Reread The Domtar Case Study (P.1-3) From Chapter 1. Answer Case Analysis Question 1 On Page 207.

CASE: Taking Charge at Domtar: What It Takes for a Turnaround*

 

Domtar is the third largest producer of uncoated free sheet paper in North America. In the decade prior to 1996, Domtar had one of the worst financial records in the pulp and paper industry. At that time it was a bureaucratic and hierarchical organization with no clear goals. Half of its business 12was in “trouble areas.” Moreover, the company did not have the critical mass to compete with the larger names in the field. The balance sheet was in bad shape, and the company did not have investment-grade status on its long-term debt.

 

In July of 1996, Raymond Royer was named president and chief executive officer (CEO). This was quite a surprise because, although Royer had been successful at Bombardier, he had no knowledge of the pulp and paper industry. Many believed that to be successful at Domtar, you needed to know the industry.

 

Royer knew that to be effective in any competitive industry, an organization needed to have a strategic direction and specific goals. He decided to focus on two goals: return on investment and customer service. Royer told Domtar executives that to survive, they needed to participate in the consolidation of the industry and increase its critical mass. The goal was to become a preferred supplier. The competitive strategy had to focus on being innovative in product design, high in product quality, and unique in customer service. At the same time, however, it had to do everything to keep costs down.

 

When Royer took over at Domtar, he explained to the executive team that there were three pillars to the company: customers, shareholders, and ourselves. He noted that it is only “ourselves” who are able to have any impact on changing the company. He backed up his words with action by hiring the Kaizen guru from Bombardier. Kaizen, a process of getting employees involved by using their expertise in the development of new and more effective ways of doing things, had been very effective at Bombardier. Royer saw no reason why it would not be successful at Domtar. Royer also knew that for the new strategic direction and focus to be successful, everyone needed to both understand the changes being proposed and have the skills to achieve them. The success of any change process requires extensive training; therefore, training became a key part of Royer’s strategy for Domtar.

 

This last point reflects the belief that it is the employees’ competencies that make the difference. The Domtar Difference, as it is called, is reflected in the statement, “tapping the intelligence of the experts, our employees.” Employees must be motivated to become involved in developing new ways of doing things. Thus, Domtar needed to provide employees with incentives for change, new skills, and a different attitude toward work. The introduction of Kaizen was one tactic used to achieve these goals.

 

Training at Domtar went beyond the traditional job training necessary to do the job effectively and included training in customer service and Kaizen. This is reflected in Domtar’s mission, which is to

 

 

 

  • • meet the ever-changing needs of our customers,
  • • provide shareholders with attractive returns, and
  • • create an environment in which shared human values and personal commitment prevail.

 

In this regard, a performance management system was put in place to provide a mechanism for employees to receive feedback about their effectiveness. This process laid the groundwork for successfully attaining such objectives as improving employee performance, communicating the Domtar values, clarifying individual roles, and fostering better communication between employees and managers. Tied to this were performance incentives that rewarded employees with opportunities to share in the profits of the company.

 

23

 

Has Royer been successful with his approach? First-quarter net earnings in 1998 were $17 million, compared with a net loss of $12 million for the same time period in 1997, his first year in office. In 2002, third-quarter earnings were $59 million and totaled $141 million for the year. That is not all. Recall his goal of return on equity for shareholders. Domtar has once again been included on the Dow Jones sustainability index. Domtar has been on this list since its inception in 1999 and is the only pulp and paper company in North America to be part of this index. To be on the list, a company must demonstrate an approach that “aims to create long-term shareholder value by embracing opportunities and managing risks that arise from economic, environmental, and social developments.” On the basis of this, it could be said that Royer has been successful. In 2003, Paperloop, the pulp and paper industry’s international research and information service, named Royer Global CEO of the year.

 

It was Royer’s sound management policies and shrewd joint ventures and acquisitions that helped Domtar become more competitive and return their long-term debt rating to investment grade. However, joint ventures and acquisitions bring additional challenges of integrating the new companies into the “Domtar way.” Again, this requires training.

 

For example, when Domtar purchased the Ashdown Mill in Arkansas, the management team met with employees to set the climate for change. The plan was that within 14 months, all mill employees would complete a two-day training program designed to help them understand the Domtar culture and how to service customers. A manager always started the oneday customer focus training, thus emphasizing the importance of the training. This manager returned again at lunch to answer any questions as the training proceeded. In addition, for supervisor training, each supervisor received skill training on how to effectively address employee issues. How successful has all this training been? Employee Randy Gerber says the training “allows us to realize that to be successful, we must share human values and integrate them into our daily activities.” The training shows that “the company is committed to the program.” Tammy Waters, a communications coordinator, said that the training impacted the mill in many ways and for Ashdown employees it has become a way of life.

 

The same process takes place in Domtar’s joint ventures. In northern Ontario, Domtar owns a 45 percent interest in a mill, with the Cree of James Bay owning the remaining 55 percent. Although Domtar has minority interest in the joint venture, training is an important part of its involvement. Skills training still takes place on site, but all management and teamwork training is done at Domtar’s headquarters in Montreal.

 

Royer’s ability to get employees to buy into this new way of doing business was necessary for the organization to succeed. Paperloop’s editorial director for news products, Will Mies, in describing why Royer was chosen for the award, indicated that they polled a large number of respected security analysts, investment officers, and portfolio managers as well as their own staff of editors, analysts, and economists to determine a worthy winner this year. Raymond Royer emerged a clear favorite, with voters citing, in particular, his talent for turnaround, outstanding financial management, and consistently excellent merger, acquisition, and consolidation moves as well as his ability to integrate acquired businesses through a management system that engages employees. Of course, that last part, “a management system that engages employees,” could be said to be the key without which most of the rest would not work very well. That requires training.

 

*

 

Swift, A. “Royer’s Domtar turnaround.” Financial Post (October 6 2003), FP3. Allen, B. 2003. The Domtar difference. www.pimaweb.org/conferences/june2003/BuddyAllen.pdf. Anonymous (January 2001) Partnership between Domtar and Cree First Nations brings results. www.diversityupdate.com. Richard Descarries, Manager, Corporate Communications and External Relations, Domtar, personal communication (2004).

 

 

 

Review the Domtar case from Chapter 1, and answer the following questions:

 

  • a. In the implementation of Kaizen, what groups of employees are likely to need training? How should the trainees be organized? Think of this issue from a training design perspective and from a training content perspective.
  • b. For the type of training envisioned, what are the learning objectives? Write these objectives in complete form.
  • c. For each group of employees that will need training, what are the organizational constraints that need to be addressed in the design of the training? What design features should be used to address these constraints? Be sure to address both the learning and transfer of training issues.

 

 
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Supply Chain Case Study

Drop Box #2: Global Supply Chain Management and Planning

Signed, sealed and delivered?

Plexet is a mid-sized manufacturing firm located in Auckland, New Zealand. The company produces a range of plastic containers that includes their flagship product range, Goodseal. The Goodseal brand includes a range of plastic food storage containers, designed to be sold to retailers and grocery stores for home use. The containers are sold in 3 and 6 packs, in three different sizes: 0.25L, 0.5L and 1L. They are typically marketed to consumers for food storage in the refrigerator or freezer. Currently, Plexet has achieved a 9 percent annual sales growth over the past five years. Within the manufacturing plant, the company is running three shifts at full capacity, although the plastic molding equipment is running at only 58 percent of its optimal production capacity. Production levels fluctuate frequently, and Plexet adjusts its labour schedule around their forecasted sales demands. The sales manager is concerned about sluggish sales over the past six months, and is aware that manufacturing targets are based on the recent sales forecasts. Having an excess of product is of concern with Plexet management. Therefore, increasing production is not a strategy considered to help boost quarterly sales targets. Instead, Plexet is considering offering a discount to their suppliers, as well as adopting a new marketing strategy that will offer consumers coupons to buy one Goodseal product and receive a 3 pack of 1L containers free.

Plexet do not receive as many orders for the 1L Goodseal container from their suppliers as they do for other container sizes. As a result, Plexet has decided to discontinue the 1L product and focus manufacturing efforts on the more popular sizes. This will enable the manufacturing plant to replace the 1L molds with 0.25L and .05L components. This is may help alleviate the low 58 percent rate of production because there will be more equipment to handle the production of the two remaining product lines. Managers believe this will increase their production levels. The coupon strategy is designed to help move some of the obsolete 1L product from their inventory, in addition to retaining consumer loyalty with the smaller sized products. The manufacturer will implement the sales and production strategies over the next fiscal year.

What is promising for Plexet is a recent order from Chinex, an exporting agent that sells to China. The agreement stipulates that Plexet will ship 25,000 cases of the entire Goodseal line to Chinex. This could not have come at a better time, because the order will be placed in time to meet Plexet’s quarterly sales target. To expedite the sale, Chinex has been offered a significant discount. Chinex has agreed to send payment within seven business days, and pay by letter of credit from a reputable Australian bank.

Meanwhile, back at the retail store

Plexet has a reliable supplier relationship with a large retail chain, KiwiMart (KM). The head of purchasing at KM acquired 4000 cases of containers this quarter at a 4 percent discount from Plexet, but has sold only 1800 over the last two quarters. She decided that KM’s in regions outside of Auckland would also benefit from the discounted price, and has sold 1800 to them. In addition, she has sold 400 cases to a wholesaler at cost, with a negotiated deal to buy them back at a 3 percent premium within 90 days if KM needed the supply. This has helped the other KM’s throughout the country, as well as solved any inventory issues with the Auckland KM. The plan is for the Auckland KM to discount 1000 cases for a special in-store promotion.

Soon after the deal with Plexet had been negotiated, Chinex contacted the head of KM’s purchasing department. They offered a significant 7 percent discount on 5000 cases of assorted Goodseal products. The deal was far too good to be ignored and KM accepted the deal. The sales department contacted Plexet and cancelled their next three orders. KM received the Chinex products over a month late.

Unfortunately, the purchasing manager was unaware of the situation on the ground in the local KM. The shelves holding the Goodseal line had an ample supply of the 1L six packs, but no other size was on the shelf. Worse yet, Plexet’s competitors were stocked next to the Goodseal line, and had a full line of product sizes and quantities per pack.

What’s the problem?

Plexet is under the assumption that they have a sales crisis. Forecasted demands are higher than their current rate of sales. They have decided to help resolve this by adjusting their product line, and adapting their production line to manufacture more products that sell faster. Offering coupons would help boost sales and consumer loyalty. The purchasing department at KM believes they have addressed a potential inventory crisis, are secure in the amount of supply they have acquired, and have perhaps even boosted their bottom line through the recent acquisition of the cheaper Goodseal product from Chinex.

Case Study Discussion Questions

a) What is wrong with the Current KiwiMart supply and inventory system?

b) Explain how conducting an organized and systematic sourcing process would benefit the purchasing department at KiwiMart (KM).

2. What form of partnership would help improve both KM and Plexet’s supply chains?

3. How would Plexet benefit from adopting a JIT (Just in Time) approach to production?

4. Explain the advantages KM and Plexet would receive from implementing an inventory management system.

 
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For A-Plus Writer Only

Turnover Calculations

 

This week, you examined the types of employee turnover and the various HR metrics available to assist in reducing the expense of turnover for organizations. Many organizations express concern about turnover because of the high costs of hiring and training new employees. Although not all turnover is negative, organizations can benefit from being able to measure and quantify it.

 

For your Discussion this week, consider the data below the table titled “Model for Costing Lost Productivity” found in Chapter 5 (p. 165) of the Mathis, Jackson, and Valentine course text.

 

With these thoughts in mind:

 

Submit by Wednesday 7-13-16 a substantive response of at least 450 words, which includes a brief interpretation of the data presented, your reaction to the data, and the reason for your reaction. Explain a possible reason for the turnover costs and the possible implications of the data for human resource professionals and organizations. Provide at least one potential solution for reducing turnover rate that could enable an organization to promote positive social change. Explain how your solution would promote positive social change.

 

Support your work with specific citations from the Learning Resources. You are allowed to draw from additional sources to support your work, but you must cite using APA standards. All quoted material must be identified, cited, and referenced per APA standards.

 

 
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Management Study Cases

Management Information Systems 13e KENNETH C. LAUDON AND JANE P. LAUDON

continued

Systems

CHAPTER 7 TELECOMMUNICATIONS, THE INTERNET, AND WIRELESS TECHNOLOGY

CASE 1 Telepresence Moves Out of the Boardroom and Into the Field

(a) TelePresence: In-Person Experiences for All URL http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rcfNC_x0VvE; L= 3:59

(b) AXA Cuts Costs and Carbon Emissions with immersive video collaboration

URL http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dD4a8Y3lEgs; L=3:52

SUMMARY Telepresence is one of the fastest growing business-technology applications. It combines the power of global, high-speed, broadband Internet networks with local video, audio, and processing power to create effective meeting and decision-making environments for managers at a fraction of the cost of face-to-face, in-person meetings. As the cost of telepresence declines, it is being deployed more deeply and broadly into business firms, involving a much wider range of employees and decision-making situations.

CASE Telepresence is the effort to create a digital environment using video and audio technologies which mimic key features of real-world interactions with people and objects. Telepresence is not the same as virtual reality because the actors involved in telepresence are human beings, not avatars. Telepresence is more than just video conferencing because it has a more immersive quality. The primary use of telepresence today is to support group meetings that allow participants to be physically in different places but to interact in a realistic environment as if they were all in the same meeting room. Other uses include the use of telepresence to

 

 

Chapter 7, Case 1 telepresenCe Moves out of the BoardrooM and Into the fIeld 2

continued

control and manipulate robots and objects in manufacturing and field settings where the use of humans would be dangerous. Military uses include control over robotic “drone” aircraft, and inspection of nuclear submarine reactors.

Telepresence, once thought to be the stuff of a distant future, has definitively arrived. First discussed as a technical possibility in the 1960s, and earlier in some novels, telepresence today is thriving thanks to broadband Internet service that has continental and global reach, field-of-view cameras that can capture a 360 degree visual experience; multiple large moni- tors to display the experience; realistic wraparound sound systems; and increased comput- ing power in the form of servers and client PCs. Telepresence systems that used to cost millions of dollars now cost thousands of dollars.

Business firms invest in telepresence systems and technologies for a variety of reasons including reduction of travel time and expenses, reduction in carbon emissions caused by unnecessary travel, improvements in worker productivity that result from lowered meeting and collaboration costs, and not least, improvements in employee quality of life. With telep- resence technologies, employees do not waste time standing in lines at airports or spending hours on flights or being away from their families for extended periods.

For high-quality telepresence, firms must make large investments in special meeting rooms, monitors, servers, and software to develop telepresence applications. This generally means that only Fortune 1000 companies can afford the top-of-the-line tools of Cisco’s telepres- ence suite. But prices are falling, so even some school districts can afford the infrastructure needed for telepresence. Schools and colleges are also making increased use of telepres- ence. Schools such as the Fontana United school district in California, which has 41,000 students at 40 school sites spread out over 40 miles and split over two major freeways, are benefiting from the introduction of telepresence technologies via a pilot program with Cisco.

