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Strategic Management




                    Notes          Organisational structure is a tool that managers use to harness resources for getting things done.
                                   It is defined as:
                                   1.  The set of formal tasks assigned to individuals and departments.

                                   2.  Formal reporting relationships, including lines  of authority, responsibility, number of
                                       hierarchical levels and span of manager’s control.
                                   3.  The design of systems to ensure effective coordination of employees across departments.

                                   The set of formal tasks and formal relationships provides a framework for vertical control of the
                                   organisation.
                                   There are two different aspects of the organisational structure:

                                   1.  Superstructure
                                   2.  Infrastructure
                                   1.  Superstructure: This is the highly visible part of the organisational structure. This depicts
                                       how people are grouped into different divisions, departments and sections and how they
                                       are related to each other. The superstructure also indicates the principal ways in which the
                                       organisational operations  are integrated  and coordinated.  By showing  their levels, it
                                       indicates which groups have relatively more strategic importance.
                                   2.  Infrastructure: This is comparatively less visible part of the organisational structure. It is
                                       concerned  with  issues  like  delegation  of  authority, specialization,  communication,
                                       information systems and procedures. The infrastructure enables the organisation to engage
                                       in a number of disparate activities and still keep them coordinated.
                                   The design of organisational structure is a critical task of the top management of an organisation.
                                   It is the skeleton of the whole organisation. It provides relatively more durable organisational
                                   arrangements and relationships.
                                   Thus an organisational structure fulfils two fundamental and opposing requirements:
                                   1.  Division of labour into various tasks
                                   2.  Coordination of these tasks to accomplish effective control of an organisation.
                                   However, as an organisation grows and becomes more complex, it needs appropriate changes
                                   in its design.

                                   11.1 Basic Principles of Organisational Structure

                                   There are several important  principles of organisation, which  need to  be understood before
                                   building an organisation’s structure. They are:
                                   1.  Hierarchy:  Hierarchy  defines who reports to  whom and the span of  control. Span  of
                                       control is the number of people reporting to a supervisor. It determines how closely a
                                       supervisor can monitor subordinates. Tall structures have many levels in the hierarchy
                                       and a narrow span. Communication up and down the hierarchy becomes difficult. Flat
                                       structures are horizontally dispersed having fewer levels in the hierarchy. The trend in
                                       recent years has been towards flat structures allowing for wider spans of control as a way
                                       to facilitate better communication and co-ordination.
                                   2.  Chain of Command: The chain of command is an unbroken line of authority that links all
                                       persons  in an organisation and shows who  reports to  whom.  It  has two  underlying
                                       principles. Unity of command means that each employee is held accountable to only one
                                       supervisor. The scalar principle means a clearly defined line of authority in the organisation.
                                       Authority and responsibility for  different tasks  should be distinct. All  persons in the



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