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Unit 7: Organising




                                                                                                Notes
             With Jobs ensconced in the Macintosh division, the reorganisation seemed to work at first.
             Jobs devoted his attention to the further development of the Macintosh, which was not
             selling quite as well as had been expected. Meanwhile, the Apple II division turned in a
             record sales performance with the less sophisticated,  but highly  profitable, Apple IIe.
             Unfortunately, trouble began to develop. The Mac division employees, touted by Jobs as
             being superstars, viewed themselves as the Apple elite, since they were developing the
             new technology. Indicative of these feelings, a pirates' flag flew over the building  in
             which the Macintosh division was housed. Morale in the Apple II division was not helped
             when Jobs addressed the Apple II marketing staff as members of the "dull and  boring
             product division." However, with the largest block of stock (11.3 percent) and the job of
             chairman, Jobs was an unusually powerful general manager.
             Troubles accelerated when sales of personal computers began to slump nationally; the
             Mac, in particular, continued to sell less well than anticipated. The situation was exacerbated
             by the fact that the Mac division  chronically missed deadlines for the development  of
             crucial parts of the Mac system. Pushed by the board of directors to take greater control,
             Sculley finally proposed a new organisation structure that would, in effect, eliminate the
             Mac division and with it the general manager position held by Jobs. The proposal (which
             was ultimately approved by the board) was aimed in part at reducing the duplication of
             position, in such areas as marketing, human resources, and manufacturing, that has been
             necessary under the division by products. It called for a functional structure, which included
             product operations (comprising R&D, manufacturing, service, and distribution), marketing
             and sales,  finance and  management information systems,  legal  services, and human
             resources. With the Mac division dissolved, Jobs resigned his position as chairman and
             left the company.
             With 18 months, sales of the Mac, with its technologically advanced desktop publishing
             capability and its relative ease of use for computer novices, started to take off. But other
             companies, including IBM, quickly began to develop products to match the Mac capabilities.
             Although Sculley professed that Job's vision of putting a computer into every person's
             hands and thus changing the world remained intact, Apple watchers wondered whether
             Apple could keep innovating under Sculley.
             To Foster product innovation further, Sculley purchased a super-computer, doubled the
             R&D budget, and increased the number of engineers to more than 1000.

             Meanwhile, Apple sales had grown from about $580 million in 1984 to more than $5 billon
             by 1989. The number of employees almost doubled to more than 10,000 worldwide during
             the same period. This massive growth led Sculley to reorganise once again, this time into
             major geographic division (Apple USA, Apple Pacific, and Apple Europe) with a separate
             division for Apple products. The Apple products division was responsible for all aspects
             of product development, ranging from basic research and product definition all the way
             to manufacturing, introduction, and coordination of marketing. This integrated approach
             was aimed at competing with Japan on price and quality while incorporating the latest
             technology and innovation. The major geographic divisions were responsible for selling
             and servicing the various products in their respective regions.
             Questions

             1.  Use your knowledge of organisation design to assess the probable effectiveness of
                 Apple's new organisation structure.
             2.  What evidence of the differential paradox related to innovation is manifested in this
                 situation?
                                                                                 Contd...




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