Telepresence systems aimed at corporate customers are sold by Cisco , AT&T, Digital Video Enterprises (DVE), Polycom, HP, , Telanetix, Tandberg, BrightCom, LifeSize, and Teliris. Prices range from tens to hundreds of thousands of dollars. These systems include multiple micro- phones, speakers, high-definition monitors, cameras, and often dedicated networks and custom-made studios. They strive to be as transparent to users as possible by providing life-size videos, imperceptible transmission delays, and user-friendly interfaces.

AXA: Global Financial Services

AXA provides financial services such as insurance, banking, and savings and retirement programs to individuals as well as businesses, both large and small. With operations in 61 countries that serve more than 95 million customers worldwide, AXA wanted to better leverage the collective knowledge and experience of its 214,000 employees. In addition

 

 

Chapter 7, Case 1 telepresenCe Moves out of the BoardrooM and Into the fIeld 3

1. List and discuss briefly the benefits claimed by Cisco for its “In-person” experiences using telepresence.

2. AXA is a global financial services firm. Describe why they invested in telepresence.

3. Why does AXA need special rooms dedicated to telepresence? Why can’t conferences take place at the desktop?

4. In the past, work was organized into central buildings located in central locations (like cities) in order to facilitate face-to-face interactions. What impacts might telepresence have on the organization of work? How could you use these tools to organize work on a global scale with actually building physical facilities in remote locations?

VIDEO CASE Q U E S T I O N S

to promoting collaboration and sharing of best practices, the firm wanted to reduce the travel burden on executives, and the carbon footprint of the firm, as well as improve the productivity of executives who were constantly moving between different AXA offices and client sites. AXA possessed a basic, older video conferencing system, but it was difficult to use and plagued by performance problems that made interactions stilted and awkward. The challenge facing the firm was to identify technologies and vendors who could deliver a workable telepresence system that could be rolled out across its major operations centers.

AXA began by building two beta Cisco Telepresence systems, one in New York and the other in Paris. Early users, mostly senior executives, were impressed. This early success led to the development of a global network of 43 telepresence centers in 14 countries. A vendor partner, Orange Business Services, contributed expertise for the implementation. So far, AXA has hosted 43,000 meetings, reduced the number of executive trips by 20,000, and saved 23,000 tons of carbon emissions. In the first three years the firm expects to save about $130 million.

COPYRIGHT NOTICE Copyright © 2013 Kenneth Laudon. This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors in teaching their courses and assessing student learning. Dissemination or sale of any part of this work (including on the World Wide Web) will destroy the integrity of the work and is not permitted. The work and materials from this site should not be made available to students except by instructors using the accompanying text in their classes. All recipients of this work are expected to abide by these restrictions and to honor the intended pedagogical purposes and the needs of other instructors who rely on these materials.

 
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Case

Conflict at ToyKing 1 Karen Washington was fuming as she marched back to her workspace. “How could that arrogant, so-and-so do that to me!” she thought. She had just come from the presentation of her new toy concept to the executives of new Product Development and marketing at ToyKing’s Design Studio. It wasn’t that the presentation went poorly – quite the opposite had happened, in fact. Both Max Carroll (the head of New Product Development) and Sherry Greenberg (the head of Marketing) loved Karen’s idea and prototype for a new interactive toy city where children were able to assign names and personalities to programmable character pieces. Sherry called it a “brame-breaking” concept that would revolutionize the Toy City line of products. Even more exciting, Max had said that the toy concept was a front-runner to be featured in ToyKing’s exhibit at next year’s American International Toy Fair, the largest and most prestigious trade show in the toy business. What was bothering Karen was that senior designer, Jeff Chang, had taken over the presentation, without Karen’s permission, and had basically claimed credit for the toy concept. As the senior on the project team, Jeff was, technically, in charge of all design projects. Yet, the culture at ToyKing allowed junior designers to take the lead on projects they had conceived. Further, these designers were often allowed to take control of formal presentation on their ideas, and to guide revisions to the designs following meetings with new Product Development and Marketing. Karen had assumed that she would be allowed to present the idea to Max and Sherry, and had developed a PowerPoint presentation for the meeting at Jeff’s request. After Jeff saw it, he said it was great, and that he would like to “introduce” the new design to Max and Sherry at the meeting using the PowerPoint. Karen thought that Jeff meant that he would merely start the presentation, and then hand it over to her following a brief introduction. But Jeff didn’t do that. He made the entire presentation, using Karen’s PowerPoint, and only referred to her briefly in his remarks and during the Q&A. In Karen’s mind, Jeff had stolen credit for her idea, and used how own PowerPoint to do it!

Background on ToyKing

What Was it Like to Work at ToyKing? ToyKing was a large, U.S. based toy design and manufacturing company that specialized in educational toys and games. The company headquarters were located in Torrance, CA, and included a large Design Studio department that housed over 60 toy designers, along with another 20 technicians and fabricators. The Design Studio had a very flat organizational hierarchy with just two ranks; junior designers and senior designers. Senior Designers made up about 15 of the total designers (the remaining 45 were junior designers), and were typically long-time employees (10 years or longer at ToyKing). Senior designers had supervisory

1 ​Adapted from the work of Kimberley D. Elsbach.

ENTR3110 A.Bickell 1

 

 

responsibilities for all the projects that were underway in the Design Studio, but junior designers could (and often would) be seen as the “creative lead” on design projects that they spearheaded. ToyKing produced about 200 new toy concepts per year. These toy concepts ranged from minor modifications to the design of a toy car, or to a completely new toy system (such as a new toy system involving interlocking toy bricks). Of these 200 new concepts, about 50 of these would be put into pilot programs, and about 20 would ultimately be produced for retail sale. For each of the 50 pilot programs, a senior designer would construct a team of 3-5 members, including junior designers, technicians and fabricators.

What were ToyKing’s Best Sellers? ToyKing’s most successful product line was ToyCity. The Toy City line included packaged sets of interlocking and customizable toy houses, stores, streets, parks, and other structures that kids could construct to make an entire working city. Kids could also add people, pets, cars, trucks, and construction machinery to the city. Although the packages came with suggested construction ideas, kids could modify these designs and construct completely original designs for the structures in their one-of-a-kind cities. This feature was what made ToyCity so popular that they won several awards at the American International Toy Fair. ToyCity was considered the crown jewel of the ToyKing product line, and there was fierce competition among designers to design components for this line. Working on the ToyCity line was seen as one of the best ways to win design awards and move up from junior to senior design.

Background on Karen’s Toy Concept The events occurring over the previous three months during the development of Karen’s toy concept are important in understanding what happened in the presentation. The concept was born during a lunchtime conversation between Karen and two other junior designers on her team.

Three Months Ago: Lunch at Mo’s Karen, and two other junior designers, Sam Gupta and Cassie Wu, were having their weekly lunch out at Mo’s, a hip diner in Santa Monica that attracted more unknown artists and musicians than celebrity television and movie actors. While waiting for their triple espressos to arrive, Karen decided to tell Sam and Cassie about a “wild-brained” idea she had for an interactive spin on ToyKing’s popular ToyCity line of toys. As Karen explained, “The ToyCity line is a huge hit with kids ages 4-9 because it allows them to make their own “city” and continue to add on to it as they acquire more pieces. The customizability of the line is what kids love.” Karen went on,

ENTR3110 A.Bickell 2

 

 

“What could be even cooler, is if the kids could program some of the play pieces (e.g., the people and pets) so that they had their own personalities and would remember past interaction with other play pieces.” In Karen’s concept, kids would be able to provide the people and pet pieces with personalities, ages, voices, and genders through a simple program installed in each play piece. Then, these programmed play pieces could interact with other play pieces based on these personalities and their actual past play experiences. For example, a play piece resembling a dog could be named “Spot” and given a super-energetic personality. This play piece would then ask all other play pieces who greeted it to play ball or go for a run. If it interacted with another play piece (resembling a child, for example) that it had played with before, it would remember that instance and talk about it with the “child” play piece. Both Sam and Cassie though this was a very cool idea indeed. They hashed out the details with Karen over the next hour and a half, making notes on napkins and coasters. By the end of lunch, karen, Sam and Cassie felt they had an idea worthy of the American International Toy Fair. Sam and Cassie both encouraged Karen to pursue it with their Senior Designer, Jeff Chang, at that week’s staff meeting. Sam also mentioned that Karen should make the cars, trucks, and machines programmable, because a recent focus group with kids had revealed that they like to give these objects personalities. Karen was inspired by their enthusiasm and promised to include them in the design team.

Staff Meeting with Jeff Chang Later that week, Karen followed up on Sam and Cassie’s suggestion and presented a more polished version of her idea to the entire work group and their Senior Designer, Jeff Chang. Jeff though the idea had merit, but wondered about the cost and the difficulty that kids might have programming their play pieces. He gave Karen permission to pursue the idea and a small budget with which to develop some prototypes. At her suggestion, Jeff put Karen on a team with Sam and Cassie, along with a technician and fabricator. He said he’d look at the idea in prototype in six weeks.

Six Weeks Later: Prototype Presentation After six weeks of late nights and constant tinkering, Karen – with the help of a technician and fabricator – had build prototypes of several programmable play pieces for the ToyCity line. She hated to admit it, but working with technician Andy Sprague, and fabricator Mike Camacho, had been really productive. In fact, these two lowly staff members had helped Karen not only to produce the prototypes, but had come up with some cool new features for the play pieces. For instance, Mike, a former welder and electrician, had suggested that they use waterproof, underwater welding materials to encase the computer chips, so that even if kids threw them in the bathtub, they would still work. In fact, they would work with ToyCity’s new DiveCity – an underwater research vessel with scuba divers that could be used in the tub or a swimming pool. In addition, Andy, a computer designer and rendering specialist helped Karen to design a

ENTR3110 A.Bickell 3

 

 

hand-held programming device that play pieces would be “seated” in and then easily programmed through a simple menu of commands. Working with Andy and Mike had been so easy and productive in fact, that Karen had avoided meeting with her junior designer teammates, Sam and Cassie, during the past six weeks. She really felt that she owned this project and should be given latitude to make all the decisions, because it was her original idea. As technicians and fabricators, Andy and Mike would not challenge her ideas and not be upset if she vetoed their suggestions. By contrast, Karen knew that the other junior designers on her team (Sam and Cassie) would want to change some of her ideas, and she did not want to give them the chance to do that. She knew that their ideas would not be as good as her own, and they would really slow down the design process. She thought if she waited until right before the prototype presentation to fill them in, it would be too late to make changes to the design. So that’s what she did, and now she was about to reveal her prototypes to the team. The presentation took place in the 3rd Floor Conference room, with view of the Pacific Ocean. In attendance were all of the design teams presenting ideas. This included senior designers, junior designers, and the technicians and fabricators that had been working on the projects to be presented. Karen opened the presentation by thanking Jeff Chang for the opportunity to pursue her idea for the ToyCity line. She then brought out the prototypes and hand-held programmer, and demonstrated how the pieces would work. Her teammates were surprised that she had moved so far in the design process without consulting them, and had many questions about the design. In particular, Sam asked why she had programmed just the people and pets in her prototypes, and why she hadn’t made the cards, machines, and other structures programmable. As he noted, “Karen, I thought we had talked about allowing the cars and trucks and machines to have personalities? You know that was something our kids’ focus group showed to be important. Why did you leave that feature out?” Karen brushed off this comment and said, “Well, we never agreed to that. And it’s too late to make that change anyway.” Karen quickly finished up the presentation to avoid any other suggestions from Sam and Cassie, and thanked everyone for coming. As everyone filed out of the conference room, Jeff Chang stopped Karen and said, “Karen, I really like the concept, and I’m ready to move the project forward to the next stage. I want to include it in my presentation to the Heads of New Product Development and Marketing in six weeks. Do you think you can have a full line of play pieces, and some marketing ideas by then?” Karen was surprised but delighted, “Of course I can!” she said. Then Jeff went on to say, “Just make sure you keep me up to date on your progress. I want to meet with you once a week between now and then so that I can make sure this thing is ready. I know what these honchos

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want, and I want to make sure I’m ready for them.” Karen said, “Sure, no problem. I’ll schedule the meetings right away.” As Karen walked away she could help but smile. This was better than she had expected. She was on her way to an award at the American International Toy Fair for sure.

Today’s Presentation Six weeks later, and the big presentation was about to begin. Karen had gone over the presentation in detail with Jeff Chang the previous week. Jeff had added several of his own edits to the final slides, and had convinced Karen that he should take the lead on “introducing” the presentation because he “understood what these corporate honchos wanted to hear”. Jeff mentioned that he would call on Karen when he needed her, but that he had a good idea about how to position the concept so that it go the green light for further development. Karen really wanted to make the presentation, but she wanted more for the project to be approved. So she agreed to let Jeff make the presentation. Jeff began the presentation with some witty banter with Max Carroll and Sherry Greenberg, and then moved into the financial summaries of last year’s best sellers. After a half an hour of financial reviews, Karen was getting impatient. When was Jeff going to talk about her idea? Why was he spending so much time talking about the profit margins on ToyCity and DiveCity from last year? Finally, Jeff got to the new toy concepts. He said he would present three ideas. He began with two rather lackluster improvements on the ToyCity toddler line. These were not hit ideas, and Karen did not understand why he was even presenting them. He then presented Karen’s idea for the “Programmable ToyCity Line”. Jeff was really good, Karen had to admit. He showed Max and Sherry clips of kids’ focus groups, and highlighted the kids saying they wanted their toys to have personalities and be “their friends”. He also showed Max and Sherry how much kids loved the underwater DiveCity line. Then he brought out the prototypes for Karen’s toy concept. He showed Max and Sherry how the play pieces could be programmed to have personalities and become friends with each other and with the kids. He also showed them how the play pieces could even be sued with the DiveCity line due to their waterproof welding feature. Throughout the presentation Karen was tempted to speak up and offer more information, but Jeff never gave her the chance. In fact, other than pointing out that she was the junior designer who had come up with the concept during the Q&A, Jeff never said one work to or about Karen the entire time. Max and Sherry loved the idea and congratulated Jeff on another winning concept. They both said that they looked forward to seeing the full line at next year’s American International Toy Fair, and patted Jeff on the back as they left. Jeff hustled after them and asked if they could go to coffee to talk about a few other things. Smiling, the three left without saying another word to Karen.

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Later, back at her desk, Karen was still fuming about the meeting. Karen was practically screaming inside as she thought to herself, “That jerk Jeff took all the credit and stole my idea. I’d be surprised if my name goes on it at all at the Toy Fair!”

Scenario One: At lunch on Monday Karen appears at Mo’s where many of the junior designers escape for lunch. You, Sam, and Cassie are sitting on the patio enjoying a well deserved respite from the cubicle jungle that is ToyCity. Karen pulls up a chair and joins the group. She promptly begins complaining about Jeff and his “antics” from the presentation the week before. Sam and Cassie quickly finish up their lunch and excuse themselves – leaving you and Karen at the table. Also a junior designer at ToyKing, you know very well the details of Karen’s project. In fact, thanks to your working relationships with Sam, Cassie, Andy and Mike, you may have more information about how things transpired than even Karen does. Karen recounts her story, yet again, and then surprises you by asking, “What should I do now?” As a fellow junior designer, a colleague to all parties involved, and a direct report to Jeff, what would you suggest she do now? How will you convince her that your advice is sound? Prepare a response to Karen. Keep in mind that this a professional scenario. Work to reply as you would if you really were an employee at Toy King.

