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© Newswise. |
Why Companies Must Keep Reorganizing
Newswise — Companies are now being forced to constantly reorganize in order to stay competitive. A new report from The Conference Board pinpoints the implications of executing a new organization design, and the telltale signs that indicate organization problems. The report is based on discussions from recent Conference Board conferences and workshops, with senior executives from a wide variety of industries. “Executives in many companies have come to accept a new reality,” says author Robert Kramer, Principal Researcher, The Conference Board. “Since organizations now experience constant change – driven by today’s global and hyper-competitive environment – they need to build an internal design capability to reorganize on an almost continuous basis. To play this vital role, managers and HR professionals must develop a more robust, holistic definition of organization design and have access to a new set of tools.” * A disconnect between the application of the company’s resources and the work that is done and business outcomes (misalignment of structure to strategy). Other suggestions to improve organization design capability: * Become competent in organization design. Since organization design is a constant (requiring perpetual redesign), companies that do it well make it a core competency for their line managers. * Encourage dialogue regarding organization design among all stakeholders so they understand how the elements of an aligned, flexible design can improve the performance of organizations, teams, and individuals. * Fix the right problem. Careful diagnosis of issues leads to good design recommendations. * Select leaders with the skills, attitudes and competencies required to operate effectively within a new organization design. * Resist the temptation to introduce organizational practices used by others into your company. The alignment of many design choices has greater impact on an organization’s success than a handful of “best in class” but misaligned choices. What other companies do informs – not necessarily answers – how management should resolve a design issue. Source: About The Conference Board
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