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Principles and Practices of Management




                    Notes          2.  Vertical and  horizontal  coordination:  Coordination  between  different  levels  of  an
                                       organisation is called 'vertical coordination'. It is achieved by top management, through
                                       delegation of authority. When coordination is brought between various positions, at the
                                       same level in the organisation (i.e., between production, sales, finance, personnel, etc.) it
                                       is called 'horizontal  coordination'. Horizontal coordination is achieved through mutual
                                       consultations and cooperation.




                                      Task       Enlist  various  types  of  coordination  that  you  see  around  you  in  the
                                                 organisation that you are currently related to.

                                   10.9 Issues and Systems Approach to Coordination


                                   The systems approach decomposes an organisation into three broad components of actors, goals
                                   and resources. The actors, comprising of entities such as management, employees, customers,
                                   suppliers and other stakeholders perform interdependent activities aimed at achieving certain
                                   goals.
                                   Multiple actors and interactions, resources and goals need to be coordinated if common desired
                                   outcomes are to be achieved. Viewed from the need to maintain perspective and solve problems
                                   that might arise from these multiplicities, coordination links hand in glove with the concept of
                                   systems thinking. Actors in organisations are faced with coordination problems. Coordination
                                   problems are a consequence of dependencies in the organisation that constrain the efficiency of
                                   task performance.
                                   Organisations are systems in the sense that they comprise of elements that interact to produce a
                                   predetermined behavior or output. Change in a  constituent part  of a  system may  constrain
                                   efficient functioning  of  other  parts  of  the same  system or  alter  required input or  output
                                   specifications.

                                   The solution  to coordination problems, according  to coordination theory, lies  in the actors
                                   performing  additional activities called coordination mechanisms. The theory maintains that
                                   dependences and mechanisms to counter them are general in the sense that they arise in one
                                   form or another in nearly every organisation.
                                   A simplified typology of the kind of dependences that call for coordination in an organisation
                                   may be:
                                   1.  Task-task: Tasks may have overlapping, conflicting or outputs with the same characteristics;
                                       Common inputs for tasks may be shareable, reusable or non-reusable; the output of one
                                       task may be the input of other tasks or a prerequisite for performing subsequent tasks.
                                       There may be conflict in specifications that need coordination.
                                   2.  Task-resource i.e. resources required by a task.
                                   3.  Resource-resource: A situation in which one resource depends on another resource. Each
                                       of these dependences requires an appropriate coordination mechanism to manage it.
                                   In conclusion, solution to organisational problems, implementation of change or formation of
                                   a new organisation involves the management of numerous dependences among tasks, resources
                                   and goals.










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