Organizational Chart for Scenario One:

 

Scenario Two: You are a senior executive at ToyKing overseeing Marketing and Product Development. Max and Sherry, your direct reports, have provided you with a brief on a promising new development that has arisen from the Design Studio called the “Programmable ToyCity Line”. The numbers look good, and the marketing research supports the idea. All in all, you are pleased that this area of the firm is working so effectively. You wrestle yourself away from the windows in your corner office and prepare to return your attention to areas that aren’t working as well when the peace of your corner office is abruptly interrupted by a ferocious knock on your door. You haven’t time to even look up from your desk when a young woman storms through the door and

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demands to be heard. She quickly reports that she is the junior designer that was solely responsible for the “Programmable ToyCity Line” proposal and that you need to hear what she has to say. You are taken aback, and whether due to shock, curiosity or some sense of concern for her mental well being, patiently invite the young woman to sit, and share what she has to say. Karen recounts the tale of injustice she’s experienced while you listen attentively. Once she is finished, you commend her on her fine work with the “Programmable ToyCity Line” and you sincerely thank her for confiding in you. You assure her that you will consider this new information very carefully and will get back to her by week’s end. Once Karen leaves your office and returns to work – what do you do? How do you know this is the best course of action? Outline your course of action and provide supporting rationale. Keep in mind that this a professional scenario. Work to reply as you would if you really were a senior executive at Toy King.

Organizational Chart for Scenario Two:

 

ENTR3110 A.Bickell 7

 
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Exam Questions

2Managing with Power

4Jeffrey Pfeffer

6Published by the Harvard Business School Press in hardcover, 1992; in paperback, 1994

© 1992 by Jeffrey Pfeffer All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America

00 01 02 12 11 10 (pbk)

The Library of Congress has catalogued the hardcover edition of this title as follows:

Pfeffer, Jeffrey. Managing with power : politics and influence in organizations / Jeffrey Pfeffer.

p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index.

9781422143452 1. Decision-making. 2. Power (Social sciences) 3. Organizational behavior. I.

Title. HD30.23.P47 1992 658.4’095 — dc20

91-26237 CIP

ISBN 0-87584-440-5 (pbk)

The paper used in this publication meets the requirements of the American National Standard for Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials Z39-49—1984.

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Table of Contents

 

Title Page Copyright Page Acknowledgments PART I – Power in Organizations

1 – Decisions and Implementation 2 – When Is Power Used? 3 – Diagnosing Power and Dependence

PART II – Sources of Power

4 – Where Does Power Come From? 5 – Resources, Allies, and the New Golden Rule 6 – Location in the Communication Network 7 – Formal Authority, Reputation, and Performance 8 – The Importance of Being in the Right Unit 9 – Individual Attributes as Sources of Power

PART III – Strategies and Tactics for Employing Power Effectively

10 – Framing: How We Look at Things Affects How They Look 11 – Interpersonal Influence 12 – Timing Is (Almost) Everything

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13 – The Politics of Information and Analysis 14 – Changing the Structure to Consolidate Power 15 – Symbolic Action: Language, Ceremonies, and Settings

PART IV – Power Dynamics: How Power Is Lost and How Organizations Change

16 – Even the Mighty Fall: How Power Is Lost 17 – Managing Political Dynamics Productively 18 – Managing with Power

NOTES BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX About the Author

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Acknowledgments

 

I wrote this book mostly because of Gene Webb and Hal Leavitt, colleagues at Stanford. Leavitt had urged me for many years to write a book that would be more accessible to students and managers than much of my other writing. I ignored his advice for a long time. When Webb left the associate dean’s office at Stanford, he began teaching sections of the course, Power and Politics in Organizations, which I had originally developed and taught. He brought new literature and new ideas to the course, but one year he stopped using the text, Power in Organizations, which I had written some years ago and which I use regularly in the course. Gene Webb had served on my thesis committee in the early 1970s when I had been a doctoral student at Stanford. I considered him a friend. When a friend stops using your book, it is clearly time to do something.

For some years, I had been developing new ideas and insights about power in organizations. I was teaching in corporate executive programs, and saw what issues were important and how executives reacted to various ideas and material. I continued to teach the elective course at Stanford, and over the years I had obtained numerous anecdotes and a great deal of feedback from students. For several years, Mike Tushman of Columbia, Charles O’Reilly from UC Berkeley, and I had taught a one-week program entitled, Managing Strategic Innovation and Change, for various companies both in the United States and overseas. From Mike and Charles I had learned a lot about the political dynamics of innovation and change, and the role of power and politics in that process. They, and my students, were also urging me to write a new book.

All of these groups paid a price for their nagging. My students in the course, Power and Politics in Organizations, had to use an earlier draft of the manuscript. Former students, in particular Fran Conley, read a copy. My colleagues who had so vigorously urged on the writing now had the task of providing me with comments, and the help I received from Chip Heath, Dan Julius, Roderick Kramer, Kotaro Kuwada, Charles O’Reilly, Donald Palmer, Michael Tushman, and particularly Gene Webb was extraordinary. Even doctoral students who were working with me at the time were drafted into providing feedback and assistance. Beth Benjamin provided examples and comments, even when she should have probably been working on her thesis. I owe much to these students and colleagues. I have benefited enormously from their feedback and their insights.

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I also owe a great deal to the secretaries who have helped so much on this project, particularly Nancy Banks and Katrina Jaggears. One has to work at the Graduate School of Business at Stanford to appreciate the enormous support faculty are provided, in so many ways. I really do thank the school for the many forms of support and for having me on the faculty.

In January 1985, I met Kathleen Fowler. Kathleen had never dated a faculty member before, and wanted to know what I did. I told her I wrote. She said, “Show me something you have written.” I gave her an autographed copy of Power in Organizations. She read it and stayed awake doing so, mostly. But she, too, said, “Can’t you write something people can read?” We were married in July 1986. She gave me a watch as a wedding present. This book is her present—a little late, but then, life has been more interesting recently.

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PART I

 

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Power in Organizations

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Decisions and Implementation

At 5:01 P.M. on October 17, 1989, a large earthquake struck northern California. The earthquake destroyed or severely damaged several sections of freeway and a number of freeway off-ramps, as well as a portion of the San Francisco Bay Bridge. The vivid pictures of the damaged section of the bridge and the collapsed freeway section in the East Bay, which accounted for most of the fatalities, were flashed around the world. Most people recall that repairs to the bridge began immediately, and since the work was literally done around the clock, the bridge was reopened about six weeks later. What most people do not realize, even many living in the San Francisco area, is that some 18 months later, the opening of the San Francisco Bay Bridge was the only completed repair. Not one other damaged highway structure, not one off-ramp, not one other section of freeway had been repaired a year and a half after the quake. Indeed, in the case of the other two major portions of roadway that had been closed by the quake—the so-called Cypress Structure in Oakland and the Embarcadero Freeway in San Francisco—there was still no decision on exactly where, how, or whether to make repairs.

Technical or engineering complexities do not account for the delays, nor do they explain why the Bay Bridge was repaired while nothing else was. San Francisco’s and California’s response to the earthquake presents a situation that is repeated often in both public and private sector organizations—a paralysis that reflects an inability to mobilize sufficient political support and resources to take action. Confronted with a problem, in this case—or opportunities, in some other instances —organizations are often unable to get things accomplished in a timely manner. This inaction can have severe consequences. The continuing closure of the Oakland section of the freeway costs some $23 million per year in extra transportation costs and fuel, while the continuing indecision about the repair of the freeways and off- ramps in San Francisco has cost much more in terms of lost business in the city.

It is, perhaps, not surprising that there is delay and indecision when the issue is as inherently ambiguous as the location and repair of roadways. Even in cases of life and death, however, there are failures to effectively mobilize political support and get things done that have serious consequences. Consider the chronology of the discovery of transfusion-transmitted AIDS, and the subsequent delays in getting anything done about it:

In March 1981, an “Rh baby” received a transfusion of blood provided by a 47- year-old donor at the Irwin Memorial Blood Bank in San Francisco.

In July 1981, epidemiological evidence led many members of the medical community to conclude that the so-called Gay Cancer was a contagious disease, spread by both sexual contact and through blood.

In September 1981, the child who received the transfusion in March was sick, suffering from immune dysfunctions; the donor, also sick, went to his doctor at

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about the same time and noted that he was a regular blood donor. In December 1981, Don Francis, an epidemiologist at the Center for Disease

Control (CDC) wanted to put blood banks on the alert. He argued that if the disease spread like hepatitis, it would be spread by blood transfusions.

In January 1982, the CDC learned that hemophiliacs were dying from a disease with symptoms similar to those spreading through the gay community, and that transfusions seemed to be the mechanism of transmission.

In November 1982, Dr. Selma Dritz, assistant director of the Bureau of Communicable Disease Control at the San Francisco Department of Public Health, was concerned about protecting the integrity of the blood supply; she had documented, at least to her satisfaction, the first case of AIDS transmitted by blood transfusion.1

The reaction by the blood-bank industry was denial. “The first public announcement that AIDS might be in the blood supply brought an angry reaction from blood bankers in the East. . . . Dr. Joseph Bove, who . . . served as an officer of the American Association of Blood Banks, went on network television to say flatly that there still was no evidence that transfusions spread AIDS. Privately, some blood bankers thought the CDC was overstating the possibility . . . to get publicity and, therefore, more funding.”2

On January 4, 1983 (more than a year after it was first suspected that AIDS could be spread by blood transfusions), at a meeting of an ad hoc advisory committee for the U.S. Public Health Service, Don Francis of the CDC was angry. “How many people have to die?” shouted Francis, his fist hitting the table again. “How many deaths do you need? Give us the threshold of death that you need in order to believe that this is happening, and we’ll meet at that time and we can start doing something.”3

In March 1983, the hepatitis antibody screening sought by the CDC was rejected because of opposition from the blood banks, although donor screening was introduced to try to eliminate high-risk donors.

In May 1983, Stanford University Hospital became the only major medical center in the United States to decide to begin testing blood for evidence of AIDS infection. “The rest of the blood industry was stunned. . . . Some said it was a gimmick to draw AIDS-hysteric patients to Stanford from San Francisco hospitals.”4

In January 1984, the blood industry was continuing to stonewall. The cost of AIDS screening would be high; moreover, the industry was afraid of what it would do to both the supply of donors and the demand for blood from nonprofit blood banks. “In early January, Assistant Secretary for Health Ed Brandt set up a conference call of blood bankers and CDC officials to discuss the AIDS problem. The upshot of all the talk was no new FDA policy; instead the blood bankers

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agreed to form a task force to study the issue.”5 The careful reader will have noted that two years have passed since transfusion-transmitted AIDS was diagnosed and one year since Don Francis asked, “How many must die?”

By late 1984, even though there was no longer any real debate about whether AIDS could be spread by blood transfusions, widespread screening for hepatitis or other blood abnormalities still had not begun.

“An estimated 12,000 Americans were infected from transfusions largely administered after the CDC had futilely begged the blood industry for action to prevent spread of the disease. ‘How many people have to die?’ Francis had asked the blood bankers in early 1983. The answer was now clear: thousands would.”6

The battle between the scientists and the blood bankers was far from an even match. The blood bankers were sophisticated users of language, symbols, and all the techniques of interpersonal influence. The very existence of that industry depended on motivating volunteers to support the work of organizations such as the American Red Cross. The blood banks and associated organizations had years of experience in working with the media. They had experience, too, in working the corridors of power in Washington, particularly the government health establishment. The scientists and the epidemiologists felt that truth would triumph, if the data were presented forcefully. But they were not at first influential enough to gain the upper hand in the struggle to change policies on AIDS. By contrast, the blood-bank industry cultivated allies, was shrewd in its use of language to make the risks appear negligible, and mustered all its resources to stall and delay policies that might harm the industry. Of course, those involved in these early struggles, and particularly the gay community, learned their political lessons. Today there is substantial research and public policy attention, and those fighting AIDS have mastered political skills and tactics. Indeed, the recent success—some claim disproportionate success—of efforts to obtain funding for AIDS research suggests that the early failure of the authorities to act occurred not so much because AIDS was a gay disease (although this was clearly a part of the story), but rather as a consequence of the lack of political will and expertise on the part of those fighting the traditional medical establishment. As they developed both the determination to make changes and the knowledge of how to do so, the outcome of the political struggle changed accordingly.

A distressing story, some will say, but what does this have to do with organizations in the private sector, which, after all, have the profit incentive to ensure that they make smart, rational, and timely decisions? Just this: Do you know which corporation invented the first personal computer as we know it today, the first word processing program applied in publishing, the mouse, the idea of windows on a computer screen, the use of icons rather than commands to make computers work, and which corporation was the first to run a television advertisement for a personal computer? If you answered, Apple Computer, you are

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partly right, in that the Macintosh, built and marketed by Apple, was the first computer to have these features and be commercially successful on a large scale. But it was, in fact, the Xerox Corporation, at its Palo Alto Research Center (PARC), that accomplished all these things in the mid-1970s, years before the introduction of the Lisa in 1983 and the introduction of the Macintosh in January 1984.7 We all know that the first company to invent or develop a technology does not necessarily reap the economic benefits from that technology—Ampex Corporation’s development of the technology for the VCR is another commonly cited example. What we don’t often recognize is that failures to capitalize on innovations are, in actuality, failures in implementation, the same sort of failures in the ability to get things done that we saw in the case of rebuilding San Francisco roads and in protecting the nation’s blood supply. Accomplishing innovation and change in organizations requires more than the ability to solve technical or analytic problems. Innovation almost invariably threatens the status quo, and consequently, innovation is an inherently political activity.

The inability to get things done, to have ideas and decisions implemented, is widespread in organizations today. It is, moreover, a problem that seems to be getting worse in both public and private sector organizations. It has led to calls for better leadership, and laments about the absence of leadership in many spheres. It is my thesis that problems of implementation are, in many instances, problems in developing political will and expertise—the desire to accomplish something, even against opposition, and the knowledge and skills that make it possible to do so. Today more than ever, it is necessary to study power and to learn to use it skillfully, since we cannot otherwise hope to gain individual success in organizations or the success of the organizations themselves. As Richard Nixon wrote:

It is not enough for a leader to know the right thing. He must be able to do the right thing. The . . . leader without the judgment or perception to make the right decisions fails for lack of vision. The one who knows the right thing but cannot achieve it fails because he is ineffectual. The great leader needs . . . the capacity to achieve.8

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POWER IN ORGANIZATIONS

 

Norton Long, a political scientist, wrote, “People will readily admit that governments are organizations. The converse—that organizations are governments —is equally true but rarely considered.”9 But organizations, particularly large ones, are like governments in that they are fundamentally political entities. To understand them, one needs to understand organizational politics, just as to understand governments, one needs to understand governmental politics.

