divided, grouped, & coordinated  Why? –Meet goals &
Organizing Ms. Ashita Chadha.
Ready Notes Basic Elements of Organizing
1 Analyzing Jobs and Work Dividing Work into Jobs Dividing Work into Jobs Work Work Effort directed toward producing or accomplishing results. Effort directed.
Organizational Structure and Design
Organizational Structure
Copyright ©2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 14-1 Chapter 14 Foundations of Organizational Structure.
HSA 171 CAR. 1436/4/26  the process of establishing the orderly use of resources by assigning and coordinating tasks. The organizing process transforms.
© 2011 Delmar, Cengage Learning Part II Organizational Perspectives Chapter 4 Foundations of Police Organization.
5 Chapter Organizational Structure and Culture Copyright ©2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall.
Copyright ©2012 Pearson Education Chapter 14 Structure and Organizational Behavior 14-1 Essentials of Organizational Behavior, 11/e Stephen P. Robbins.
. Organizing is that part of managing that involves establishing an organizational structure of roles for people to fill in an organization.
UNIT A LEADERSHIP AND SUPERVISION 2.01 Recognize the four functions of management.
Basic Organization Designs BSM 12. ORGANIZING The function of management that creates the organization’s structure.
Organizational Behavior BUS-542 Instructor: Erlan Bakiev, Ph.D. 1-1.
Chapter 8 Concepts of Organizing. Chapter 8/Concepts of Organizing Hilgert & Leonard © Identify the organizing function of management. 2. Explain.
CH. 17 Class Discussion MANAGING OPERATIONS AND STAFFING.
Basic Organization Designs Where We Are Part 1 Introduction Part 2 Planning Part 3 Organizing Part 4 Leading Part 5 Controlling Part.
Copyright ©2011 Pearson Education
Organizing Process a course of action, a route, a progression Structure an arrangement, a configuration, a construction.
Developed by Cool Pictures & MultiMedia PresentationsCopyright © 2004 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning. All rights reserved. Fundamentals.
U NIT IV ORGANISATIONAL PROCESSES. DEFINITION OF ORGANISATIONAL PROCESS A process is a series of connected steps or actions with a beginning and an end.
Introduction to Management LECTURE 19: Introduction to Management MGT
Planning and Organizing Chapter 13. The Planning Function Planning for a business should stem from the company’s Business Plan – The business plan sets.
Copyright © 2003 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning. All rights reserved. Developed by Cool Pictures & MultiMedia Presentations chp10 Daft.
Human Resource Management Lecture 2 MGT Last Lecture Title and Course Code Introduction Text Book Chapters (Course Topics) What is HRM (managing.
BUSINESS 7e Copyright 2004 Prentice Hall, Inc.1 CHAPTER 7 Organizing the Business Enterprise.
Chapter 9 Managing the Structure and Design of Organizations.
* * Chapter Eight Adapting Organizations to Today’s Markets Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Introduction to Business (BUS 201) CHAPTER.
Organization Structure
Managing Organizational Structure and Design
Daft 6th ed Fundamentals of Organizing
Organizing.
Organization Structure and Process
Managing the Structure and Design of Organizations
Chapter 6 Organization Structure and Design
The Organizing Process
Designing Adaptive Organizations
Planning and Organizing
Job Analysis and Job Design
Managing the Structure and Design of Organizations
Organizing.
Principles of Business, Marketing, and Finance
Presentation transcript:

The Organizing Function

Organizing Distributing or allocating resources toward the accomplishment of the objectives defined in the plans –Requires the understanding of staffing and work distribution –Includes the allocation of material, machine, and space resources –Converts goals into actions

Classical Theories of Organization Specialization of Labor Unity of Command Span of Control Departmentalization Centralization vs. Decentralization

Specialization of Labor Productivity can be increased if people use their natural and acquired talents to do exclusively what they do best Specialists are often more efficient Disadvantages –Boredom –Burnout –Increased error rate –Might not feel like part of the team

Unity of Command No person should have more than a single boss at any time Clear to whom you report What problems can having multiple supervisors cause?

