Details

Designing Your Organization


Designing Your Organization

Using the STAR Model to Solve 5 Critical Design Challenges
1. Aufl.

von: Amy Kates, Jay R. Galbraith

33,99 €

Verlag: Wiley
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 10.09.2007
ISBN/EAN: 9780470179031
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 288

DRM-geschütztes eBook, Sie benötigen z.B. Adobe Digital Editions und eine Adobe ID zum Lesen.

Beschreibungen

<i>Designing Your Organization</i> 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: <p>·        Designing around the customer</p> <p>·        Organizing across borders</p> <p>·        Making a matrix work</p> <p>·        Solving the centralization—and decentralization dilemma</p> <p>·        Organizing for innovation</p> <p> </p> <p> </p>
<p>Decision Tools Included on the CD-ROM ix</p> <p>Introduction xi</p> <p>The Authors xv</p> <p><b>1 </b><b>Fundamentals of Organization Design 1</b></p> <p>The Star Model<sup>TM</sup>: A Framework for Decision Making 2</p> <p>Strategy 5</p> <p>Organizational Capabilities: Translating Strategy into Design Criteria 6</p> <p>Structure 8</p> <p>Processes 16</p> <p>Rewards 21</p> <p>People 22</p> <p>Design Principles 23</p> <p>Requisite Complexity 23</p> <p>Complementary Sets of Choices 23</p> <p>Coherence, Not Uniformity 24</p> <p>Active Leadership 24</p> <p>Reconfigurability 24</p> <p>Evolve, Do Not Install 24</p> <p>Start with the Lightest Coordinating Mechanism 25</p> <p>Make Interfaces Clear 25</p> <p>Organize Rather Than Reorganize 25</p> <p><b>2 </b><b>Designing Around the Customer 27</b></p> <p>Customer-Centric Strategies 28</p> <p>What Is Customer-Centric? 28</p> <p>Strategy 29</p> <p>Structure 29</p> <p>Process 30</p> <p>Rewards 30</p> <p>People 30</p> <p>The Drive Toward Customer-Centricity 31</p> <p>Customer-Centric Strategies 33</p> <p>Customer Profitability and Segmentation 36</p> <p>Customer-Centric Organizations 38</p> <p>Strategy Locator: How Customer-Centric Do You Need to Be? 38</p> <p>Customer-Centric Capabilities 41</p> <p>Customer-Centric Light 42</p> <p>Customer-Centric Medium 49</p> <p>Customer-Centric Intensive 57</p> <p><b>3 </b><b>Organizing Across Borders 69</b></p> <p>Levels of International Strategy 71</p> <p>Level 1: Export 71</p> <p>Level 2: Partner 72</p> <p>Level 3: Geographic 73</p> <p>Level 4: Multidimensional Network 73</p> <p>Level 5: Transnational 73</p> <p>Design Considerations: Geographic 74</p> <p>Geographic Example: Cemex 76</p> <p>Structure 76</p> <p>Processes 83</p> <p>Rewards 87</p> <p>People 87</p> <p>Design Considerations: Multidimensional Network 89</p> <p>Strategy 90</p> <p>Structure 91</p> <p>Processes 95</p> <p>Rewards 100</p> <p>People 101</p> <p>Design Considerations: Transnational 103</p> <p>Strategy 104</p> <p>Structure 104</p> <p>Processes 105</p> <p>Rewards 107</p> <p>People 107</p> <p><b>4 </b><b>Making a Matrix Work 109</b></p> <p>What Is a Matrix? 110</p> <p>Strategic Reasons to Use a Matrix 112</p> <p>Challenges of a Matrix 113</p> <p>Matrix Design 116</p> <p>Structure 116</p> <p>Processes 126</p> <p>Rewards 134</p> <p>People 137</p> <p><b>5 </b><b>Solving the Centralization—Decentralization Dilemma 141</b></p> <p>Corporate Center Strategy 143</p> <p>Understanding the Business Portfolio 144</p> <p>Portfolio Diversity 145</p> <p>Organizational Implications of the Business Portfolio Strategy 147</p> <p>Role of the Corporate Center 149</p> <p>Size of Corporate Staff 151</p> <p>Centralization and Decentralization 152</p> <p>Definitions 152</p> <p>Strategic Reasons for Centralization 154</p> <p>Strategic Reasons for Decentralization 156</p> <p>Predictable Problems of Centralization 158</p> <p>Predictable Problems of Decentralization 160</p> <p>Making an Explicit Choice 161</p> <p>Getting the Best of Both: A Balancing Act 163</p> <p>Structure 165</p> <p>Processes 167</p> <p>Rewards 171</p> <p>People 171</p> <p><b>6 </b><b>Organizing for Innovation 173</b></p> <p>Innovation Strategies 175</p> <p>Sustaining Innovation 176</p> <p>Breakthrough Innovation 176</p> <p>Innovation Capabilities 178</p> <p>Innovation Process 178</p> <p>Portfolio Management 180</p> <p>Balancing Separation and Linkage 180</p> <p>Designing for Breakthrough Innovation 181</p> <p>MeadWestvaco Specialty Chemicals Division 182</p> <p>Structure 184</p> <p>Processes 190</p> <p>Rewards 196</p> <p>People 199</p> <p><b>7 </b><b>Conclusion 203</b></p> <p>Appendix: Decision Tools 207</p> <p>Bibliography 245</p> <p>Index 249</p> <p>How to Use the CD-ROM 255</p>