Ours is an era in which people tend to shy away from this task. As I browse through bookstores, I am struck by the incursion of “New Age” thinking, even in the business sections. New Age can be defined, I suppose, in many ways, but what strikes me about it are two elements: 1) a self-absorption and self-focus, which looks toward the individual in isolation; and 2) a belief that conflict is largely the result of misunderstanding, and if people only had more communication, more tolerance, and more patience, many (or all) social problems would disappear. These themes appear in books on topics ranging from making marriages work to making organizations work. A focus on individual self-actualization is useful, but a focus on sheer self-reliance is not likely to encourage one to try to get things done with and through other people—to be a manager or a leader. “Excellence can be achieved in a solitary field without the need to exercise leadership.” 10 In this sense, John Gardner’s (former secretary of HEW and the founder of Common Cause) concerns about community are part and parcel of a set of concerns about organizations and getting things accomplished in them.11 One can be quite content, quite happy, quite fulfilled as an organizational hermit, but one’s influence is limited and the potential to accomplish great things, which requires interdependent action, is almost extinguished.

If we are suspicious of the politics of large organizations, we may conclude that smaller organizations are a better alternative. There is, in fact, evidence that the average size of establishments in the United States is decreasing. This is not just because we have become more of a service economy and less of a manufacturing economy; even within manufacturing, the average size of establishments and firms is shrinking. The largest corporations have shed thousands, indeed hundreds of thousands of employees—not only middle managers, but also production workers, staff of all kinds, and employees who performed tasks that are now contracted out. Managers and employees who were stymied by the struggles over power and influence that emerge from interdependence and differences in points of view have moved to a world of smaller, simpler organizations, with less internal

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interdependence and less internal diversity, which are, as a consequence, less political. Of course, such structural changes only increase interdependence among organizations, even as they decrease interdependence and conflict within these organizations.

I see in this movement a parallel to what I have seen in the management of our human resources. Many corporations today solve their personnel problems by getting rid of the personnel. The rationale seems to be that if we can’t effectively manage and motivate employees, then let’s turn the task over to another organization. We can use leased employees or contract workers, or workers from temporary help agencies, and let those organizations solve our problems of turnover, compensation, selection, and training.

It is an appealing solution, consistent with the emphasis on the individual, which has always been strong in U.S. culture, and which has grown in recent years. How can we trust large organizations when they have broken compacts of long-term employment? Better to seek security and certainty within oneself, in one’s own competencies and abilities, and in the control of one’s own activities.

There is, however, one problem with this approach to dealing with organizational power and influence. It is not clear that by ignoring the social realities of power and influence we can make them go away, or that by trying to build simpler, less interdependent social structures we succeed in building organizations that are more effective or that have greater survival value. Although it is certainly true that large organizations sometimes disappear,12 it is also true that smaller organizations disappear at a much higher rate and have much worse survival properties. By trying to ignore issues of power and influence in organizations, we lose our chance to understand these critical social processes and to train managers to cope with them.

By pretending that power and influence don’t exist, or at least shouldn’t exist, we contribute to what I and some others (such as John Gardner) see as the major problem facing many corporations today, particularly in the United States—the almost trained or produced incapacity of anyone except the highest-level managers to take action and get things accomplished. As I teach in corporate executive programs, and as I compare experiences with colleagues who do likewise, I hear the same story over and over again. In these programs ideas are presented to fairly senior executives, who then work in groups on the implications of these ideas for their firms. There is real strength in the experience and knowledge of these executives, and they often come up with insightful recommendations and ideas for improving their organizations. Perhaps they discover the wide differences in effectiveness that exist in different units and share suggestions about how to improve performance. Perhaps they come to understand more comprehensively the markets and technologies of their organizations, and develop strategies for both internally oriented and externally oriented changes to enhance effectiveness. It

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really doesn’t matter, because the most frequently heard comment at such sessions is, “My boss should be here.” And when they go back to their offices, after the stimulation of the week, few managers have either the ability or the determination to engineer the changes they discussed with such insight.

I recall talking to a store manager for a large supermarket chain with a significant share of the northern California grocery market. He managed a store that did in excess of $20 million in sales annually, which by the standards of the average organization makes him a manager with quite a bit of responsibility—or so one would think. In this organization, however, as in many others, the responsibilities of middle-level managers are strictly limited. A question arose as to whether the store should participate in putting its name on a monument sign for the shopping center in which the store was located. The cost was about $8,000 (slightly less than four hours’ sales in that store). An analysis was done, showing how many additional shoppers would need to be attracted to pay back this small investment, and what percentage this was of the traffic count passing by the center. The store manager wanted the sign. But, of course, he could not spend even this much money without the approval of his superiors. It was the president of the northern California division who decided, after a long meeting, that the expenditure was not necessary.

There are many lessons that one might learn from this example. It could be seen as the result of a plague of excessive centralization, or as an instance of a human resource management policy that certainly was more “top down” than “bottom up.” But what was particularly interesting was the response of the manager—who, by the way, is held accountable for this store’s profits even as he is given almost no discretion to do anything about them. When I asked him about the decision, he said, “Well, I guess that’s why the folks at headquarters get the big money; they must know something we don’t.” Was he going to push for his idea, his very modest proposal? Of course not, he said. One gets along by just biding one’s time, going along with whatever directives come down from the upper management.

I have seen this situation repeated in various forms over and over again. I talk to senior executives who claim their organizations take no initiative, and to high-level managers who say they can’t or won’t engage in efforts to change the corporations they work for, even when they know such changes are important, if not essential, to the success and survival of these organizations. There are politics involved in innovation and change. And unless and until we are willing to come to terms with organizational power and influence, and admit that the skills of getting things done are as important as the skills of figuring out what to do, our organizations will fall further and further behind. The problem is, in most cases, not an absence of insight or organizational intelligence. Instead the problem is one of passivity, a phenomenon that John Gardner analyzed in the following way:

In this country—and in most other democracies—power has such a bad name that

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many good people persuade themselves they want nothing to do with it. The ethical and spiritual apprehensions are understandable. But one cannot abjure power. Power, as we are now speaking of it . . . is simply the capacity to bring about certain intended consequences in the behavior of others. . . . In our democratic society we make grants of power to people for specified purposes. If for ideological or temperamental reasons they refuse to exercise the power granted, we must turn to others. . . . To say, a leader is preoccupied with power, is like saying that a tennis player is preoccupied with making shots his opponent cannot return. Of course leaders are preoccupied with power! The significant questions are: What means do they use to gain it? How do they exercise it? To what ends do they exercise it?13

If leadership involves skill at developing and exercising power and influence as well as the will to do so, then perhaps one of the causes of the so-called leadership crisis in organizations in the United States is just this attempt to sidestep issues of power. This diagnosis is consistent with the arguments made by Warren Bennis and his colleagues, who have studied leaders and written on leadership. For instance, Bennis and Nanus noted that one of the major problems facing organizations today is not that too many people exercise too much power, but rather the opposite:

These days power is conspicuous by its absence. Powerlessness in the face of crisis. Powerlessness in the face of complexity. . . . power has been sabotaged. . . . institutions have been rigid, slothful, or mercurial.14 They go on to comment on the importance of power as a concept for understanding leadership and as a tool that allows organizations to function productively and effectively:

However, there is something missing . . . POWER, the basic energy to initiate and sustain action translating intention into reality, the quality without which leaders cannot lead. . . . power is at once the most necessary and the most distrusted element exigent to human progress. . . . power is the basic energy needed to initiate and sustain action or, to put it another way, the capacity to translate intention into reality and sustain it.15

Such observations about power are not merely the province of theorists. Political leaders, too, confirm that the willingness to build and wield power is a prerequisite for success in public life. In this consideration of power and leadership, Richard Nixon offered some observations that are consistent with the theme of this book:

Power is the opportunity to build, to create, to nudge history in a different direction. There are few satisfactions to match it for those who care about such things. But it

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is not happiness. Those who seek happiness will not acquire power and would not use it well if they did acquire it. A whimsical observer once commented that those who love laws and sausages should not watch either being made. By the same token, we honor leaders for what they achieve, but we often prefer to close our eyes to the way they achieve it. . . . In the real world, politics is compromise and democracy is politics. Anyone who would be a statesman has to be a successful politician first. Also, a leader has to deal with people and nations as they are, not as they should be. As a result, the qualities required for leadership are not necessarily those that we would want our children to emulate—unless we wanted them to be leaders. In evaluating a leader, the key question about his behavioral traits is not whether they are attractive or unattractive, but whether they are useful.16

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OUR AMBIVALENCE ABOUT POWER

 

That we are ambivalent about power is undeniable. Rosabeth Kanter, noting that power was critical for effective managerial behavior, nevertheless wrote, “Power is America’s last dirty word. It is easier to talk about money—and much easier to talk about sex—than it is to talk about power.”17 Gandz and Murray did a survey of 428 managers whose responses nicely illustrate the ambivalence about power in organizations. 18 Some items from their survey, along with the percentage of respondents reporting strong or moderate agreement, are reproduced in Table 1-1.

Table 1-1 Managers’ Feelings about Workplace Politics

 

Statement Percentage Expressing Strongor Moderate Agreement The existence of workplace politics is common to most organizations 93.2

Successful executives must be good politicians 89.0 The higher you go in organizations, the more political the climate becomes 76.2

Powerful executives don’t act politically 15.7 You have to be political to get ahead in organizations 69.8

Top management should try to get rid of politics within the organization 48.6

Politics help organizations function effectively 42.1 Organizations free of politics are happier than those where there are a lot of politics 59.1

Politics in organizations are detrimental to efficiency 55.1

Source: Gandz and Murray (1980), p. 244.

The concepts of power and organizational politics are related; most authors, myself included, define organizational politics as the exercise or use of power, with power

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being defined as a potential force. Note that more than 90% of the respondents said that the experience of workplace politics is common in most organizations, 89% said that successful executives must be good politicians, and 76% said that the higher one progresses in an organization, the more political things become. Yet 55% of these same respondents said that politics were detrimental to efficiency, and almost half said that top management should try to get rid of politics within organizations. It is as if we know that power and politics exist, and we even grudgingly admit that they are necessary to individual success, but we nevertheless don’t like them.

This ambivalence toward, if not outright disdain for, the development and use of power in organizations stems from more than one source. First, there is the issue of ends and means—we often don’t like to consider the methods that are necessary to get things accomplished, as one of the earlier quotes from Richard Nixon suggests. We are also ambivalent about ends and means because the same strategies and processes that may produce outcomes we desire can also be used to produce results that we consider undesirable. Second, some fundamental lessons we learn in school really hinder our appreciation of power and influence. Finally, in a related point, the perspective from which we judge organizational decisions often does not do justice to the realities of the social world.

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Ends and Means

 

On Saturday, September 25, 1976, an elaborate testimonial dinner was held in San Francisco for a man whose only public office was as a commissioner on the San Francisco Housing Authority board. The guest list was impressive—the mayor, George Moscone; Lieutenant Governor Mervyn Dymally, at that time the highest- ranking Afro-American in elected politics; District Attorney Joe Freitas; Democratic Assemblyman Willie Brown, probably the most powerful and feared individual in California politics; Republican State Senator Milton Marks; San Francisco Supervisor Robert Mendelsohn; the city editor of the morning newspaper; prominent attorneys—in short, both Democrats and Republicans, a veritable who’s who of the northern California political establishment. The man they were there to honor had recently met personally with the president’s wife, Rosalynn Carter. Yet when the world heard more of this guest of honor, some two years later, it was to be with shock and horror at what happened in a jungle in Guyana. The person being honored that night in September 1976—who had worked his way into the circles of power in San Francisco using some of the very same strategies and tactics described in this book—was none other than Jim Jones.19

There is no doubt that power and influence can be acquired and exercised for evil purposes. Of course, most medicines can kill if taken in the wrong amount, thousands die each year in automobile accidents, and nuclear power can either provide energy or mass destruction. We do not abandon chemicals, cars, or even atomic power because of the dangers associated with them; instead we consider danger an incentive to get training and information that will help us to use these forces productively. Yet few people are willing to approach the potential risks and advantages of power with the same pragmatism. People prefer to avoid discussions of power, apparently on the assumption that “If we don’t think about it, it won’t exist.” I take a different view. John Jacobs, now a political editor for the San Francisco Examiner, co-authored a book on Jim Jones and gave me a copy of it in 1985. His view, and mine, was that tragedies such as Jonestown could be prevented, not by ignoring the processes of power and influence, but rather by being so well schooled in them that one could recognize their use and take countermeasures, if necessary—and by developing a well-honed set of moral values.

The means to any end are merely mechanisms for accomplishing something. The something can be grand, grotesque, or, for most of us, I suspect, somewhere in between. The end may not always justify the means, but neither should it

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automatically be used to discredit the means. Power and political processes in organizations can be used to accomplish great things. They are not always used in this fashion, but that does not mean we should reject them out of hand. It is interesting that when we use power ourselves, we see it as a good force and wish we had more. When others use it against us, particularly when it is used to thwart our goals or ambitions, we see it as an evil. A more sophisticated and realistic view would see it for what it is—an important social process that is often required to get things accomplished in interdependent systems.

Most of us consider Abraham Lincoln to have been a great president. We tend to idealize his accomplishments: he preserved the Union, ended slavery, and delivered the memorable Gettysburg Address. It is easy to forget that he was also a politician and a pragmatist—for instance, the Emancipation Proclamation freed the slaves in the Confederacy, but not in border states that remained within the Union, whose support he needed. Lincoln also took a number of actions that far overstepped his constitutional powers. Indeed, Andrew Johnson was impeached for continuing many of the actions that Lincoln had begun. Lincoln once explained how he justified breaking the laws he had sworn to uphold:

My oath to preserve the Constitution imposed on me the duty of preserving by every indispensable means that government, that nation, of which the Constitution was the organic law. Was it possible to lose the nation and yet preserve the Constitution? . . . I felt that measures, otherwise unconstitutional, might become lawful by becoming indispensable to the preservation . . . of the nation.20

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Lessons to Be Unlearned

 

Our ambivalence about power also comes from lessons we learn in school. The first lesson is that life is a matter of individual effort, ability, and achievement. After all, in school, if you have mastered the intricacies of cost accounting, or calculus, or electrical engineering, and the people sitting on either side of you haven’t, their failure will not affect your performance—unless, that is, you had intended to copy from their papers. In the classroom setting, interdependence is minimized. It is you versus the material, and as long as you have mastered the material, you have achieved what is expected. Cooperation may even be considered cheating.

Such is not the case in organizations. If you know your organization’s strategy but your colleagues do not, you will have difficulty accomplishing anything. The private knowledge and private skill that are so useful in the classroom are insufficient in organizations. Individual success in organizations is quite frequently a matter of working with and through other people, and organizational success is often a function of how successfully individuals can coordinate their activities. Most situations in organizations resemble football more than golf, which is why companies often scan resumes to find not only evidence of individual achievement, but also signs that the person is skilled at working as part of a team. In achieving success in organizations, “power transforms individual interests into coordinated activities that accomplish valuable ends.”21

The second lesson we learn in school, which may be even more difficult to unlearn, is that there are right and wrong answers. We are taught how to solve problems, and for each problem, that there is a right answer, or at least one approach that is more correct than another. The right answer is, of course, what the instructor says it is, or what is in the back of the book, or what is hidden away in the instructor’s manual. Life appears as a series of “eureka” problems, so-called because once you are shown the correct approach or answer, it is immediately self- evident that the answer is, in fact, correct.

