Apart from the very simplest form of
enterprise in which one individual carries out all tasks and responsibilities,
business organisations are characterised by a division of labour which allows employees
to specialise in particular roles and to occupy designated positions in pursuit
of the organisation's objectives. The resulting pattern of relationships between
individuals and roles constitutes what is known as the organisations structure
and represents the means by which the purpose and work of the enterprise is
carried our. It also provides a framework through which communications can
occur and within which the processes of management can be applied.
Responsibility for establishing the
formal structure of the organisation lies with management and a variety of
options is available. Whatever form is chosen, the basic need is to identify a
structure which wilt best sustain the success of the enterprise and will permit
the achievement of a number of important objectives. Through its structure an
organisation should be able to:
·
achieve efficiency in the utilisation of
resources;
·
provide opportunities for monitoring
organisational performance;
·
ensure the accountability of
individuals;
·
guarantee co-ordination between the different
parts of the enterprise;
·
provide an efficient and effective means
of organisational communication;
·
create iob satisfaction, including opportunities
for progression; and
·
adapt to changing circumstances brought
about by internal or external developments.
In short, structure is not an end in
itself, but a means to an end and should ideally reflect the needs of the
organisation within its existing context and taking into account its future requirements.
The essence of structure is the division
of work between individuals and the formal organisational relationships that
are created between them. These relationships will be reflected not only in
individual job descriptions, but also in the overall organization chart which
designates the formal pattern of role relationships and the interactions between
roles and the individuals occupying those roles. Individual authority relationships
can be classified as line, staff. functional and lateral and arise from the defined
pattern of responsibilities, as follow's:
·
Line relationshipd occur when authority-flows
vertically downward through the structure
from superior to subordinate (e.g. managers - section leader – staff).
·
Staff relationships are created when
senior personnel appoint assistants who normally have no authority over other staff but act as an extension of their superior.
·
Functional relationship,s are those between
specialists {or advisers) and line managers and their subordinatcs (e.g., when
a specialist provides a common service throughout the organisation but has no
authority over the users of the service). The personnel or computing function
may be one such service that creates a functional relationship. (Note that
specialists have line relationships with their own subordinates.)
·
lateral relationships exist across the
organisation, particularly between individuals occupying equivalent positions
within different departments or sections, (e.g. commitees, head of departments,
section, leaders).
With regird to the division of work and
the grouping of organisational activities, this can occur in a variety of ways.
These include:
·
By function or major purpose, associated
particularly with departmental structures.
·
By product or service, where individuals
responsible for a particular product or service are grouped together.
·
By location, based on geographical
criteria
·
By common processes (e.g. particular
skills or merhods of operation)
·
By client group (e.g. children the
disabled, the elderly).
In some organisations a particular
method of grouping will predominate; in others there will tend to be a variety
of types and each has its own particular advantages and disadvantages. In the
discussion below, attention is focused on five main methods of grouping
activities in business organisations. Students should attempt to discover what
types of structure exist within their own educational institution and the logic
(!) which underlies the choices made.
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