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Objective 5.03
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The process of structuring a business’s people, information, and technology to enable the business to achieve its goals and be successful It is used to match the form of the organization as closely as possible to the purpose(s) the organization seeks to achieve.
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Span of control Authority Responsibility Delegation Chain of command Accountability Line authority Staff departments
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Span of control The range of employees who to report to a managerial position Authority The formally-granted influence of a position to make decisions, pursue goals and get resources to pursue the goals; authority in a managerial role may exist only to the extent that subordinates agree to grant this authority or follow the orders from that position
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Responsibility The duty to carry out an assignment or conduct a certain activity Delegation Process of assigning a task to a subordinate along with the commensurate responsibility and authority to carry out the task
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Chain of command The lines of authority in an organization, who reports to whom Accountability Responsibility for the outcome of the process
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Line authority The type of authority where managers have formal authority over their subordinates' activities (the subordinates are depicted under the manager on a solid line in the organization chart); departments directly involved in producing services or products are sometimes called line departments Staff departments The type of authority where managers influence line managers through staff's specialized advice; departments that support or advise line departments are called staff departments and include, e.g., human resources, legal, finance, etc.
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Functional structures Divisional structures Lateral relations Matrix structures
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Functional organizations contain specialized units that report to a single authority, usually called top management. Referred to as functional units or areas, these specialized units contain personnel with various but related skills grouped by similarities. Each functional unit handles one aspect of the product or service provided: information technology, marketing, development, research, etc. Top management is responsible for coordinating the efforts of each unit and meshing them together into a cohesive whole.
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Use functional structures when the organization is small, geographically centralized, and provides few goods and services.functional structures When the organization experiences bottlenecks in decision making and difficulties in coordination, it has outgrown its functional structure.
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ADVANTAGES Reduces duplication of activities Encourages technical expertise DISADVANTAGES Creates narrow perspectives Difficult to coordinate
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Use a divisional structure when the organization is relatively large, geographically dispersed, and/or produces wide range of goods/services.divisional structure
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A type of organizational configuration that groups together those employees who are responsible for a particular product type or market service according to workflow. The divisional structure of a business tends to increase flexibility, and it can also be broken down further into product, market, and geographic structures.
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ADVANTAGES Improves decision making Fixes accountability for performance Increases coordination of functions DISADVANTAGES Hard to allocate corporate staff support Loses some economies of scale Fosters rivalry among divisions
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An organizational structure that facilitates the horizontal flow of skills and information. It is used mainly in the management of large projects, drawing employees from different functional disciplines for assignment to a team without removing them from their respective positions. Employees report day-to-day progress to the project manager. They continue to report to their department head.
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To adopt the matrix structure effectively, the organization should modify many traditional management practices.matrix structure
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ADVANTAGES Reinforces & broadens technical excellence Facilitates efficient use of resources Balances conflicting objectives of the organization DISADVANTAGES Increases power conflicts Increases confusion & stress for 2-boss employees Impedes decision making
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A lateral structural arrangement consists of a decentralized structure in which departments work together to achieve a common goal rather than operate as separate and distinct entities.
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Use lateral relations to offset coordination problems in functional and divisional structures.lateral relations When the organization needs constant coordination of its functional activities, then lateral relations do not provide sufficient integration. Consider the matrix structure.
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Dotted-line supervision Liaison roles Temporary task forces Permanent teams Integrating managers
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McNamara, C. (n.d.). Key concepts in the design of an organization. Retrieved June 11, 2012, from http://www.managementhelp.org/org_thry/concepts. htm http://www.managementhelp.org/org_thry/concepts. htm Chun Wei Choo. (1995). Organizational structures. Retrieved June 11, 2012, from http://choo.fis.utoronto.ca/FIS/Courses/LIS1230/LIS12 30sharma/od2.htm http://choo.fis.utoronto.ca/FIS/Courses/LIS1230/LIS12 30sharma/od2.htm Read more: http://www.businessdictionary.com/definition/ divisional-structure.html#ixzz3rJHqvWSchttp://www.businessdictionary.com/definition/ divisional-structure.html#ixzz3rJHqvWSc
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