This emphasis on the potential of intellectual analysis to provide the right answer —the truth—is often, although not invariably, misplaced. Commenting on his education in politics, Henry Kissinger wrote, “Before I served as a consultant to Kennedy, I had believed, like most academics, that the process of decision-making was largely intellectual and all one had to do was to walk into the President’s office and convince him of the correctness of one’s view. This perspective I soon realized is as dangerously immature as it is widely held.”22 Kissinger noted that the

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easy decisions, the ones with right and wrong answers that can be readily discerned by analysis, never reached the president, but rather were resolved at lower levels.

In the world in which we all live, things are seldom clear-cut or obvious. Not only do we lack a book or an instructor to provide quick feedback on the quality of our approach, but the problems we face often have multiple dimensions—which yield multiple methods of evaluation. The consequences of our decisions are often known only long after the fact, and even then with some ambiguity.

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AN ALTERNATIVE PERSPECTIVE ON DECISION MAKING

 

Let me offer an alternative way of thinking about the decision-making process. There are three important things to remember about decisions. First, a decision by itself changes nothing. You can decide to launch a new product, hire a job candidate, build a new plant, change your performance evaluation system, and so forth, but the decision will not put itself into effect. As a prosaic personal example, recall how many times you or your friends “decided” to quit smoking, to get more exercise, to relax more, to eat healthier foods, or to lose weight. Such resolutions often fizzle before producing any results. Thus, in addition to knowledge of decision science, we need to know something about “implementation science.”

Second, at the moment a decision is made, we cannot possibly know whether it is good or bad. Decision quality, when measured by results, can only be known as the consequences of the decision become known. We must wait for the decision to be implemented and for its consequences to become clear.

The third, and perhaps most important, observation is that we almost invariably spend more time living with the consequences of our decisions than we do in making them. It may be an organizational decision such as whether to acquire a company, change the compensation system, fight a union-organizing campaign; or a personal decision such as where to go to school, which job to choose, what subject to major in, or whom to marry. In either case, it is likely that the effects of the decision will be with us longer than it took us to make the decision, regardless of how much time and effort we invested. Indeed, this simple point has led several social psychologists to describe people as rationalizing (as contrasted with rational) animals.23 The match between our attitudes and our behavior, for instance, often derives from our adjusting our attitudes after the fact to conform to our past actions and their consequences.24

If decisions by themselves change nothing; if, at the time a decision is made, we cannot know its consequences; and if we spend, in any event, more time living with our decisions than we do in making them, then it seems evident that the emphasis in much management training and practice has been misplaced. Rather than spending inordinate amounts of time and effort in the decision-making process, it would seem at least as useful to spend time implementing decisions and dealing with their ramifications. In this sense, good managers are not only good analytic decision makers; more important, they are skilled in managing the consequences of their decisions. “Few successful leaders spend much time fretting about decisions once they are past. . . . The only way he can give adequate attention to the decisions he

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has to make tomorrow is to put those of yesterday firmly behind him.”25 There are numerous examples that illustrate this point. Consider, for instance, the

acquisition of Fairchild Semiconductor by Schlumberger, an oil service company.26 The theory behind the merger was potentially sound—to apply Fairchild’s skills in electronics to the oil service business. Schlumberger wanted, for example, to develop more sophisticated exploration devices and to add electronics to oil servicing and drilling equipment. Unfortunately, the merger produced none of the expected synergies:

When Schlumberger tried to manage Fairchild the same way it had managed its other business units, it created many difficulties. . . . resources were not made available to R&D with the consequence of losing technical edge which Fairchild once had. Creative . . . technical people left the organization and the company was unable to put technical teams together to pursue new technological advancement .27

A study of 31 acquisitions found that “problems will eventually emerge after acquisitions that could not have been anticipated. . . . both synergy and problems must be actively managed.”28 Moreover, firms that see acquisitions as a quick way of capturing some financial benefits are often insensitive to the amount of time and effort that is required to implement the merger and to produce superior performance after it occurs. Emphasis on the choice of a merger partner and the terms of the deal can divert focus away from the importance of the activities that occur once the merger is completed.

Or, consider the decision to launch a new product. Whether that decision produces profits or losses is often not simply a matter of the choices made at the time of the launch. It also depends on the implementation of those choices, as well as on subsequent decisions such as redesigning the product, changing the channels of distribution, adjusting prices, and so forth. Yet what we often observe in organizations is that once a decision is made, more effort is expended in assigning credit or blame than in working to improve the results of the decision.

I can think of no example that illustrates my argument as clearly as the story of how Honda entered the American market, first with motorcycles, and later, of course, with automobiles and lawn mowers. Honda established an American subsidiary in 1959, and between 1960 and 1965, Honda’s sales in the United States went from $500,000 to $77 million. By 1966, Honda’s share of the U.S. motorcycle market was 63%,29 starting from zero just seven years before. Honda’s share was almost six times that of its closest competitors, Yamaha and Suzuki, and Harley- Davidson’s share had fallen to 4%. Pascale showed that this extraordinary success was largely the result of “miscalculation, serendipity, and organizational learning,” not of the rational process of planning and foresight often emphasized in our efforts to be successful.30

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Sochiro Honda himself was more interested in racing and engine design than in building a business, but his partner, Takeo Fujisawa, managed to convince him to turn his talent to designing a safe, inexpensive motorcycle to be driven with one hand and used for package delivery in Japan. The motorcycle was an immediate success in Japan. How and why did Honda decide to enter the export market and sell to the United States? Kihachiro Kawashima, eventually president of American Honda, reported to Pascale:

In truth, we had no strategy other than the idea of seeing if we could sell something in the United States. It was a new frontier . . . and it fit the “success against all odds” culture that Mr. Honda had cultivated. I reported my impressions . . . including the seat-of-the-pants target of trying, over several years, to attain a 10 percent share of U.S. imports. . . . We did not discuss profits or deadlines for breakeven.31

Money was authorized for the venture, but the Ministry of Finance approved a currency allocation of only $250,000, of which less than half was in cash and the rest in parts and motorcycle inventory. The initial attempt to sell motorcycles in Los Angeles was disastrous. Distances in the United States are much greater than in Japan, and the motorcycles were driven farther and faster than their design permitted. Engine failures were common, particularly on the larger bikes.

The company had initially focused its sales efforts on the larger, 250cc and 350cc bikes, and had not even tried to sell the 50cc Supercub, believing it was too small to have any market acceptance:

We used the Honda 5os . . . to ride around Los Angeles on errands. They attracted a lot of attention. One day we had a call from a Sears buyer. . . . we took note of Sears’ interest. But we still hesitated to push the 50cc bikes out of fear they might harm our image in a heavily macho market. But when the larger bikes started breaking, we had no choice. We let the 5occ bikes move. And surprisingly, the retailers who wanted to sell them weren’t motorcycle dealers, they were sporting goods stores.32

Honda’s “you meet the nicest people on a Honda” advertising campaign was designed as a class project by a student at UCLA, and was at first resisted by Honda. Honda’s distribution strategy—sporting goods and bicycle shops rather than motorcycle dealers—was made for them, not by them. And its success with the smaller motorbike was almost totally unanticipated. It occurred through a combination of circumstances: the use of the motorbike by Honda employees, who couldn’t afford anything fancier; the positive response from people who saw the bike; and the failure of Honda’s larger bikes in the American market.

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Honda did not use decision analysis and strategic planning. In fact, it is difficult to see that Honda made any decisions at all, at least in terms of developing alternatives and weighing options against an assessment of goals and the state of the market. Honda succeeded by being flexible, by learning and adapting, and by working to have decisions turn out right, once those decisions had been made. Having arrived with the wrong product for a market they did not understand, Honda spent little time trying to find a scapegoat for the company’s predicament; rather, Honda personnel worked vigorously to change the situation to their benefit, being creative as well as opportunistic in the process.

The point is that decisions in the world of organizations are not like decisions made in school. There, once you have written down an answer and turned in the test, the game is over. This is not the case in organizational life. The important actions may not be the original choices, but rather what happens subsequently, and what actions are taken to make things work out. This is a significant point, because it means that we need to be somewhat less concerned about the quality of the decision at the time we make it (which, after all, we can’t really know anyway) and more concerned with adapting our new decisions and actions to the information we learn as events unfold. Just as Honda emerged as a leader in many American markets more by accident and trial-and-error learning than by design, it is critical that organizational members develop the fortitude to continue when confronted by adversity and the insight about how to turn situations around. The most important skill may be managing the consequences of decisions. And, in organizations in which it is often difficult to take any action, the critical ability may be the capacity to have things implemented.

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WAYS OF GETTING THINGS DONE

 

Why is implementation difficult in so many organizations, and why does it appear that the ability to get decisions implemented is becoming increasingly rare? One way of thinking about this issue, and of examining the role of power and influence in the implementation process, is to consider some possible ways of getting things done.

One way of getting things to happen is through hierarchical authority. Many people think power is merely the exercise of formal authority, but it is considerably more than that, as we will see. Everyone who works in an organization has seen the exercise of hierarchical authority. Those at higher levels have the power to hire and fire, to measure and reward behavior, and to provide direction to those who are under their aegis. Hierarchical direction is usually seen as legitimate, because the variation in formal authority comes to be taken for granted as a part of organizational life. Thus the phrase, “the boss wants . . .” or “the president wants . . .” is seldom questioned or challenged. Who can forget Marine Lieutenant Colonel Oliver North testifying, during the Iran-contra hearings, about his willingness to stand on his head in a corner if that was what his commander-in-chief wanted, or maintaining that he never once disobeyed the orders of his superiors?

There are three problems with hierarchy as a way of getting things done. First, and perhaps not so important, is that it is badly out of fashion. In an era of rising education and the democratization of all decision processes, in an era in which participative management is advocated in numerous places,33 and particularly in a country in which incidents such as the Vietnam War and Watergate have led many people to mistrust the institutions of authority, implementation by order or command is problematic. Readers who are parents need only reflect on the difference in parental authority between the current period and the 1950s to see what I mean. How many times have you been able to get your children to do something simply on the basis of your authority as a parent?

A second, more serious problem with authority derives from the fact that virtually all of us work in positions in which, in order to accomplish our job and objectives, we need the cooperation of others who do not fall within our direct chain of command. We depend, in other words, on people outside our purview of authority, whom we could not command, reward, or punish even if we wanted to. Perhaps, as a line manager in a product division, we need the cooperation of people in human resources for hiring, people in finance for evaluating new product opportunities, people in distribution and sales for getting the product sold and

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delivered, and people in market research for determining product features and marketing and pricing strategy. Even the authority of a chief executive is not absolute, since there are groups outside the focal organization that control the ability to get things done. To sell overseas airline routes to other domestic airlines requires the cooperation of the Transportation and Justice Departments, as well as the acquiescence of foreign governments. To market a drug or medical device requires the approval of the Food and Drug Administration; to export products overseas, one may need both financing and export licenses. The hierarchical authority of all executives and administrators is limited, and for most of us, it is quite limited compared to the scope of what we need in order to do our jobs effectively.

There is a third problem with implementation accomplished solely or primarily through hierarchical authority: What happens if the person at the apex of the pyramid, the one whose orders are being followed, is incorrect? When authority is vested in a single individual, the organization can face grave difficulties if that person’s insight or leadership begins to fail. This was precisely what happened at E.F. Hutton, where Robert Fomon, the chief executive officer, ruled the firm through a rigid hierarchy of centralized power:

Fomon’s strength as a leader was also his weakness. As he put his stamp on the firm, he did so more as monarch than as a chief executive. . . . Fomon surrounded himself with . . . cronies and yes men who would become the managers and directors of E.F. Hutton and who would insulate him from the real world.34

Because Fomon was such a successful builder of his own hierarchical authority, no one in the firm challenged him to see the new realities that Hutton, and every other securities firm, faced in the 1980s.35 Consequently, when the brokerage industry changed, Hutton did not, and it eventually ceased to exist as an independent entity.

Another way of getting things done is by developing a strongly shared vision or organizational culture. If people share a common set of goals, a common perspective on what to do and how to accomplish it, and a common vocabulary that allows them to coordinate their behavior, then command and hierarchical authority are of much less importance. People will be able to work cooperatively without waiting for orders from the upper levels of the company. Managing through a shared vision and with a strong organizational culture has been a very popular prescription for organizations.36 A number of articles and books tell how to build commitment and shared vision and how to socialize individuals, particularly at the time of entry, so that they share a language, values, and premises about what needs to be done and how to do it.37

Without denying the efficacy and importance of vision and culture, it is important

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to recognize that implementation accomplished through them can have problems. First, building a shared conception of the world takes time and effort. There are instances when the organization is in crisis or confronts situations in which there is simply not sufficient time to develop shared premises about how to respond. For this very reason, the military services rely not only on techniques that build loyalty and esprit de corps,38 but also on a hierarchical chain of command and a tradition of obeying orders.

Second, there is the problem of how, in a strong culture, new ideas that are inconsistent with that culture can penetrate. A strong culture really constitutes an organizational paradigm, which prescribes how to look at things, what are appropriate methods and techniques for solving problems, and what are the important issues and problems.39 In fields of science, a well-developed paradigm provides guidance as to what needs to be taught and in what order, how to do research, what are appropriate methodologies, what are the most pressing research questions, and how to train new students. 40 A well-developed paradigm, or a strong culture, is overturned only with great difficulty, even if it fails to account for data or to lead to new discoveries.41 In a similar fashion, an organizational paradigm provides a way of thinking about and investigating the world, which reduces uncertainty and provides for effective collective action, but which also overlooks or ignores some lines of inquiry. It is easy for a strong culture to produce groupthink, a pressure to conform to the dominant view.42 A vision focuses attention, but in that focus, things are often left out.

