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Principles and Practices of Management




                    Notes          The same basic organisational form is assumed to be appropriate for any organisation, be it a
                                   government, school, business, church, or fraternity. It is familiar, predictable, and rational. It is
                                   what comes immediately to mind when we discover that ...we really have to get organised!
                                   As  rational as the functional  hierarchy may  be, there  are distinct  disadvantages to  blindly
                                   applying the same form of organisation to all purposeful groups. To state a few,

                                   1.  different groups wish to achieve different outcomes.
                                   2.  different groups have different members, and that each group possesses a different culture.
                                   These differences in desired outcomes, and in culture, should alert the mangers to the danger of
                                   assuming there is any single best way of organising. To be complete, however, also observe that
                                   different groups will likely choose different methods through which they  will achieve their
                                   purpose. Service groups will choose different methods than manufacturing groups, and both
                                   will choose different methods than groups  whose purpose is primarily social. One structure
                                   cannot possibly fit all.

                                   7.2.2  Organising on Purpose

                                   The purpose for which a group exists should be the foundation for everything its members do –
                                   including the choice of an appropriate way to organise. The idea is to create a way of organising
                                   that best suits the purpose to be accomplished, regardless of the way in which other, dissimilar
                                   groups are organised.

                                   Only when there are close similarities in desired outcomes, culture, and methods should the
                                   basic form of one organisation be applied to another.  And even then, only with careful fine
                                   tuning. The danger is that the patterns of activity that help one group to be successful may be
                                   dysfunctional  for  another  group,  and  actually  inhibit  group  effectiveness.  To  optimize
                                   effectiveness, the form of organisation must be matched to the purpose it seeks to achieve.
                                   7.2.3  The Design Process


                                   Organisation design begins with the creation of a strategy – a set of decision guidelines  by
                                   which members will choose appropriate actions. The strategy  is derived from clear, concise
                                   statements of purpose, and vision, and from the organisation's basic philosophy. Strategy unifies
                                   the intent of the  organisation and  focuses members toward actions designed to accomplish
                                   desired outcomes. The strategy encourages actions that support the purpose and discourages
                                   those that do not.

                                   Creating a strategy is planning, not organising. To organise we must connect people with each
                                   other in meaningful and purposeful ways. Further, we must connect people with the information
                                   and technology necessary for them to be successful. Organisation structure defines the formal
                                   relationships  among  people  and  specifies  both  their  roles  and  their  responsibilities.
                                   Administrative systems govern the organisation through guidelines, procedures and policies.
                                   Information and technology define the process(es) through which members achieve outcomes.
                                   Each element must support each of the others and together they must support the organisation's
                                   purpose.


                                          Example: Many organisations including  GP have used  evolutionary computational
                                   methods to optimize various kinds of systems in ways that rival or exceed human capabilities.
                                   It has produced optimization results for a wide variety of problems involving automated synthesis
                                   of controllers, circuits, antennas, genetic networks, and metabolic pathways.






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