Unit3 Organizing
Unit3 Organizing
Unit3 Organizing
ORGANISING
INTRODUCTION
• Organizing is the process of identifying and
grouping the activities required to attain the
objective , delegating authority , creating
responsibilities and establishing relationship for
people to work effectively.
• Koontz and O’Donnel define the organising as
“the grouping of activities necessary to attain
objective, the assignment of each grouping to a
manager with authority necessary to supervise
it and the provision for co-ordination
horizontally and vertically in the enterprise
structure”
Nature of organising
• Characteristics of organising
1. Common objective
all efforts of the organization are directed
towards this goal.
2. Specialization or division of labor
the total work of an organization is divided
into function and sub-functions to get the
benefits of specialization.
3. Authority of structure or chain of command
arrangement of position into a graded series.
the chain of superior and subordinate
relationships is known as chain of command.
4. Group of person – basically organisation is a
group of person.
5. Co-ordination – coordinating the different
activities and parts of an organising
6. Communication- own channel of
communication. These channels are necessary
for mutual understanding and co-operation
among members of an organisation.
7. Environment – an organisation functions in
an environment comprises of economic,
social, political and legal factors. Therfore it
must be desired to work efficiently in a
changing environment.
8. Rule and regulation- the rules and regulation
may be in written term or implied form
behaviour.
Process of organising
Steps involved in organizing:
1. Determination of activities
2. Grouping of activities
3. Assignment of duties
4. Delegation of authority
5. Establishment of structural relationship
6. Co-ordination of activities
1. Determination of activities
- identify the work to achieve the goal.
- The entire work is divided into different
activities and each activity is sub-divided into
various sub-activities which can be carried
out by a single individual
- Ensure no activity is left out and no
unnecessary activities are included.
2. Grouping of activities
- Grouping of closely related and similar
activities to form department, division, or
sections.
- Done on the basis of function, processes,
locations, products, customer.
- Departmentation
3. Assignment of duties
- The groups are assigned to different managers
such as production manager, marketing
manager, financial manager, personnel
manager
- This assignment of activities is done at all
levels of operation.
4. Delegation of authority
- It will be very difficult for a person to
perform the duties effectively if there is no
authority to do it.
- Each person has authority and responsibility
to perform the duties.
- Authority and responsibility should be
properly balanced
5. Establishment of structural relationship
- The structural relationship in the organization is
clearly shown with the help of organizational
charts and manuals.
6. Co-ordination of activities
- co-ordination is necessary for optimum
performance
- There must be separate and responsible persons
to see whether all activities are going on to
accomplish the objectives.
Purpose of organizing
Importance of organizing
• Organization is the foundation store upon which the
whole structure of management is built.
• Backbone of management.
1. To facilitate administration
2. To increases the efficiency of management
3. To facilitate growth and diversification
4. To ensure optimum use of man and material resources.
5. To facilitate co-ordination and communication
6. To permit optimum use of technological innovations
7. To simulate creativity
8. To facilitate the development of managerial ability.
1. To facilitate administration
- Administration aims to earn the highest profit.
- A properly designed organisation facilitates
both the management and operation of
enterprise.
- Organisation is the mechanism through which
managers direct , co-ordinate and control the
business.
2. To increases the efficiency of management
- Good org will use workers ability fully and
utilize the resources effectively.
- A well designed org avoids the duplication
and confusion in performance
- So, it automatically motivates the efficiency
of management
3. To facilitate growth and diversification
- The growth of business means an increase in
the scale of operation but the diversification
means the start of production of a new type
of products.
- Sound organization helps in keeping the
various activities under control and it
increases the capacity to do more work.
4. To ensure optimum use of man and material
resources.
- Division of work and specialisation are the tools
for achieving the optimum use of man and
material resources.
- Optimum use of human resources is achieved by
providing psychological satisfication to
employee.
- Right person are placed for the right job at right
time to commensurate their knowledge and skills
5.To facilitate co-ordination and communication
- The activities of different department are
grouped together to achieve the business
objective.