An organization that had difficulties, as well as great success, because of its strong, almost evangelical culture is Apple Computer. Apple was founded and initially largely populated by counterculture computer hackers, whose vision was a computer-based form of power to the people—one computer for each person. IBM had maintained its market share through its close relations with centralized data processing departments. IBM was the safe choice—the saying was, no one ever got fired for buying IBM. The Apple II was successful by making an end run around the corporate data processing manager and selling directly to the end-user, but “by the end of ’82 it was beginning to seem like a good idea to have a single corporate strategy for personal computers, and the obvious person to coordinate that strategy was the data processing manager.”43 Moreover, computers were increasingly being tied into networks; issues of data sharing and compatibility were critical in organizations that planned to buy personal computers by the thousands. Companies wanted a set of computers that could run common software, to save on software purchasing as well as training and programming expenses. Its initial vision of “one person—one machine” made it difficult for Apple to see the need for compatibility, and as a consequence:

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The Apple II wouldn’t run software for the IBM PC; the PC wouldn’t run software for Lisa, Lisa wouldn’t run software for the Apple II; and none of them would run software for the Macintosh. . . . Thanks largely to Steve [Jobs], Apple had an entire family of computers none of which talked to one another.44

Apple’s strong culture and common vision also helped cause the failure of the Apple III as a new product. The vision was not only of “one person—one machine,” but also of a machine that anyone could design, modify, and improve. Operating systems stood between the user and the machine, and so the Apple culture denigrated operating systems:

The problem with an operating system, from the hobbyist point of view, was that it made it more difficult to reach down inside the computer and show off your skills; it formed a barrier between the user and the machine. Personal computers meant power to the people, and operating systems took some of that power away. . . . It wasn’t a design issue; it was a threat to the inalienable rights of a free people.45

Apple III had an operating system known as SOS for Sophisticated Operating System, which was actually quite similar to the system Microsoft had developed for IBM’s personal computer—MS. DOS (Microsoft Disk Operating System), except it was even better in some respects. Yet Apple was too wary of operating systems to try to make its system the standard, or even a standard, in personal computing. As a result the company lost out on a number of important commercial opportunities. The very zeal and fervor that made working for Apple like a religious crusade and produced extraordinary levels of commitment from the work force made it difficult for the company to be either cognizant of or responsive to shifts in the marketplace for personal computers.

There is a third process of implementation in organizations—namely, the use of power and influence. With power and influence the emphasis is on method rather than structure. It is possible to wield power and influence without necessarily having or using formal authority. Nor is it necessary to rely on a strong organizational culture and the homogeneity that this often implies. Of course, the process of implementation through power and influence is not without problems of its own; the last section of the book treats some of them and offers some potential palliatives. For now, what is important is to see power and influence as one of a set of ways of getting things done—not the only way, but an important way.

From the preceding discussion we can see that implementation is becoming more difficult because: 1) changing social norms and greater interdependence within organizations have made traditional, formal authority less effective than it once was, and 2) developing a common vision is increasingly difficult in organizations comprised of heterogeneous members—heterogeneous in terms of race and

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ethnicity, gender, and even language and culture. At the same time, our ambivalence about power, and the fact that training in its use is far from widespread, mean that members of organizations are often unable to supplement their formal authority with the “unofficial” processes of power and influence. As a result their organizations suffer, and promising projects fail to get off the ground. This is why learning how to manage with power is so important.

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THE MANAGEMENT PROCESS: A POWER PERSPECTIVE

 

From the perspective of power and influence, the process of implementation involves a set of steps, which are outlined below. This book is about the details of these steps. At this point, however, it is useful to provide an overview of the process:

1. Decide what your goals are, what you are trying to accomplish. 2. Diagnose patterns of dependence and interdependence; what individuals are

influential and important in your achieving your goal? 3. What are their points of view likely to be? How will they feel about what you

are trying to do? 4. What are their power bases? Which of them is more influential in the

decision? 5. What are your bases of power and influence? What bases of influence can you

develop to gain more control over the situation? 6. Which of the various strategies and tactics for exercising power seem most

appropriate and are likely to be effective, given the situation you confront? 7. Based on the above, choose a course of action to get something done.

The first step is to decide on your goals. It is, for instance, easier to drive from

Albany, New York to Austin, Texas if you know your destination than if you just get in your car in Albany and drive randomly. Although this point is apparently obvious, it is something that is often overlooked in a business context. How many times have you attended meetings or conferences or talked to someone on the telephone without a clear idea of what you were trying to accomplish? Our calendars are filled with appointments, and other interactions occur unexpectedly in the course of our day. If we don’t have some clear goals, and if we don’t know what our primary objectives are, it is not very likely that we are going to achieve them. One of the themes Tom Peters developed early in his writing was the importance of consistency in purpose: having the calendars, the language, what gets measured, and what gets talked about—all focus on what the organization is trying to achieve.46 It is the same with individuals; to the extent that each interaction, in each meeting, in each conference, is oriented toward the same objective, the achievement of that objective is more likely.

Once you have a goal in mind, it is necessary to diagnose who is important in

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getting your goal accomplished. You must determine the patterns of dependence and interdependence among these people and find out how they are likely to feel about what you are trying to do. As part of this diagnosis, you also need to know how events are likely to unfold, and to estimate the role of power and influence in the process. In getting things accomplished, it is critical to have a sense of the game being played, the players, and what their positions are. One can get badly injured playing football in a basketball uniform, or not knowing the offense from the defense. I have seen, all too often, otherwise intelligent and successful managers have problems because they did not recognize the political nature of the situation, or because they were blindsided by someone whose position and strength they had not anticipated.

Once you have a clear vision of the game, it is important to ascertain the power bases of the other players, as well as your own potential and actual sources of power. In this way you can determine your relative strength, along with the strength of other players. Understanding the sources of power is critical in diagnosing what is going to happen in an organization, as well as in preparing yourself to take action.

Finally, you will want to consider carefully the various strategies, or, to use a less grand term, the tactics that are available to you, as well as those that may be used by others involved in the process. These tactics help in using power and influence effectively, and can also help in countering the use of power by others.

Power is defined here as the potential ability to influence behavior, to change the course of events, to overcome resistance, and to get people to do things that they would not otherwise do.47 Politics and influence are the processes, the actions, the behaviors through which this potential power is utilized and realized.

The next two chapters in the first section of this book provide some help both in diagnosing the extent to which situations are going to involve the use of power and in figuring out who the major political actors are and what their points of view are likely to be. The second section of the book has a series of chapters directed at answering the question, where does power come from, and why are some units and people more powerful than others? Implicitly, this section will also help the reader figure out how to get more power, if that is desired. The third section considers the strategies and tactics through which power and influence are used. We need to know not only where power comes from, but how it is employed. The final section of the book addresses issues of power dynamics—and particularly how power, once gained, is lost. It also examines the consequences of power, both positive and negative, for organizations and the vital and necessary role of power in the process of implementation and change. The final summary draws much of this material together by giving some examples of people who used power successfully, and others who did not.

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When Is Power Used?

Although power plays an important part in organizational activity, not all decisions and actions within an organization involve power to the same extent, nor are conflicts of power equally common in every organization. It is important to be able to recognize and diagnose the context if you are to implement your plans effectively. Not understanding the degree to which the situation is politicized may cause a person either to use power and influence when it is unnecessary, and thereby violate behavioral norms as well as waste resources, or to underestimate the extent to which power needs to be employed, and fail in the task of implementation.

An example of the failure to manage politics and use power skillfully is provided by Xerox. The corporation realized that it had missed exploiting the personal computer technology it had invented, that the Palo Alto Research Center was really a treasure trove of ideas, and that there was a gap between great research and the development of a marketable product. In an attempt to commercialize PARC technology more effectively, Xerox established the Express project, a co-development effort with Syntex, a pharmaceutical company. A team of researchers, working with marketing and product development personnel, as well as with the customer, Syntex, set out to develop a system designed to meet the needs of the pharmaceutical industry, and to do it rapidly.

The task was viewed, for the most part, as one of technical coordination, in which the major challenges were to find the right organizational structure and to create a common perspective on the development effort. But the effort was highly politicized, in part because of its high visibility. Departments maneuvered for position, and this political maneuvering was neither well recognized nor well managed.

Marketing did not get involved early on, in part because it was understaffed, and in part because it did not view the co-production effort as critical—this was just an experiment, after all. When the project attained high visibility and it became clear that upper management was very interested in its outcome, marketing decided to get involved. Having come in late, it had to do something to justify its importance— otherwise, it might lose out in future efforts of this type. So with the project already well under way, marketing conducted a study of the product’s ability to be sold more broadly to the rest of the pharmaceutical industry, and also put together a business plan to evaluate the product’s financial attractiveness. The co-production group had already done both of these tasks. However, the marketing group used different assumptions about market penetration and margins (even though the co- production group had used some estimates originally supplied by marketing) and, naturally, came to different conclusions. The marketing group, although late into the fray, had the power of its legitimacy and presumed expertise—after all, who knows more about markets than marketing? The marketing people convinced a group of

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higher corporate executives, already nervous because of the unusual nature of the project (an interdisciplinary team co-developing a project with a customer), that the effort should be stopped before more money was spent. The incident shows that the political nature of the new product development and innovation process was not fully apprehended or successfully managed at Xerox. Not being aware of the importance of power and its use in the context, the project champions lost the project.

This chapter explores the conditions under which power is more or less important in organizational life, and the implications of power for our own career management activities. Finding a position in which the requirements for exercising power are compatible with our interests and abilities is crucial for our individual success and for the success of the projects we sponsor.1

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OCCURRENCE OF POWER AND INFLUENCE ACTIVITIES

 

There is some limited empirical evidence that can help set the framework for a discussion of the conditions under which power is used. The evidence comes primarily from two types of studies: examinations of actual decision making, and surveys of managers and executives about their perceptions of power and influence activities in their organizations.

A study of some 33 purchase decisions in 11 firms provides useful background information on the importance of influence in decisions of this type.2 The study revealed that, first of all, in 27 of the 33 decisions, there was some disagreement during the decision-making process that required resolution. It also turned out that the more important the decision, the more people involved in it. For decisions of moderate or major importance, almost 20 people on average were involved, while for decisions of less significance, an average of only eight people were involved. With the relatively large number of people involved in a major decision, it is scarcely surprising that differences of opinion emerge. But the real significance of the number is this: think about the task of trying to affect a decision in which 20 or so people are involved. It will clearly be important to carefully map the political terrain, understand the points of view, and spend time and effort on the process. With a smaller number of people involved, one’s attempts at influence can be more ad hoc and still have some chance of success.

From a survey of 428 graduates of a Canadian business school, we learn what types of decisions are perceived to most involve power and influence.3 In Table 2- 1, we see that interdepartmental coordination, promotion and transfer decisions, and decisions about facilities and equipment allocation were thought by many respondents to be highly involved with power. By contrast, work appraisals, hiring decisions, personnel policies, and grievances and complaints were less involved with power.

Table 2-1 Survey Responses about What Organizational Level and What Decisions Most

Involve the Use of Power

Situations % of Respondents Saying That Situation Always orFrequently Involves the Use of Power

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Interdepartmental Coordination

68.4

Promotions and Transfers 59.5

Facilities and Equipment Allocation 49.2

Grievances and Complaints 31.6

Personnel Policies 28.0 Hiring 22.5 Work Appraisals 21.5

Amount of Political Behavior at Various Levels

Level Mean Amount of Use of Power (3 = always; 2 = frequently; 1 = rarely; o = never)

Top Management 1.22 Middle Management 1.07 Lower Management .73

Source: Gandz and Murray (1980), pp. 242, 243.

The same survey provides some interesting information about the amount of power and influence required at various hierarchical levels. This is also displayed in Table 2-1. Not surprisingly, the data show that there is a more political climate, involving the more frequent use of power, at the higher organizational levels.

Another study interviewed three managers in each of 30 organizations, including the chief personnel or human resource officer, the chief executive officer, and one lower-level manager.4 The data from that study permit us to rank both functional areas and situations in terms of the frequency with which power and influence are used. These rankings are displayed in Table 2-2.

Table 2-2 shows that marketing, sales, and the board of directors are the three areas in which power is most used; by contrast, production and accounting and finance are functional areas in which power is less important. In terms of the importance of power in various situations, reorganizations, personnel changes, and resource allocations entail greater use of power, while establishing individual performance standards and changing rules and procedures involve power and

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political activity less frequently.

Table 2-2 What Functions and What Decisions Most Involve the Use of Power

 

Functional Area Amount of OrganizationalPolitics Marketing Staff 4.27 Board of Directors 3.88 Sales 3.74 Manufacturing Staff 3.05 Personnel 3.01 Purchasing 2.67 Research and Development 2.62 Accounting and Finance 2.40 Production 2.01 Type of Decision Amount of Organizational Politics Reorganizations 4.44 Personnel Changes 3.74 Budget Allocations 3.56 Purchase of Major Items 2.63 Establishing Individual Performance Standards 2.39

Rules and Procedures 2.31 Note: Responses are to the question, “How frequent is the occurrence of organizational politics?” Answers range from 1 = “very low” to 5 = “very high.”

Source: Madison et al., pp. 88, go.

All of these data together suggest that power is more important in major decisions, such as those made at higher organizational levels and those that involve crucial issues like reorganizations and budget allocations; for domains in which performance is more difficult to assess such as staff rather than line production operations; and in instances in which there is likely to be uncertainty and disagreement. We need to understand why these conditions seem to be associated with the use of power and influence. In exploring this subject, we will also discover some of the nuances of power and influence processes in organizations.

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INTERDEPENDENCE

 

Power is used more frequently under conditions of moderate interdependence. With little or no interdependence, there is little or no need to develop power or exercise influence. By the same token, when interdependence is great, people have incentives to work together, forge common goals, and coordinate their activities. If they ignore these incentives, then their organization or group is likely to fail.

My colleague Jerry Salancik and I have defined interdependence as follows:

Interdependence is the reason why nothing comes out quite the way one wants it to. Any event that depends on more than a single causal agent is an outcome based on interdependent agents. . . . interdependence exists whenever one actor does not entirely control all of the conditions necessary for the achievement of an action or for obtaining the outcome desired from the action.5

The essence of organizations is interdependence, and it is not news that all of us need to obtain the assistance of others in order to accomplish our jobs. What is news is that when interdependence exists, our ability to get things done requires us to develop power and the capacity to influence those on whom we depend. If we fail in this effort—either because we don’t recognize we need to do it or because we don’t know how—we will fail to accomplish our goals.

In the first chapter, we saw that Xerox’s Palo Alto Research Center invented the first personal computer, the Alto, and also made “the first graphics-oriented monitor, the first hand-held ‘mouse’ inputting device simple enough for a child, the first word processing program for nonexpert users, and the first local area communications network, the first object-oriented programming language, and the first laser printer.”6 There are, of course, a number of reasons why Xerox failed to capitalize commercially on its inventive technology, but one source of difficulty was the relationship of PARC personnel to the rest of Xerox. Bringing a new product to market requires the interdependent activity of many parts of the organization; this interdependence was not recognized at PARC, and even when it was recognized, the people involved did not see the need to develop power and influence. It was presumed that the magnificence of the technology would speak for itself and compel the development and introduction of successful products.

PARC was physically removed from the rest of Xerox—the Xerox of Rochester, New York and Stamford, Connecticut. PARC researchers had a healthy dose of arrogance, which led them to cultivate a we/they attitude toward the rest of Xerox,

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including SDS, the computer company that Xerox had purchased to help it enter the computer business:

“PARC suffered from a whole lot of arrogance,” remarks Bert Sutherland, one of a series of managers of PARC’s Systems Science Laboratory. “If you didn’t understand automatically, you were ‘stupid.’ It’s hard to get a good hearing that way.”7 By not appreciating the interdependence involved in a new product launch and the skills required to manage that interdependence, PARC researchers lost out on their ambition to change the world of computing, and Xerox missed some important economic opportunities.