Span of Control Refers to the number of people a manager can effectively supervise Varies from situation to situation The actual number of employees one manager can supervise depends upon the characteristics of the manager, the types of employees, and the work situation

Departmentalization How managers divide or structure work Usually based on function –Example: Hospital setting Nursing Radiology Health Information Management –File room –ROI –Coding

Centralization vs. Decentralization Centralization: Top managers make the decisions and allow few decisions to be made at lower levels –Consistency and control Decentralization: Top management encourages decision making at lower levels –Empowers people who do the work to make the decisions concerning their jobs

Staffing and Work Distribution The identification of the number and types of employees needed to carry out the work of the department

Number of Employees Number of employees needed depends on: –Volume of work and –Pattern of work division that has been selected

Work Scheduling Work scheduling is based on: –When employees are needed and/or –What services are required

Work Division Patterns For process-oriented departments 3 types: –Serial Work Division –Parallel Work Division –Unit Work Division

Serial Work Division Refers to the consecutive handling of tasks or products by individuals who perform a specific function in sequence –Tends to create task specialists –Production line/assembly line type of work

Parallel Work Division The concurrent handling of tasks Multiple employees do identical types of tasks and basically see the process through from beginning to end Everyone performs the same tasks Independent of one another

Unit Work Division Enlists simultaneous assembly in which everyone performs a different specialized task at the same time The tasks are all related to the same end product but are not dependent on each other The work is specialized but the sequence is not fixed Manufacturing work (rare in HIM)

Work Distribution Analysis A function of effective work process management and is one element of organizational analysis. Used to determine whether a department’s current work assignments and job content are appropriate

Work Distribution Analysis Possible observations: –Large amounts of time are being dedication to functions of minor importance –Small amounts of time are being dedicated to functions of key importance –There is too much or too little job function specialization

Work Distribution Analysis There is duplication of efforts or functions Some employees are overloaded with work assignments Some employees do not have enough work to keep busy Staff are performing tasks inappropriate to their positions

Work Distribution Analysis Work Distribution Chart –Used to collect basic distribution data –Each employee fills one out to reflect their work content –Does all task content come from the job description? –Productivity is recorded

Work Scheduling Effective scheduling includes: –A core of employees on duty at all times when services must be provided –A pattern of hours to be worked and days off that employees can be reasonably sure will not be changed –Fair and just treatment of all employees

Work Scheduling Staffing issues to consider: –How is the workweek defined by policy? –What days of the week is the department open? –How many and what hours/days are covered? –What functions must be performed each day and within what timeframe? –How many Full Time Employees (FTE’s) are needed?

Work Scheduling Shift Rotation –Employees rotate between day, evening, and night hours –Not ideal –Used when more than Monday-Friday, 8:00- 5:00 coverage is needed –There should always be at least 12 hours between the time a person ends one shift and begins another

Work Scheduling Shift Differential –A slightly higher hourly wage to employees who work the less desirable shifts –Evening, night, weekend shifts

Work Scheduling Vacation and Absentee Coverage –Plan appropriately for vacations and absence –Options: Tasks are distributed to other employees Temporary employees Which do you think is the best choice? Why?

Work Scheduling Alternate Work Schedules –Flextime Employee can choose their hours –Compressed work week For example, 4-10 hour days –Job sharing Divides one job between two employees –Telecommuting Employees work from home

Thought Question… What are the benefits of offering alternate work schedules such as a compressed work week, flextime, job sharing, or telecommuting to employees? This is the topic of the Discussion this week!

Organizational Charts Typically shown from the top of the authority hierarchy down Line relationships are shown as solid lines Staff relationships are shown as dotted lines Shows limits of each person’s responsibility and authority

Organizational Charts –Gives a clear picture of employee structure –Shows job titles or functions –Shows Span of Control and Unity of Command