6.To permit optimum use of technological
innovations
- Organisation structure is not rigid, it is flexible
and provides scope for innovative changes in
the enterprise by wake of new departments
7. To simulate creativity
- It provides an opportunity for the staff to show their
hidden talents which will help the enterprise to
achieve the business goals with higher rate of profits
8. To facilitate the development of managerial ability.
- The managerial personnel are trained to acquire a
wide and varied experience in diverse activities
through job rotation.
- This makes them responsible to accept the various
challenges to be faced by the organisation.
Formal and informal
organisation
Formal organisation
- A formal organisation typically consists of
classical hierarchical structure in which position,
responsibility, authority, accountability, and the
line of command with prescribed pattern of
communication, co-ordination and delegation of
authority are clearly defined and established.
- According to Allen “the formal organisation is a
system of well defined jobs, each bearing a
definite measure of authority responsibility and
accountability”
Characteristics of formal organisation
1. It is flexible and properly planned.
2. Based on the principle of division labor and efficiency in
operation.
3. Concentrate more on the performance of job and not on the
individual performing the jobs.
4. Organisation chart are usually drawn.
5. Co-ordination and control among the members are well
specified through processes, procedures rules etc.,
6. Unity of command is normally maintained.
7. The responsibility and accountability at all levels are clearly
well defined.
Advantages of formal organisation
1. Conflict among the workers are reduced.
2. Overlapping of responsibility is avoided.
3. Ensure stable organisation, so less dependent
on one man.
4. A sense of security arises from classification
of the task.
5. Motivates the employees
Informal organisation
• Informal organisation is an organisation which
establishes the relationship on the basis of
member’s interaction, communication, personal
likings and disliking and social contacts within as
well as outside the organisation.
• The typists working in different departments may
form an informal group due to similarity of work.
• The informal organisation relationship exists
under the formal organisation also.
Characteristics of informal
organisation
1. It arises without any external cause. It is the outcome
at the work place.
2. Created on the basis of similarity among the members.
3. This has no place in the organisational chart.
4. One of the part of total organisation.
5. It has no structure and definiteness
6. A person may become a member of several informal
group.
7. Rules are not written but they are commonly followed.
Advantage of informal organisation
1. Since the informal organisation gives satisfaction
to workers, it motivates workers and maintains
the stability of the worker.
2. It fills up the gaps and deficiency of the formal
organisation.
3. It fills up the gaps among abilities of the
managers.
4. The presence of informal organisation
encourages the executives to plan the work
correctly and act accordingly.
5. It is one of the useful channel of communication.
Disadvantage of informal organisation
- May function as a counter- productive.
Barricade of achieving the objective of the
organisation.
- Indirectly reduces the effort of management.
- It spreads a rumor among workers regarding
the functioning of the organisation
unnecessarily.
S.No Formal organisation Informal organisation
Foreman 1 Foreman 2
• Functional authority is the part of the authority of
line personnel.
• Functional authority should satisfy the following:
1. It should be granted only when an enterprise
wants uniformity in operation.
2. Cover only minor part of the line of authority
3. Confined to areas in which line executive do not
possess expertise
4. It should be delegated to the level which is
directly below the position of line personnel.
Advantages
1. Foreman responsible for one function, so he
perform in a better way.
2. Make use of specialist to give expert advice to
workers.
3. It relives line executives of routine, specialized
decision which are sometimes boredom.
4. Expert guideline reduces the number of
accidents and wastages materials, man and
machine hours.
5. Need to search a large number of all round
executives.
limitation
1. Coordination is difficult
2. Functional authority violates the principle of
unity of command.
3. Maintaining the discipline is difficult.
4. Industrial relationship more complex.
5. Workers always remain confused about the
authority and activity of each foreman.
6. Workers are not given the opportunity to make
use of their ingenuity, initiative and drive.
Departmentation
• Departmentation means the process of grouping
the similar activities of the business into
departments, division or other homogeneous
units. It is used for the purpose of facilitating a
smooth administration at all levels.
• Koontz and O’Donnell defined “A
departmentation is a process of dividing the large
monolithic functional organization into small and
flexible administrative units”
Needs and importance of
departmentation
1. Increase operating efficiency of the workers
by providing the specialization of work.
