Chapters 12 and 13 Collect and Discuss Assignment 4 D ecision Rights The Level of Empowerment &...
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Transcript of Chapters 12 and 13 Collect and Discuss Assignment 4 D ecision Rights The Level of Empowerment &...
Chapters 12 and 13Collect and Discuss Assignment 4
Decision RightsThe Level of Empowerment &
Bundling Tasks into Jobs & Subunits
Benefits of Decentralization
• Effective use of “local” (specific) knowledge– Local tastes and preferences– Price sensitivities of particular customers
• Conservation of management time– Senior management focus on strategy
• Training and motivation for local managers
Costs of Decentralization
• Potential agency (incentive) problems– Effective control systems may be expensive– Influence costs
• Influence activities = individuals’ attempts to affect the distribution of
wealth or other benefits in an organization toward themselves, for motives of self-interest
• Coordination costs and failures• Less effective use of central information
Decentralizing to Teams
• Benefits of team decision making– Improved use of dispersed specific knowledge– Employee buy-in
• Costs of team decision making– Collective-action problems (e.g. voting)– Free-rider problems
• Use teams if benefits exceed costs
Teams: Free-rider example
• Prisoner’s dilemma• If probability of working
together again is high enough, players will work hard today (result – chapter 9 appendix)
• Managerial implication for teams– – repetition facilitates
cooperation (don’t change team composition too frequently)
– Structure high rewards for cooperation and low if not
“Optimal” decentralization:
• Limits to net gains to decentralization• Some decisions can be decentralized, or• Can decentralize within parameters, or• Decentralize decision management
• Discuss
Decision management and controlFama-Jensen model
example of loan approval
• Decision management– Initiation
• (rep recommends loan approval for unusual case)
– Implementation• (rep grants loan)
• Decision control
– Ratification• (by supervisor)
– Monitoring• (check on performance
of loan)
Example of decision management and control
S en io r m an ag em en t
C E O
B oard o f D irec to rs
S h areh o ld ers(R es id u a l C la im an ts )
Grant major decision control rights to board
Ratifies major decisions initiated by CEO; monitors & can fire & compensate CEO
Initiates & implements major decisions
Alternative Organizational Structures
Principals/agents
Private, For-Profit Private, Nonprofit
Government
Proprietorship Partnership Corporation
Primary Stakeholders
Owner Partners Stockholders Community Citizens
Governing body
Owner Senior partners
Elected board Board of directors/ trustees
Legislative body
Chief Executive
Owner Managing partner
President/chair
President/director
Commissioner/head
Example of Organizational Structure
Mom & Pop grocery
Most law and
accounting firms
Any corporation
Human service, arts,
etc.
Departments, bureaus, etc.
Fama-Jensen Rx and Berle and Means
• When decision makers are not owners, separate decision management and decision control
= > Hierarchies
• When decision maker is also the major residual claimant (owner), okay to combine decision management and control.
Influence costs
= Lobbying, politicking, and other nonproductive activities that employees conduct in order to influence decision makers e.g. Sony acquired CBS records and top execs spent hours
each day listening to requests for how decision rights were to be assigned in new organization
Can be reduced by imposing bureaucratic rulesBut there is a cost to this approach as it makes the
company less flexible and less able to respond to new information and situations
Specialized tasks in jobs
• Benefits– comparative advantage– lower cross-training expense
• Costs– foregone complementarities across tasks– coordination costs– functional myopia– reduced flexibility
Methods of grouping jobs
• U-form of organization (unitary)– Functional specialization
• M-form of organization (multidivisional)– Product/geographic subunits
• Matrix organization– Combines aspects of U & M forms
Functional subunits (“U form”) advantages and disadvantages
• Advantages– promotes effective coordination within functional area
– promotes functional expertise
– well-defined promotion path
• Disadvantages– opportunity cost of senior management time
– coordination problems across departments
– employee focus on functions, not customers
Battle of the functional managers
• Ventura Motorcycle Company– functionally organized
• Design, Marketing
• New product design options– Speed, Safety
• Marketing options– magazine advertising older consumers– television advertising younger consumers
Battle of the functional managers
• Coordination problem• Could fail to reach either
Nash equilibrium• Managerial solutions
– Reconfigure around products and motivate through profit-based bonuses
– OR form coordinating committees; evaluate & reward managers on value-maximizing coordination
Product/geographic subunits (“M form”)
advantages and disadvantages• Advantages– decision rights tied to specific knowledge– senior management able to focus on strategy– promotes coordination pertinent to product/area
• Disadvantages– unit interdependencies may be ignored– Comparative advantage may be foregone
Matrix organizationsadvantages and disadvantages
Advantages• Functional expertise• Customer-focusedDisadvantages• Battles between functional
and product authorities• Costs of team decision
making• Increase in potential
influence costs
Evaluation of Decision Rights
• Do decision rights fit the external environment and strategy?
• Do decision makers have specific knowledge?
• Is there sufficient oversight?
• Do the economic benefits seem to outweigh the costs of decentralization?
Ore-phone
• Ore-phone is a cellular phone service company trying to increase its market share in the Duluth area. The manager has just received the latest benchmarking figures from his consultant. Salesperson productivity compares very well, but customer service appears very weak. Customer loyalty is well below the industry average. Currently, sales employees are also responsible for servicing customer accounts and are paid a mid-range salary with a commission for each new customer. How might the manager re-bundle tasks to improve these figures? What are the benefits and the costs of re-bundling tasks to improve these figures?
1. The CEO, von Hugel, is considering reorganizing as a multidivisional firm organized around customer type. Draw the revised organizational chart.2. Discuss the pros and cons of the proposed reorganization, relative to the current structure.3. Jessica Wilde, VP of product development, suggests that a matrix organization might be better. Draw the organization chart implied by her proposal.4. Discuss the pros and cons of the matrix proposal relative to the multidivisional proposal.
Medford University, p. 325
•Why did President Kobayashi appoint a task force to consider the issue of fringe benefits? •Should the president anticipate that all members of the task force will strive to cut university expenses? What actions can the president take to increase the likelihood that the task force members have this objective as a major priority?•Why did the president appoint the administrator of the hospital as the chair of the task force? What advice would you offer the chair in appointing subcommittee chairs? Explain.•Does the president want to commit to accepting the committee report or does she want to reserve the right to make modifications? Explain.•Why did the president appoint a key assistant as secretary of the task force?
Looking ForwardNovember 18, 22, 23-- Labor Markets• Managerial Economics
– Chapters 14
• Cool Case: Safelite Auto Glass (A)
• Deadline for drafts: Nov. 18, 22, or 23• Please signup for in class presentations
– Nov. 18, 22, and 23 - first week
– Nov. 29,30 and Dec 2 – second week
• Course project due Dec. 6,7, and 8• Final Exam: Dec 13, 14, and 16