The paper criticizes the currently dominant view of organization forms as ‘‘discrete alternatives’’ and ‘‘coherent’’ set attributes, and proposes a more refined and micro-analytic view of organization forms as particular combinations of coordination mechanisms and rights allocations. This view is relevant for understanding and devising ‘‘new’’ forms and proposing solutions for governing the composite and fast changing systems of today. The view is ‘‘relational’’ as it offers a procedure for devising ‘‘superior’’ configurations as combinations—relations between organizational components—in a quasi-continuous space of possibilities. The approach is sustained by the quantitative methods of network analysis as applied to relations among firm’s resources and activities. Theoretically, the approach revisits organization design, integrating classic organization theory tenets with the new inputs provided by organizational economics. Substantively, it is argued that a mix of much differentiated coordination mechanisms is usually superior to the codified, ‘‘packaged’’, allegedly ‘‘coherent’’, forms of organization. The procedure presented in the paper is applied to a field experiment in a medium size firm.
A relational approach to organizational design
GRANDORI, ANNA;SODA, GIUSEPPE
2006
Abstract
The paper criticizes the currently dominant view of organization forms as ‘‘discrete alternatives’’ and ‘‘coherent’’ set attributes, and proposes a more refined and micro-analytic view of organization forms as particular combinations of coordination mechanisms and rights allocations. This view is relevant for understanding and devising ‘‘new’’ forms and proposing solutions for governing the composite and fast changing systems of today. The view is ‘‘relational’’ as it offers a procedure for devising ‘‘superior’’ configurations as combinations—relations between organizational components—in a quasi-continuous space of possibilities. The approach is sustained by the quantitative methods of network analysis as applied to relations among firm’s resources and activities. Theoretically, the approach revisits organization design, integrating classic organization theory tenets with the new inputs provided by organizational economics. Substantively, it is argued that a mix of much differentiated coordination mechanisms is usually superior to the codified, ‘‘packaged’’, allegedly ‘‘coherent’’, forms of organization. The procedure presented in the paper is applied to a field experiment in a medium size firm.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.