The Mindset of Mechanistic Organizations

The Mindset of Mechanistic Organizations

Charlie Chaplin’s film Modern Times is a humorous but thought-provoking visualization of the machine metaphor in practice. As the United States transitioned from the agricultural era to the industrial era, management thinking changed as well. In the field, everyone worked together according to natural cycles. In factories, the work was designed for efficiency and the manager needed predictable processes to control the work of employees. Jobs were mechanized and designed so workers had to do little thinking, and the managers “controlled” the workers’ actions. For this Discussion, you examine the mindset of mechanistic organizations.

For this Discussion, review this week’s resources, including the media provided. Consider the evolution of management theory and practice since its inception.

Explain your thoughts on how the mechanistic organization mindset became so ingrained in the business world. Next, explain what in the evolution of management theory and practice has raised the need for change. Then, explain the strengths and limitations of the machine metaphor. Finally, explain an alternative structure of a mechanistic organization.

 

Morgan, G. (1998). Images of Organization. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications. Walker Management Library: HD 31.M628 An Overview The underlying priciple of the books is that all management theory and practice is based on images or metaphors that lead us to understand situations in powerful, yet partial ways. To achieve greater effectiveness, managers must become skilled at reading organizations from different perspectives, and developing action strategies that are consistent with the insights they glean. Managers who are skilled in the art of reading organizational life have a capacity to remain open and flexible, suspending immediate judgements until a more comprehensive view of the situation emerges. Metaphor is “a primal force through which humans create meaning by using one element of experience to understand another. Metaphor gives us the opportunity to stretch our thinking and deepen our understanding, therefore allowing us to see things in new ways and act in new ways. Applied in this way, metaphor becomes a tool for creating an understanding about what we now recognize as organization and management.” (Morgan) Metaphor can also create distortions (example, comparing a man to a lion when he really does not have fur, claw or a tail). Consider the popular metaphor that the organization is a machine. The metaphor has valuable insights, but neglects the human element. Metaphors are often one-sided or biased, and can be misleading. In approaching the same situation in different ways, metaphors extend insight and suggest actions that may not have been possible before. The insights generated by different metaphors are not just theoretical, they are incredibly practical. Metaphors lead to new metaphors, creating a mosaic of competing and complementary insights. Metaphors shape what we see, so this is the manager’s dilemma – we often tend to realize what we are looking for. Taken to the extremes metaphors can encounter severe limitations, can be incredibly persuasive, but blinding and block our overall view. While metaphors create insight, they also distort. While they have strengths, they also have limitations. In creating ways of seeing and acting, metaphors tend to create ways of not seeing and acting. Some Images of Organizations Organization as a Machine Some organizations are run as a machine. Max Weber’s bureaucracy – precision, speed, clarity, regularity, reliability, efficiency is achieved through a fixed division of tasks, heirarchy, supervision, detailed rules, and regulations. Weber was one of the first organizational theorist to observe parallels between the mechanization of industry, and bureaucratic forms of organization. He noted that the bureaucratic form routinizes the process of administration exactly as the machine routinizes production. He felt this eroded the human spirit and capacity for spontaneous action. Weber was concerned with the effects of bureaucracy on society. Classical management and mechanistic principles of organization Theorist Henri Fayol, F.W. Mooney, and Col. Lyndall Urwick all had an interest in the problems of practical management and sought to codify their experience of successful organization for others by process of: planning, organization, command, coordination, and control. Collectively they set the basis for modern management techniques, such as: management by objectives (MBO); planning, programming, budgeting, systems (PPBS), and other theories stressing rational planning and control. Organization became a form of engineering. Just like an engineer designs a machine, classical theorists were attempting to achieve a similar design approach to organizations: 1) conceived organization as a network of parts, 2) they designed the organizational structure to operate as precise as possible. Classical management principles created limited flexibility through decentralized forms of organizations, where units are allowed to operate in a semi-autonomous manner under general, rather than detailed, supervision. The ability to decentralize has greatly advanced due to MBOs, PPBS, and Management Information Systems (MIS) which are used to establish top down control and impose a