Enterprise Organizations - a new breed?

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Enterprise Organizations - a new breed? The costs and benefits of this emerging organizational archetype in the disability field. Pamela Spall

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Enterprise Organizations - a new breed?. The costs and benefits of this emerging organizational archetype in the disability field. Pamela Spall. A respondent to the research wrote -. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Enterprise Organizations - a new breed?

Page 1: Enterprise Organizations - a new breed?

Enterprise Organizations - a new breed?

The costs and benefits of this emerging organizational archetype in the

disability field.

Pamela Spall

Page 2: Enterprise Organizations - a new breed?

A respondent to the research wrote -

“The trend towards marketisation is of major concern. Managerialism in the human services sector has introduced managerial practice such as strategic planning, performance indicators/appraisals, risk management, quality assurance etc which have had a major impact on community services and their capacity to respond to individual, family and community needs in a meaningful and flexible way. Increasing accountability and reporting obligations, the impact of funding reforms, complex legal and industrial matters, increasing pressure for formalization and professionalism, economic rationalism --- make these extremely challenging times!” (720)

Page 3: Enterprise Organizations - a new breed?

Defining Marketisation

• Split between the role of purchasing of service through contracts and delivery of services

• introduction of managerial concepts such as strategic planning, performance systems

• equating the community services sector to a quasi-market that operates along competitive lines

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Defining Marketisation (continued)

• Implementing quality systems which are customer focused and enable choice

• generating income through commercial activities

• engaging in market segmentation and other market positioning type behaviours.

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Values and beliefs Systems

Structures

An Organizational Archetype

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Table 1. Two types of archetypes or footprints

EnterpriseA new breed oforganization?

Non-enterprise

Two types of archetypes or footprints

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Description of ideal archetypesNon-enterprise Archetype

Values and Beliefs• supports state role of

public good• opposes neo-liberal

contractualism• needs based• coercive role with the

state• linkages with ‘like’

nonprofit organizations

Enterprise Archetype

Values and Beliefs• supports state role of

public good• supports neo-liberal

contractualism• consumer choice• mixed role with state• linkages with wide

range of institutions

Page 8: Enterprise Organizations - a new breed?

Description of ideal archetypesNon-enterprise Archetype

Systems

• limited flexibility in human resources

• limited technical and technological capacity

• cost management accounting

• mixed centralized and decentralized decision-making

• little strategic planning

• individual and group service delivery

• no formal quality system

Enterprise Archetype

Systems

• flexible human resources

• skilled in technical and technology

• accrual accounting

• mixed centralized and decentralized decision-making

• highly developed strategic planning

• managed care

• formal quality system

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Description of ideal archetypes

Non-enterprise Archetype

Structure• hierarchical and

functional• limited structural

flexibility• participatory model of

governance - more rowing than steering

Enterprise Archetype

Structure• flatter more organic

structure• scope for flexibility,

dependent on context• executive model of

governance - more steering than rowing

Page 10: Enterprise Organizations - a new breed?

Table 3. Sample Frame and Respondent Return Count.Sample Frame

CountSample Frame

%Respondent

ReturnCount

Respondents%

Queensland 240 42.6 114 44.2Victoria 324 57.4 144 55.8TOTAL N = 564 100.00 n = 258 100.00Source: Pamela Spall Unpublished Thesis 2001.

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Primary CSDA disablity service offered

1.9%

12.0%

7.4%

5.0%

10.5%

18.6%

9.3%

14.3%

20.9%

Missing

Other

Respite

Recreation specific

Psychiatric disabili

Community Access

Employment

Community support

Accommodation suppor

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This paper will:

• Establish whether an enterprise and non-enterprise organizational archetype exists in the disability sector

• examine some of the similarities and difference between enterprise and non-enterprise organizations around demographic profile, values and beliefs, systems and structures, and managerial demographics

Page 13: Enterprise Organizations - a new breed?

This paper will:

• Discuss the implications for the sector in terms of costs and benefits of the enterprise organizational form.

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Figure 3. Existence of Enterprise and Non-enterprise Organizations.

Source: Pamela Spall Unpublished Thesis 2001.

EnterpriseOrganizationalForm

87 organizations

Non-enterpriseOrganizational Form

87 organizations

Respondent sample of258 organizations

Existence of Enterprise and Non-enterprise Organizations

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Agency demographics - no difference between enterprise and non-enterprise

• Whether they were religious/charitable or of non-government status

• number of service outlets operating

• primary disability group served

• presence of paid workers.

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Number of years of operation

Co

un

t

30

20

10

0

Non-enterprise

Enterprise

Significant difference - enterprise and non-enterprise organizations

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Values and beliefs - no difference between

enterprise and non-enterprise

• Social justice beliefs

• myth of pure virtue operative (i.e. nonprofits are more ethical, more caring)

• cost competitive tendering and competition does not improve efficiency or is beneficial to the sector.