It is especially important to develop power and influence when the people with whom you are interdependent have a different point of view than you, and thus cannot be relied upon to do what you would want. Thus, for example, a study of the process of selecting a dean in 40 colleges located in large state universities found that the greater the interdependence, the greater the amount of political activity on the part of the faculty.8 However, when interdependent faculty were in agreement, there was less political activity. The study indicates that interdependence increases the need for exercising influence, but, of course, the exercise of influence is important primarily when those with whom you are interdependent are not going to do what you want anyway.

Interdependence helps us understand the evidence presented in Tables 2-1 and 2- 2, which show where power is most used in organizations. There is more interdependence at higher levels in the organization, where tasks are less likely to be either simple or self-contained.9 There is more likely to be interdependence in staff positions, in which getting things done almost inevitably requires obtaining the cooperation of others in line management. Interdepartmental coordination is obviously a situation of extreme interdependence, and decisions about reorganizations typically involve a large number of units. Functional units also vary in their interdependence with other units, but it is often the case that sales and marketing stand between engineering or product development, on the one hand, and manufacturing or production on the other.

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Resource Scarcity

 

Interdependence results from many things, including the way in which tasks are organized. One factor that is critical in affecting the nature and the amount of interdependence is the scarcity of resources. Slack resources reduce interdependence, while scarcity increases it. As an example, consider the case of promotions. If an organization is growing rapidly and there are many promotional opportunities, the competition for promotions will be less intense. Individuals will feel that their chance for promotion depends mainly on their own performance, rather than on the performance of their co-workers. If, however, the organization stops growing and promotion opportunities decline, candidates find themselves in a so-called “zero sum game,” in which each person’s gain is another’s loss. What happens to me in the contest for promotion is now much more contingent on what happens to my competitors, and thus, the degree of interdependence is greater.

This example illustrates why most people prefer to be in situations of plentiful resources. Not only is each person’s chance for obtaining what he or she desires increased, but interdependence is reduced and there is, therefore, less need to develop power and influence in the situation. Since many, although not all, people find the task of developing power and exercising influence difficult or uncomfortable, they prefer situations with as little interdependence as possible.

A study at the University of Illinois explored the effect of power on the allocation of four resources that varied both in terms of their scarcity and their importance to the various academic departments.10 The study indicated that, according to every measure of departmental power employed, departmental power was most strongly related to the distribution of the most scarce resources, and least strongly related to the least scarce resources. Indeed, departmental power negatively predicted the allocation of the least scarce resources, once objective criteria were statistically controlled. The most straightforward interpretation of this result is that the powerful departments, having obtained a disproportionate share of those resources that were scarcest, gave the losers in the struggle, as a partial payoff, a disproportionate share of the resources that were not really contested anyway.

There is other evidence consistent with the argument that scarcity increases the use of power in organizational decision situations. A study at the University of Minnesota examined the allocation of budgets to academic departments over time.11 The study found that there appeared to be a greater effect of departmental power on resource allocations at times when resources were scarcer. Another study examined

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resource allocations to academic departments on two University of California campuses.12 Between 1967 and 1975, on one campus the total budget increased 52% and 11.9% of the faculty positions were lost, while on the second campus, the budget increased by almost 80% and faculty positions actually grew slightly (by .4%). The study observed that departmental power was more strongly associated with budget allocations on the campus facing scarcer resources.13

We can also see that in the interviews reported in Table 2-2, budget allocations were considered among the most political of decisions. To the extent that most organizations customarily face scarce rather than plentiful resources, it is not surprising that the allocation of these resources involves the use of power and influence.

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DIFFERENCES IN POINT OF VIEW

 

The fact that people are interdependent is not sufficient by itself to create the use of power and influence in organizations. After all, the players on sports teams are interdependent, but we seldom see them stopping to negotiate with each other while the clock is running. If everyone has the same goals and shares the same assumptions about how to achieve those goals, there will be a minimum of conflict. With consensus about what to do and how to do it, there is no need to exercise influence or develop the power to affect others, since they will do what you want in any event.14

But agreement about how to do it is the key. Goals alone are not a reliable index of political activity in a given situation. At first glance, one might think that goals are fundamental to all action, and that disagreement about goals inevitably leads to the use of power and influence. Although there is no comprehensive evidence on this point, observation suggests that it is not invariably true. There is often intense political activity in business firms, in which there is presumably shared agreement about the goal of making a profit. And, there are frequently cordial compromises in the world of governmental politics, where goals are inconsistent but deals can be struck in which the same means are employed to reach several ends.

The greater the task specialization in the organization, the more likely there will be disagreements. This is simply because, when work is divided into different specialties and units, it is more likely that the organization will have people whose differences in background and training will cause them to take different views of the situation. Lawyers are trained to see the world in one way, engineers another, and accountants yet another. Moreover, holding a particular position in an organization causes one to see the world through the information that comes with that position. Marketers get data on sales and market share, production folks on manufacturing costs and inventory levels. Moreover, different positions often have different incentives—sales maximization, cost minimization, innovation, meeting budgets—and these various incentives provide reasons to see the world differently. The aphorism I often use to describe this situation is: where you stand depends on where you sit.

David Halberstam’s history of Ford Motor Company vividly illustrates how education and functional background can condition the ways in which people view their environment. 15 The conflict at Ford (and at other automobile companies as well) between finance and engineering was, at its heart, a conflict about how to view the world. Engineers fundamentally see cars and engines as technological

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challenges, as things to be built. They are interested in developing a technological advantage over their competitors and in being the first to introduce new features. They want to design and build cars that have elements of engineering excellence. Finance analyzes cars less in terms of their aesthetics or their engineering wizardry than in financial terms such as payback period, return on investment, and the amount of capital required to launch new car models or to introduce new technologies of engines or transmissions. The two groups look at the same project from different perspectives, and therefore come, in many instances, to very different conclusions. Ford developed front-wheel drive and numerous other engineering innovations, but it was often one of the last automobile companies to actually put these innovations into its cars. Introducing a totally new transmission and redesigning the car accordingly cost a lot of money, and, unable to prove that such expenditures would produce enough additional revenues to make them profitable, engineering often lost out, at least in the 1960s and 1970s, to finance.

Serious disagreements among people with differing points of view are more likely to emerge in the absence of clear objectives or in the absence of an external threat or competition sufficient to cause subunits to work together. In the 1960s and 1970s, General Motors dominated the automobile industry. It is hard to believe now, but in the late 1950s GM’s biggest concern was antitrust—whether it would be broken up, not whether it could withstand competition. The lack of external competitive pressure, along with its large size and differentiated structure, produced an environment that was prone to organizational politics. John De Lorean noted, for instance, that “objective criteria were not always used to evaluate an executive’s performance.”16 What seemed to be valued more were being a good team player, not standing out too much, and being loyal to one’s boss. De Lorean provided many details of the extremes to which people went to prove loyalty to their boss: hiring a crane and removing a hotel window so that a refrigerator, too large to get in the door, could be placed in the hotel room of a GM executive who liked late-night snacks; picking up their boss at the airport; organizing retinues of people to meet and accompany the boss on tours; finding out the culinary likes and dislikes of their boss, and making sure that every need or desire was accommodated.

The politicking that occurs in the absence of real competitive pressure rarely promotes the success of the organization. It is, consequently, not surprising that political leaders, whether of nations or organizations, like to find a common enemy or an external threat that they can use to make organizational citizens put aside their differences and work together more effectively. For Apple Computer, for a long while, this was IBM, for the Japanese copier companies at the beginning, it was Xerox, and for U.S. automobile companies today, it is the Japanese. It is not coincidental that crossfunctional communication and coordination in U.S. automobile firms increased as the Japanese competition intensified.

 
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Strategic Staffing Handbook

OUR DEFINITION OF STRATEGIC STAFFING

Planning strategically on staffing helps bring success to any organization’s operations. Right skilled staffs are a crucial aspect of performance in organization (Jaiswal, 2018). Strategic staffing, according to Galloway (2018), is a process through which an organization’s staffing implications and operational plans are defined, laid down and addressed. Strategic staffing is important for many reasons. First, as Galloway (2018) states, it gives an opportunity to attract and hire the right people fit for an organization. Second, through strategic staffing, managers help examine and put in place a good retention plan for the staff hired as well as improve staff utilization. Lastly, it is an important aspect of budgeting. Determining the number of staff and associated costs help budget accordingly.

Sugar Street Sweets plans to staff strategically to enjoy the benefits listed. It plans to go about it through a well-defined process. First, the bakery will identify who the clients for its products are. Knowing the number of clients will help determine the workload, thus budgeting for enough staff. Next, Sugar Street Sweets will identify critical issues to be addressed in operation so as to quickly find the right people to handle them. It will then determine the level of demand and supply for balancing workload and personnel. It will then identify any gaps and surpluses in demand, supply and staff so as to apply controllable actions and lastly come up with appropriate staffing plan that will be reviewed periodically to ensure operations carry on smoothly.

Many factors, especially internal factors in an organization like policies, staffing structure, practices, procedure, information systems, budgets and legal reporting can be implemented as integrated an integrated staffing management system through alignment over the network. Alignment helps ensure departments and workers are aware of strategic direction of organization, policies and other requirements. It gives information to the right people in time with convenience. Over network, a data interface is established in company between employers and many employees, capturing all data about employees for employers. Job analysis means judging all information collected about a given job. It will be important for Sugar Street Sweets in determining relate procedures like training content and amount needed for personnel, compensation factors like environment and finally recruitment or advertisement content for jobs.

JOB ANALYSIS

Job analysis is the process which includes identification and determination of the job duties and requirements for a particular job post. It involves making judgment on information already available about a job. Job content describes the basic responsibilities that are associated with a particular job posting. It gives the applicant an overview of what is expected in an organization so as to understand whether they qualify or not.

Job requirements stipulate what is required of the employee once they have been confirmed. It includes the daily tasks to be carried and what is expected at the end of the day. Competencies are the skills that a prospective employee must have in order to produce the desired results. They include the educational skills, special training and the minimum qualifications.

At Sugar Street Sweets, job analysis will be carried out by the management and the supervisors. Together they will be able to determine the responsibilities that each job should have for efficiency and better performance of the employees. The consultants will also be involves to ensure each job posting is up to the required standards. This exercise will be carried out before the advertisement of the open positions to ensure there is a consensus on what is required.

The methods to be used in a job analysis are interviews and observation. The interviews will be individual based to gain as much information as possible, such as the applicant’s knowledge, skills, and abilities. This will involve engaging the already available employees so as to understand from them what the knowledge, skills, and abilities are required to perform the job. A structured interview protocol will be preferred to ensure standardization as we interview different employees. For the fairly routine jobs such as cleaning, observation method will be used whereby the management will use direct observation to develop the skills and abilities required.

Skills can be defined as the ability of a person to do something well. Store front employees, have no room for error. They should always have a good time management skill (Rodolphe, 2017). This is because they are responsible for various tasks such as management of the cash coming into the company. A cashier or store front employee should ensure that there is accuracy in all calculations requiring simple math skills, such as addition and subtraction. At Sugar Street Sweets, our store front employees should have communication skills which include verbal and written skills. This will enhance their communication in the organization. The cashier or store front employee should be able to use equipment’s such a as box cutter to open any packages needed. Other skills include being detail oriented and the ability to work in a fast paced environment.

The store front employee should have a number of abilities. This includes the ability to make quick decisions. They should have good problem solving skills to be able to identify the case of a problem and solve it instead of always running to the manager. Good work ethics makes the store front employee be able to make the right decision at all times (Beblavy, Fabo, & Lenaerts, 2016). Having the ability to work in a team makes the store front employee perform well in any organization.

Store front employees should have a good knowledge in Front End or customer service experience which enables them to perform their tasks effectively. Sugar Street Sweets wants the employees to have knowledge on pricing and inventory control to assist in determining overprices and underpriced goods.

LEGAL ASPECTS OF STAFFING

Affirmative Action

Affirmative Action is a law enforced to ban discrimination in any workplace. It provides that all people should be equally considered for employment. This law is important to Sugar Street Sweets because it will help plan on how to balance our personnel in terms of gender, race, color and others. It will help give slot to all qualified people while avoiding cases of discrimination. That is, it will help highlight all recruitment components and how to comply with the law.

Child Labor

This law, enforced by Wage and Hour Division, sets a minimum age for employment. It also sets duration for working by children at a certain age. The law also restricts employment of minors within dangerous environment. This law is of pertinence of Sugar Street Sweets in that it will help state clearly the rightful age for employment. It will also be important for setting friendly working conditions, putting it clean when and where to work. Thus, through the law, rights of children will be considered during recruitment.

Foreign Labor

Foreign Labor Act seeks certification with the US Department of Labor before hiring foreigners. It helps certify legality of foreign individuals for employment in the United States. This law is useful at Sugar Street Sweets to help ensure that only those who have their credentials up to date will be hired. It will also help outline staffing plans while laying out policies and requirements for recruitment. Through the law, conditions for staffing will be set ensuring only certified personal works for Sugar Street Sweets.

PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT

The performance management of Sugar Street Sweets will be a continuous process. The work environment today is characterized by increasing business pressures which puts more pressure on them to become more efficient and effective in their operations. This must be done in order to remain competitive (Arnaboldi, Lapsley & Steccolini, 2015). Therefore the continued evaluation and review of the employees is important in establishing the performing and non-performing employees. It also identifies the gaps in the skills and hence makes it possible for Sugar Street Sweets to determine the training needs for the organization. Since evaluations lead to the aligning of the employees’ actions to the business strategy it results to better performance (Arnaboldi, Lapsley & Steccolini, 2015). Job evaluations and reviews results to well skilled, strategy oriented and performing employees in our company.

The evaluation methods to be used at Sugar Street Sweets include the management by objectives method. This method uses the set objectives between managers and the employees as well as evaluated the performance periodically (Jenter & Kanaan, 2015). The achievement of the goals leads to the rewarding of the employees. The second method we will use is the 360 Degree performance appraisal model. The manager(s) can use different measures and certain factors about an employee. The third method that we would use would be the Behavioral Observation Scale Method. This method will help identify the frequency rating of the critical incidents in which the employees performed over time while employed as Sugar Street Sweets.

Calibration of performance in the company is to be carried out by the senior management only. The factors to be determined include productivity, achievement of goals and performance on areas such as relationships (Oyemomi et al., 2016). The process should be carried out after appraisal for better information.

 

 

 

 

 

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Alaska Airlines

A. Create Urgency

1. Describe a plan to create urgency within the organization and convince stakeholders that this change needs to take place.

2. What processes currently exist for implementing change? How will these processes need to be updated for the proposed change?

3. Describe the strategy you will use to get support from your employees. How will this strategy be effective?

B. Build a Guiding Coalition

1. Identify who should be involved in this guiding coalition. Provide rationale for each choice. Kotter likes 50% leaders and 50% managers with experience, while others prefer the composition to be 33% leaders, 33% managers, and 33% informal leaders, but you can assemble the guiding coalition as you see fit.

2. Determine steps you can take to ensure commitment from those involved. Describe those steps.

Guidelines for Submission:Your paper must be submitted as a 3–6-page Microsoft Word document with double spacing, 12-point Times New Roman font, one-inch margins, and at least three sources cited in APA format.