mechanistic system of goals and objectives on an organization. Dehumanization of workers to meet organizational objectives The classical theorist gave little attention to the human aspects of the organization and considered organization to be a technical problem. The “reengineering movement” of the 1990’s opposed bureaucracy and urged a new mechanistic design building around key business processes instead of bureaucratic functions. Working under the old classical theory assumption that if you get the engineering right, the human factor will fall into place. The human factor often subverts the reengineering process leading to massive failure rates. The whole thrust of classical management theory and its modern application is to suggest that organizations can or should be rational systems that operate in as efficient manner as possible. This is easier said than done, because we are dealing with people, not inanimate cogs and wheels. Scientific Management – Perfecting Technical Design Frederick Taylor was an American engineer who believed in increasing efficiency by breaking work into its smallest parts. He believed: 1) Shift all responsibility from worker to manager 2) Use scientific methods to determine the most efficient way to do work 3) Select the best person to perform the job 4) Train the worker to do work efficiently 5) Monitor worker performance to ensure procedures were followed and results achieved * Exampled are assembly line or fast food work. However, increasing productivity came at a human cost, reducing workers to automatons. Scientific Management aka “McDonaldization” (McJobs) results in dehumanization. The ultimate goal is to find the “one best way” to organize. Strengths and Limitations of the Machine Metaphor Strengths: 1) Mechanistic approaches work well under conditions where machines work well: straightforward task, consistency, precision is a premium (fast food example). Limitations: 1) Mechanistic approaches create organizational forms that have difficulty in adapting to change. 2) Mechanistic approaches result in mindless and unquestioning bureaucracy – ready-made responses, myopic views. Organizations as Organisms The image of an organism, seeking to adapt and survive in a changing environment, offers a powerful perspective for managers who want to help their organizations flow with change. The metaphor helps us to understand organizations as clusters of interconnected human, business, and technical needs. It encourages us to learn about the art of corporate survival. It urges us to develop vibrant organic systems that remain open to new challenges. The metaphor suggests that different environments favor different species of organizations based on different methods of organizing, and that congruence with the environment is the key to success. Certain species are better adapted to specific environmental conditions than others. The Organismic metaphor has helped organizational theorist to identify: 1) Organizations as “open systems” 2) The process of adapting organizations to environments 3) Organizational life cycles 4) Factors influencing organizational health and development 5) Different species of organizations 6) The relations between species and their ecology Discovering organizational needs Organization theory began its excursion into biology by developing the idea that employees are people with complex needs that must be satisfied to lead full and healthy lives and perform in the workplace. Whereas under “Taylorism” organizations were viewed as a technical problem (machines) and reduced to “paying the right rate for the job,” much of organizational theory since the late 1920’s has focused the limitations of the machine perspective and sought to identify the social and psychological needs of people in organizations. The Hawthorne Studies (1920’s-1930’s), lead by Elton Mayo are now famous for identifying the importance of social needs in the workplace. A new theory of organization began to emerge, built on the idea that individuals and groups, like biological organisms, operate most effectively when their needs are satisfied. Abraham Maslow’s theory suggests that humans are motivated by a heirarchy of needs, not just money as suggested in bureaucratic organizations. Many management theorist were quick to see that jobs and interpersonal relations could be redesigned to create conditions for personal growth that would simultaneously help organizations achieve their aims and objectives. The idea of integrating the needs of individuals and organizations became a powerful force. Alternatives to bureaucratic organizations began to emerge and show how structure, leadership, and work can be modified to create “enriched,” motivating jobs that would encourage people to exercise their capacity for self control and creativity. Particular attention was paid to making jobs meaningful by giving autonomy, responsibility, and recognition. Job enrichment combined with a more participative, democratic, and employee-centered style of leadership took precedence over more authoritatian and dehumanizing approaches generated by scientific and classical management theory. Since the 1960’s, management and organization researchers have given attention to shaping the design of work to increase productivity and job satisfaction while improving work quality and lowering absenteeism and turnover. Human Resource Management has been a major focus with the realized need of integrating the human and technical aspects of work. Sociotechnical Systems places a dual focus on people and technology. Recognizing the importance of environment, the organization is seen as an “open system” that is open to their environment and must achieve an appropriate relation with that environment if they are to survive. The open system approach has generated many new concepts for thinking of social systems and organizations, such as: open system, homeostasis, entropy, negative entropy, requisite variety, equifinality, system evolution. Practical implications of open systems: 1) Open system theory emphasizes the importance of environment in which the organization exists. 