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Values and beliefs - significant difference between enterprise and non-enterprise

• Beliefs around consumer choice and other quality concepts

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Systems and structures - significant difference between enterprise and non-enterprise

Enterprise organizations had:

• greater flexibility in HRM systems

• enhanced information and performance systems through use of technology and benchmarks

• improved financial management systems including accrual accounting and financial delegation

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Systems and structures - significant difference between enterprise and non-enterprise

• Development of marketing systems such as service differentiation and diversification into new markets and income sources

• highly developed strategic planning processes

• decentralization of decision-making systems

• implementation of quality systems

• reduced internal hierarchical organizational structures.

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Structures and systems

Non-enterprise organizations had -

• “not implemented” or• “very little

implemented”

Enterprise organizations had -

• “mostly implemented”

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Table 4. Comparison of organizational size between enterprise and non-enterpriseorganizationsi.

Components Enterprise Archetype Non-enterprise ArchetypeSize ofOrganization

Larger multi-service agency in termsof: Total number of permanent full-

time employees (9.84 employees) Number of temporary or contract

workers (1.95 workers) Total income of auspicing

organization ($1,078,085) Total number of unpaid volunteer

hours worked per week (110.1hours)

Smaller agency in terms of:

Total number of permanent full-time employees (5.35 employees)

Number of temporary or contractworkers (.37 workers)

Total income of auspicingorganization ($687,858)

Total number of unpaid volunteerhours worked per week (14.63hours)

Source: Pamela Spall Unpublished Thesis 2001.

i Significance testing for the number of employees across all categories and unpaid workers and financialdata was calculated using Chi-square and the Kruskal-Wallis test to take account of the large variation inresponses to this question. Outliers were removed if they were not valid for the sample. To do this, a filterwas applied for outliers. The filter for this data was $80,000 to $3m. Therefore these results represent aconservative interpretative of the analysis of variance. Not applying the filter resulted in a variancebetween enterprise and non-enterprise organizations in relation to employees and unpaid staff ofapproximately 6:1.

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Approximate total income 1999-2000

Co

un

t20

10

0

Non-enterprise

Enterprise

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Financial income of organizations

• 91.8% of all organizations were dependent on government as their largest source of funding

• on average, organizations were reliant on government for 72.4% of their total income

• 17.6% of income was obtained from sources other than government

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Changes in funding from all government sources

In the last five years

IncreasedStayed the sameDecreased

Pe

rce

nt

60

50

40

30

20

10

0

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Manager demographics - no difference between enterprise and non-enterprise

• Gender

• age

• political beliefs

• years working in current organization or the community services sector

• level of education

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Manager demographics - significant difference between enterprise and non-enterprise

• Enterprise managers had a greater extent of influence on policy decision in the organization

• a greater number of enterprise managers had occupied a position in the public sector for either 6 - 10 years or 11 - 15 years

• a greater number of enterprise managers had occupied a position in the private sector

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Benefits of enterprise organization

• More sustainable model• Larger resource base• Longer history and collective experience• High credibility and legitimacy in community

• Multi-service nature to spread risk• Better equipped in terms of skills and

resources to respond to change.

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Benefits of enterprise organization

• More geared up in terms of system and structures for accountability and funding reform requirements

• Range of strategies to diversify income base

• Able to attract and retain skilled staff

• Externally recognized quality system

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Benefits of non- enterprise organization

More responsive to local needs• As newer organization can be more innovative

and flexible

• Able to be more cause related

• Doesn’t have any historic legacy so can design new responses

• Less formal approach is often likened to an individualized approach

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Cost of Enterprise Organization

• Due to size more difficult to be innovative

• Model might be better suited to less residual service delivery interventions

• Overlooked by government in terms of funding increases

• Due to its size can be likened to a bureaucracy

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Cost of non-enterprise organization

• Less robust in day-to-day management

• no critical mass to endure change

• requires a greater commitment of management committee

• limited structures and systems to meet accountability and other funding reform requirements

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Cost of non-enterprise organization

• Prone to be ‘permanently failing’

• no externally recognized quality system

• limited capacity for income generation

• few incentives to attract and retain skilled staff

• locked into a value base

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Question

Whether either the enterprise or non-enterprise organization is a better model to survive in the changed

market environment?

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If the Goal is to -

Accommodate, grow and sustain a diversity of organizational forms then it will be necessary to strengthen the organizational ‘do business’ capacity

of a range of organizations

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Non-enterprise organizations require

Greater technical assistance - technology, financial management functions, performance and quality

systems

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Enterprise organizations require

Support and ideas in social entrepreneur initiatives in income

generation

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All organizations require

Increased skill building around change management and surviving

transformational change