<p><b>The Authors</b> <p><b>AMY KATES</b> is principal partner with Downey Kates Associates, an organization design and development consulting firm located in New York City. <p><b>JAY R. GALBRAITH</b> is professor emeritus at the International Institute for Management Development in Lausanne, Switzerland.
<p>DESIGNING YOUR ORGANIZATION <p><i>Designing Your Organization</i> 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: <ul> <li><b>Designing around the customer</b></li> <li><b>Organizing across borders</b></li> <li><b>Making a matrix work</b></li> <li><b>Solving the centralization/decentralization dilemma</b></li> <li><b>Organizing for innovation</b></li> </ul> <p><i>Designing Your Organization</i> is written for managers and leaders who make critical choices about organizational strategy and execution as well as for human resource and organization design and development professionals who help implement these decisions. <p>This important resource includes a CD-ROM. <p>Praise for <i>Designing Your Organization</i> <p>"Jay Galbraith and Amy Kates provide the compass, charts, essential tools, and supplies for the journey to organization effectiveness in dynamic times. <i>Designing Your Organization</i>, brought forth at a time of major challenges to global business and national priorities, brings contemporary organization decisions into focus and provides clear advice to achieve business performance today and tomorrow." <br/>—<b>John D. Hofmeister,</b> president and U.S. country chair, Shell Oil Company <p>"Should be used by every leader seeking to give their organization a competitive advantage. Galbraith and Kates offer a practical framework to align a corporation's organizational structure with its business strategy." <br/>—<b>Thomas J. Falk</b>, chairman and CEO, Kimberly-Clark Corporation <p>"Starting several decades ago, Jay Galbraith wrote a series of books that essentially defined the field of modern organization design. Now, with deceptive simplicity, compelling logic, and immense practicality, he and Amy Kates have summarized in a single place what every manager needs to know about this vitally important subject." <br/>—<b>Thomas W. Malone</b>, Patrick J. McGovern Professor of Management; director, MIT Center for Collective Intelligence, MIT Sloan School of Management; and author, <i>The Future of Work</i>
“Jay Galbraith and Amy Kates provide the compass, charts, essential tools and supplies for the journey to organization effectiveness in dynamic times. <i>Designing Your Organization</i>, brought forth at a time of major challenges to global business and national priorities, brings contemporary organization decisions into focus and provides clear advice to achieve business performance today and tomorrow.”--John D. Hofmeister, president and U.S. country chair, Shell Oil Company <p> </p> <p>“Should be used by every leader seeking to give their organization a competitive advantage. Galbraith offers a practical framework to align a corporation’s organizational structure with its business strategy.”--Thomas J. Falk, chairman and CEO, Kimberly-Clark Corporation</p> <p> </p> <p>“Starting several decades ago, Jay Galbraith wrote a series of books that essentially defined the field of modern organization design. Now, with deceptive simplicity, compelling logic, and immense practicality, he and Amy Kates have summarized in a single place what every manager needs to know about this vitally important subject.”--Thomas W. Malone, Patrick J. McGovern Professor of Management; director, MIT Center for Collective Intelligence, MIT Sloan School of Management; and author, <i>The Future of Work</i></p> <p> </p>