2. Helps in fixing the responsibility. It makes the
executive to be alert and efficient in his
duties.
3. Makes it possible for the enterprise to expand
and grow.
4. New ideas for completing the job effectively
5. Easier for the appraisal of managerial
performance.
6. Result in semi-autonomous unit. The feeling
of autonomy provides the job satisfaction and
motivation which in turn lead to higher
efficiency of operation.
7. Other advantages such as facilitating budget
preparation, effective control of expenditure,
attaining specialization, better co-ordination.
Departmentation by different strategies
1. Departmentation by numbers
2. Departmentation by time
3. Departmentation by enterprise function
4. Departmentation by territory or geography
5. Departmentation by customer.
6. Departmentation by equipment or process
7. Departmentation by product or service
Departmentation by numbers
- Created on the basis of number of persons
forming the department.
- E.g army soldiers are grouped into squads,
battalions, companies, brigades and regiments
on the basis of the number prescribed for each
unit. followed lower level of hierarchy.
Disadvantages
• Specialized persons are frequently more
efficient than those based merely on numbers.
• Useful only at lower level of the organisation.
Departmentation by time
• On the basis of time of performance.
• E.g manufacturing working in three shifts of
eight hours each per day.
• To get advantage of people specialized to work
in a particular shift.
adv
1. Service can be rendered around- the –clock
basis
2. Expensive equipment can be used efficiently
3. Provides part time job for students.
Disadv
1. Supervising lacking during the night shift
2. Several shift, create problem in coordination
and communication.
3. Payment of overtime rate.
Departmentation by enterprise function
1. Lecture
2. Conference and seminar
3. Role-play
4. Case studies
5. Business game
6. In basket- method- basket contains a number of
correspondences such as memos, circulars letters
and reports which all describe the real time problems
the trainees are required to solve each problem and to
record their decision within a specific time period
Performance mgt
• Performance mgt is a process by which
managers and employee work together to plan
monitor and review an employee work
objective and overall contribution to the org.
Barriers of performance appraisal
system
• Faulty assumption
• Psychological barriers- feeling of insecurity,
appraisal as an extra burden.
• Halo effect – it is the tendency of the raters to
depend excessively on the ratee’s one or two
outstandingly good performance in rating all
other traits
• Personal prejudice
Methods of performance appraisal
• Trait-based appraisal
• Job knowledge
• Leadership skills
• Analytical competence
• Judgment ability
• Loyalty
Graphic scale method- employee characteristics
and employee contribution
Ranking method-
Grading- excellent, very good, average, poor etc.
Check list method- many number of yes or no
condition
Critical incident method- based on key incidents.
A stress is given on the behaviour of the
worker on the job.
2. Appraisal by result
MBO
BARS( Behaviourally Anchored Rating Scales)
-combines the elements of traditional traits
scales and critical incident methods
Assessment centers - area polls
career planning and
management
• Edwin B. Flippo defined a career as a
sequence of separate but related work activities
that provide continuity, order and meaning in
person’s life
• Types
1. Individual career
2. Organisation career
Career mgt
• Two essential components
1. Career planning – the process by which
employee obtain the knowledge about
themselves and information about the working
environment and then making an effort to
achieve a proper goal
2. Career development – ongoing process by
which individual progress through a series of
stages each of which is characterized by a
relatively unique set of issues, themes or tasks.
Career stages
1. Exploration stage
(adolescence period age: 15 to 25) – during
which persons seriously explores various
occupational alternatives attempting to match
these alternatives with his or her interest and
abilities.
2. Establishment stage
(early adulthood period age:25 to 35)- begins
with the individuals entry into the world of work
ideally in a position which matches the
organisational needs with individual needs
3. Mid-career or advancement stage
(later adulthood period age:35 to 45)
upward movement in the organisation
4. Late-career or maintenance stage
(middle age, from about 45 to 65)
no longer learning about their jobs nor
expected to exceed levels of performance
from previous years
5. Decline or Disengagement stage
(old age, from about 65 years onwards)
marked by retirement