2) Organizations are seen as sets of interrelated sub-systems. 3) The open systems approach encourages us to establish contingencies or alignments between different systems and to identify and eliminate potential dysfuntions. Collectively these ideas have helped organizational and management theory to break free of bureaucratic thinking to organize in a way that meets the requirements of the environment. Contingency Theory: Adapting Organizations to Environment The main ideas underlying contigency theory: 1) Organizations are open systems that need careful management to satisfy and balance internal needs and adapt to environmental circumstances. 2) There is no “one best way” of organizing – the appropriate form depends on the environment. 3) Management must be concerned with alignment and “good fits.” 4) Different approaches to management may be necessary to perform different tasks within the same organization. 5) Different types or “species” of organizations are needed in different types of environments. Mechanistic vs. Organic Organizations In a 1950’s study by Tom Burns and G.M. Stalker distinguished between “mechanistic” and “organic” approaches to organization and management (see photocopies for details). Awareness of the need for internal differentiation and integration Lawrence and Lorsch’s research was built upon two principal ideas: 1) That different kinds of organizations are needed to deal with different market and technological conditions. 2) Organizations operating in uncertain and turbulent environments need to achieve a higher degree of internal differentiation than those that are less complex and more stable. They studied high-low performance organizations in plastics and container industries, and their hypotheses were supported. Their study yielded important insights on modes of integration. In stable environments, bureaucratic modes of integration work well, while in turbulent environments, more project teams, coordination, and conflict resolution are needed. Lawrence and Lorsch gave refinement to the idea that certain organizations need to be more organic than others. The variety of the species Since the 1960’s, research has been placed on the idea that there are different “species” of organizations. Henry Mintzberg lists 5 types: 1) Machine bureaucracy – simple, stable, high efficiency, centralized control systems 2) Divisionalized form – many divisions with central control 3) Professional bureaucracy – more autononmy, less heirarchy, standards in professional training 4) Simple structure – chief executive, support staff, typical of young innovative companies. 5) Adhocracy – complex, very organic, virtual or network organizations Contingency Theory – Promoting Organizational Health and Development How do organizations achieve a good fit with their environment? Ask a series of questions: 1) What is the nature of the organization’s environment? 2) What kind of strategy is being employed? 3) What kind of technology is being used? 4) What kinds of people are employed, and what is the dominant culture or ethos within the organization? 5) How is the organization structured, and what are the dominant managerial philosophies? Natural Selection: The population ecology view of organizations There is some criticism to contigency theory and in organizations that “adapt” to their environment that it attributes too much flexibility, and some advocate that we should focus on how the environment “selects” organizations and that this can be analyzed by population ecology. The “population ecology” view of organizations brings Darwin’s theory of evolution front and center. In essence, organizations, like organisms in nature, depend for survival on their ability to acquire an adequate supply of resources necessary to sustain existence. They face competition for scarce resources and only the fittest survive. Insights created by the Populations Ecology perspective: 1) Inertial pressures may prevent organizations from changing in response to their environment. 2) Faced with new kinds of competition or environmental circumstances, whole industries or types of organizations may come and go. 3) The ability to obtain a resource niche and out perform one’s competitors is all important, and in the long run, relative superiority in being able to command resources applies to whole populations of organizations. 4) An awareness of the changing structure of critical resource niches and patterns of resource dependencies can make important contributions to our understanding of the success and power of different organizations. Criticisms to Populations Ecology theory: 1) The theory is too deterministic. 2) It is seen as placing too much

 

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