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Design of an organization is not an exact science. Hence the main thrust of this approach is to define design criteria accepted by the organization and propose options that can be evaluated by the executive team based on the identified criteria. It is imperative to ensure all design requirements and organizational constraints are captured as design criteria and the deliberations of the executive team are facilitated to pick the most optimal design. There are two distinct streams of work that can be carried out simultaneously, which contribute together for identifying design options.
The Current State Assessment (CSA) provides a snapshot of the strengths and weaknesses of the organization at a point in time. This provides important information on baseline conditions and helps determine what changes will have the greatest positive impact on the organization. This is a way to surface the ideas for improvement that are latent throughout the organization. This is a crucial link between the needs of the organization and the design process. It is important to select a representative sample of workforce across different levels as respondents to questionnaire or interview candidates to obtain an overall perspective of the current design flaws. The following questions need to be answered by CSA Do people have to work with others outside their own department but find it difficult to cross-organizational boundaries?
Does the structure create barriers to working with people outside the organization (e.g. internal and external customers, key suppliers, business partners)? Are there groups that should be combined into new departments? Is there a logic and a rationale for each of the pieces (departments, units) or have they just grown organically ( or represent past political decisions ) ? Are there overlaps between the roles of the departments or Units?
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Having understood the current design limitations, the next important thing to understand is the competitive advantage that the organization aims to create. To put it simply, if the strategy of the organization is to provide excellent customer service through increased customer responsiveness, it needs to concentrate on building a structure that is customer facing externally and is internally supported by an integrated end-to-end process run on ERP system owned by the customer service team. Organizational capability is defined as an integrated set of skills, technologies and human abilities that create competitive advantage for the organization. Generally, there are 3 areas in which competitive advantage can be gained- product, customer, and operations.
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Success of an organization design depends on how well various units of the organization work together. Integrative processes support the main operating model of any organization. They provide information and shape decisions in order to coordinate activities spread out across different units of the organization. They are the business and management processes that provide value to the customers and get work done. Although numerous processes exist within any organization, typically there are three to five that are critical to the business and involve multiple parts of the organization to carry them out. For a strictly product focused company, new product development, innovation management, market research and intelligence might be essential processes. For a customer organization, relationship management, knowledge management, and solution development processes might be important. These integrative processes can be defined in the organization design as a separate function or additional responsibility.
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A crucial input to any design exercise is the number of layers of management and right span of control. There is no one right answer to this question. Layers and spans are structured to help managers get work done, so the decision on the number of management layers and the span of a managers control requires discussions and agreement on what managers are there to do.
To help get a good enough answer to the how many layers question, there are four rules of thumb (related to the four management activities of planning, coordinating, controlling and allocating). Each layer should: 1. Be flexible and adaptable enough to enable managers to forward plan in a context of constantly changing operating environments; 2. Facilitate co-ordination between units (There are six forms of business unit to unit co-coordinating activity; leveraging know-how; sharing tangible resources; delivering economies of scale; aligning strategies; facilitating the flow of products or services; creating new business) 3. Have appropriate control and accountability mechanisms ( note that any task, activity, or process should have only one person accountable for it and accountability and decision-making should be at the lowest possible level in the organization; overlap and duplication, fuzzy decision-making and conflict resolution processes are all symptoms of lack of adequate controls ); 4. Enable its managers to allocate effectively the range of resources (human, time equipment, money, and so on) they need to deliver their business objectives.
Before defining any roles in the new organization design it is essential to clarify the scope of the roles. A good way to get clarity on the scope of roles is by creating operational process flowcharts swimlaned as per role.
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A detailed task analysis needs to be carried out to assess impact of process change on the roles and requisite competencies. To capture the competencies required for each manual task, task analysis interview need to be carried out with process owners. It is possible to present all identified competencies as a competency dictionary for the organization for future reference. This information can then be used to identify new roles by collating all related tasks
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To create role definitions all related tasks should be brought together and related competencies should be collated. The swimlaned process charts and task analysis document should be used together to identify relevant roles in the new organization design.
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A headcount analysis needs to be carried to establish headcount required to handle expected volumes at the productivity defined by new processes. This also provides critical input to span of control discussions. Theoretically, an organization can be structured in a limited number of ways- by product, by function, by geography or in a matrix. Practically, the structure is always a hybrid of these options. Following the steps mentioned above will provide the team, entrusted with creating a new organization design, enough information to evaluate the potential options. It is only through deliberations on the data collated and building a consensus with the senior executives that a final organization design can be created. To know more about how PeopleWiz can support your organization-restructuring visit us at http://www.peoplewizconsulting.com