 
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HRMN 367 Assignment Solutions- Culture Analysis Paper (Final Project Part 1; 20 Points)

HRMN 367

 

Culture Analysis Paper (Final Project Part 1; 20 points)

For this assignment, you are asked to analyze an organizational culture. This could be the organization in which you work, or it could be some other organization to which you have access. Remember that clubs, associations, and churches (as examples) can be considered organizations.

 

Research (data gathering) may include research of corporate websites, interviews, observations, and surveys.

 

Collect your data and analyze it. Describe how you collected the data (observation, interviews, surveys, etc.).

 

Then, analyze the organizational culture along three dimensions: artifacts, values, and underlying assumptions. Give examples of behavior, speech, or symbols that illustrate your findings. Use at least four scholarly sources in your analysis.

 

 

Format: Your paper should be 4-6 pages (double spaced), or approximately 1,000-1,500 words, and not counting the Title and References pages. Any data used (interviews, surveys, websites, etc.) should be attached and referenced in the appendices. Your title page should include the title of your paper, your name, the course name/number, and the date. The in-text citations and references should be in APA style. You should use a black 12 point Times New Roman font.

 
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Intro To Management: Assessment Case Study – The Imperial Hotel, London

The assessment is based on a business and management case study which requires a critical approach to identifying and problem-solving a range of business and management challenges within the case.

Within the individual report you will include a summary and key justifications for the resolution of one of the problems in the case supported by management theories and principles.

The report will be an individual 2,000 words report which will address one of the five specific ‘problems’ identified in the case (e.g. a human resource management challenge, an ethical problem, a performance and productivity issue, etc). Students will be expected to apply management theory to practice throughout the report.

See attachment for Case Study: The Imperial Hotel, London and list of Problems 1-5, of which to choose 1 from, as well as full detailed brief for this assignment.

If any questions, please do not hesitate to ask.

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Introduction to Management BUS020C414S 2018-2019 Resit due 26TH July 2019 Re-sit Assessment Template for Students

Academic year and term: Year 1, Term 2

Module title: Introduction to Management (Level 4)

Module code: BUS020C414S Module Convener:

Dr Guy Bohane Learning outcomes assessed within this piece of work as agreed at the programme level meeting

Knowledge outcome – On completion of this module you will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the processes, procedures and practices for effective management in organisations. Intellectual /transferrable skill outcome – Students who successfully complete this module will be developing your competence in using a range of basic analytical and managerial techniques and processes including objective setting, monitoring and evaluation as well as interpersonal skills of successful managers.

Business Readiness outcomes assessed within this piece of work as agreed at the programme level meeting

Students will be developing an understanding of and using techniques to solve business problems with awareness of commercial acumen as well as developing your ability to write reports and have confidence in team working.

1)Type of assessment: (one summative assessment per module)

One summative assessment which is an individual report on a case study – The Imperial Hotel. The report will be 2,000 words in total.

• A 2,000 words individual report will address one specific problem topic within the case

 

 

 

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Imperial Hotel Case Study • For students who originally submitted work and need to resit, the original report submitted needs to be reworked (the same problem) and improved upon and a reflective piece of 500 words added where the student would reflect on how their work has been amended based on the feedback received and how this might help in future assignments. For students who did not originally submit their assessment, the report needs to be written and submitted (details of the report topics are below). Resit submission date: Friday 26th July 2019, 2pm For students who are offered a resit: you are required to improve and resubmit your original report as well as adding a further reflective commentary discussing what you have learned from the process. You must resubmit your work using the specific resit Turnitin link on Moodle. You should: 1. Review your previously submitted work and read carefully the feedback given by the marker. 2. Use this feedback to help you revisit and rewrite your work, improving it in the areas identified as weak in the original marking process 3. Include with your resubmission an additional reflective piece (up to 500 words) on what you understand was weak, how you set about addressing this and what you have learned from this that may help you with further assignments. You should address the following specifically: i) Identify tutor feedback points on your original work and identify where/how the resit work has changed (give page number) in response to feedback ii) Identify the lessons you have learnt from doing the resit iii) Reflect on how your feedback and this process will help you improve future assignments

 

 

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For students who did not submit a report at the first opportunity you cannot reflect on your feedback. However, you are still required to submit a reflective piece in which you identify your reasons for non- submission, the implications of non-submission for your future success and how you propose to address this in the future. For deferred students: If you were deferred at the first assessment opportunity you do not need to include the reflective piece as this is a first submission at a later date, not a resit. The original marking criteria will still apply (see marking grid provided below*) except that the 10% weighting for presentation will be awarded instead to your reflective piece. • A 2,000 words individual report will address one specific problem topic within the case (e.g. a human resource management challenge, an ethical problem, a performance and productivity issue, etc). Dates : Submit by 2pm on 26th July 2019 Marks release date: 6pm on 16th August

 

Submission date and time

Students submit final summative report through Turnitin by Friday 26th July 2019, 2pm

Marks and feedback date: Feedback and provisional marks release: – 6pm Friday16th August 2019 Support and feedback on assessment You will be offered support throughout the planning and writing of our report. Please contact Guy Bohane the Module Convenor for a tutorial. g.bohane@roehampton.ac.uk. He will be on annual leave on Friday 14th June returning to the University on Monday 24th June. I will also be unavailable between 13th to 26th July inclusive.

 

 

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Summative Assessment: Re-sit Instructions to students

Assessment Case Study – The Imperial Hotel, London The assessment is based on a business and management case study which requires a critical approach to identifying and problem-solving a range of business and

management challenges within the case. Throughout the term you will undertake research and analysis which will inform your individual report. Within the individual report you will include a summary and key justifications for the resolution of one of the problems in the case supported by management theories and principles.

The report will be an individual 2,000 words report which will address one of the five specific ‘problems’ identified in the case (e.g. a human resource management challenge, an ethical problem, a performance and productivity issue, etc). You will receive a full briefing in Week 4.

Students will be expected to apply management theory to practice throughout the report. Case Study – The Imperial Hotel, London

The Imperial Hotel is a London 500 bedroom hotel, which is owned and managed part of a well-known international branded chain of hotels in the 4 star market – Star Hotels which operates 25 hotels in the UK. The Imperial Hotel, located in the heart of London’s West End, caters for mainly international business and tourists guests who have high expectation in terms of service standards.

The facilities at the hotel include the following:

• 500 bedrooms, all with en-suite facilities. • Conference facilities for 1,000 people • Leisure centre with swimming pool • 3 Bars and 4 restaurants • 12 conference rooms

Staff

• 6 Heads of Departments: Food and Beverage; Housekeeping; Guest Services & Concierge; Front of House & Reception; and Human Resources & training. • 450 staff in total (300 full-time and part-time) • Outside contractors (for specialist cleaning; laundry services; management of the leisure centre;)

 

 

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A new General Manager, Peter Farnsworth, has recently taken over the management of the whole hotel. He is an experienced manager having worked in several of the other Star city centre hotels outside London. The previous General Manager, who had just retired, had been experiencing a range of problems in managing the hotel, namely that:

• There was a very high turnover of staff in all the departments running around 80% a year mainly due to poor staff morale; • The hotel was graded the lowest in the whole Star chain in terms of overall guest satisfaction running at a rate of 60% in the company’s benchmark grading

system; the overall sales in the hotel are improving, • Although the hotel occupancy (the ratio of rooms sold against the total number of rooms available) was running at 90% for the year, the actual average

room rate (ARR) achieved, currently running at £95 per room per night was relatively low compared to the local competition. • The poor performance is having a direct negative effect on the costs of the hotel and the hotel’s overall profitability.

The Imperial is an old hotel having been in operation for nearly 100 years. The hotel was last fully refurbished some 8 years ago but is now in need of some restoration and redecoration. There is a programme of staged refurbishment in place which means each floor of the hotel is being closed for building work to be undertaken. The consequence of this is that, at any one time for the next two years, 60 rooms will be out of action. This is putting the hotel under budgetary pressure due to the ongoing building costs as well as the loss of income from the 60 rooms out of action at any one time.

 

 

 

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Planned Strategy for Resolving the Problems in the Hotel

Peter Farnsworth is under no illusion as to the challenges ahead and has decided to plan a strategy for resolving the operational, management and business-related problems in the hotel. The first part of the plan is to identify the top five problems for the hotel for the coming year. He identifies the problems as follows:

• Problem 1: Poor guest satisfaction • Problem 2: High staff turnover with 80% of the staff leaving within the year • Problem 3: A negative work culture amongst the staff with high levels of sick leave and poor attendance • Problem 4: Front of house staff (Reception, Conference & Banqueting, and Restaurant & Bars )– poor team working and

inefficient use of IT systems including the reservation and property management systems • Problem 5: Back of house staff (Housekeeping, Kitchen, Maintenance) – poor operating and control procedures in place

with stock being regularly pilfered and evidence of staff not meeting basic Standard Operating Procedures (SOPS) resulting in unusually high operating costs

 

 

 

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The Problems in Detail Problem 1: Poor guest satisfaction The hotel was graded the lowest in the whole Star chain in terms of overall customer satisfaction running at a rate of 60% in the company’s benchmark grading system. The company average is 78%. In every hotel in the chain the company undertakes a monthly Guest Satisfaction Survey (GSS) with regular guests and this includes a summary of guest cards completed by guests in their hotel rooms, as well as more formal online monthly survey with major business clients. The survey asks clients to grade all the facilities in the hotel (see Appendix 1 for the most recent monthly survey results for the Imperial Hotel). The most regular complaints received are in relation to issues about checking in and checking out of the hotel, the quality of the rooms themselves and the poor quality of staff. There have been a number of complaints about the reception staff being indifferent and sometimes rude to guests. Other guests have been critical of having to wait in queues at reception both for checking into the hotel as well as checking out. A considerable number of guests have complained of repeatedly being charged incorrectly in their final bill. Most worrying is the fact that some guests are also complaining that there has been little or no timely response to their complaints. In terms of the accommodation in the hotel a growing number of guest are being critical of the quality of the hotel rooms and in particular the cleanliness of the bathrooms, with numerous requests for room changes due to showers not working properly, noisy air conditioning, and technology not working in the rooms.

 

 

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Problem 2: High staff turnover with 80% of the staff leaving within the year

Staff turnover in the hotel sector is generally high due to the temporary nature of employment of, for example: students; foreign nationals from the European Union wanting to work for short periods in London; and generally low pay (on average just at the living wage rate). The turnover of staff is particularly high in the Imperial hotel for front-line staff. The exit interviews with leaving staff have identified a number of issues around: poor perception of the work culture within the hotel with sometimes aggressive supervisory and management styles in evidence: the unsociable working hours; a lack of proper and regular training; poor pay levels compared to working for example food retailing; little opportunity for promotion or bonuses; the high cost of travelling to work in central London and difficulties in getting transport home at night; A number of young and talented supervisory staff have also left the hotel to work at competitor hotel companies who offer better pay, working conditions and benefits. The high level of staff turnover puts direct pressure on the staffing budget with staff costs currently running at around 35% of sales for the hotel which is a particularly high for this type of hotel. The need to continuously employ new staff has considerably increased induction training costs as well as had a negative impact of the overall quality of the service to guests, particularly the regular guests who are now reducing in number and appear to be using other hotels. There appears to be a cycle emerging which may be linked to the high level of staff turnover which subsequently affecting the whole organisation. In terms of individual members of staff there appears to be decreased job satisfaction and a lack of commitment to the hotel with an intent to leave. This shows itself in attendance problems, decreased work performance, and sometimes stress. As a consequence there is an increased pressure on colleagues to pick up the slack which contributes to routine system problems and a ‘culture of turnover’. This operational staff as well as management as well as this often results in a decreased pool of promotable staff and managers. The result of this for the hotel is that there are managerial succession problems. Other consequences include operational bureaucracy.

 

 

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Problem 3: A negative work culture amongst the staff with high levels of sick leave and poor attendance

The organisational culture of working within Star Hotels is performance driven. The General Manager, and the Heads of Departments are under continuous pressure to increase sales month-by-month by increasing the occupancy of the hotel as well as pushing up the average room rate. The hotel is assessed on a monthly basis and managers’ bonus schemes are directly linked to the financial performance of increasing sales and reducing and controlling costs. The espoused values of Star Hotels is about excellence in customer service and hence performance is also linked to the results of the Guest Satisfaction Surveys (GSS). The London hotels consistently perform worse than the other hotels in the Star Group and this is linked to guests’ perceptions that London hotels are overly expensive and offer poor value for money. The managers and Heads of Department often complain that that the guest surveys put them at a disadvantage because comparing experiences and views of guests staying in a London hotel is completely different to say a leisure-based hotel in Scotland whereby guests are more relaxed. The work culture in the hotel under the previous General Manager was somewhat toxic. The hotel, being a busy London 24 hour and 365 day a year operation, means that there are often long working hours, particularly for those staff covering for staff who may have gone off sick at short notice. Many of the part-time staff are female and have family commitments, and in many cases have other part-time jobs to fit round those family commitments. This has often resulted in these staff turning up late for their work shifts, and there have been many occasions whereby staff ask their colleagues to cover for them for short periods without informing their supervisors. The levels of supervision of staff has been minimal because of the high turnover of supervisory staff. In the recent past the style of management could be described as authoritarian and often dictatorial with very little consultation with lower levels of staff in terms of ways of improving performance and minimal feedback in terms of how to improve on working practices or meet the guests’ needs.

 

 

 

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Problem 4: Front of house staff (Reception, Conference & Banqueting, and Restaurant & Bars)

– poor team working and inefficient use of IT systems including the reservation and property management systems

The front of house staff, particularly in the Reception have a pivotal customer-facing role in offering service and support to guests. The Reception needs to be open 24 hours a day and is the first point-of-call for guests as well key staff in all Departments to have up-to-date information and data on guest arrivals and departures, specific guest needs and guest billing data. The Reception staff at the Imperial Hotel work three, 8 hour shifts working in teams. Each team has a supervisor and they have a particularly challenging function of managing Reception teams as well as in passing on important guest information and data on to the next shift. The hotel uses a Micros Fidelio reservation and Property Management System (PMS) which provides up-to-date information on real-time and prospective guests and their reservations. The other departments including the kitchen, restaurants and conferencing are dependent on Reception for guest numbers and data. Some of the key Reception staff have been in conflict with the other Departments after numerous complaints about wrong and inaccurate information being provided. Housekeeping have been given wrong or out-of-date data on room availability, and whether a guest is staying on in the hotel. Reception have also failed to inform Housekeeping about early and late arrivals and subsequently rooms have not been cleaned in time with guests having to wait for long periods to get their room keys. The conference and banqueting staff have complained that they have not been provided with proper data on numbers of guests coming in for meetings and conferences. This, combined with complaints from guests that Reception staff are often abrupt or even rude in dealing with even the most basic request has caused a lot of animosity within the Reception staff and other staff throughout the hotel. The Reception Department has become somewhat dysfunctional and there are examples of Reception shift teams arguing with in the incoming teams about not providing proper handover information. A new Head of Department of Front Office and Reception, working closing with the General Manager, is aware of the conflict issues within the department as well as with the other departments within the hotel and intends to undertake a stand to manage the conflict quickly and efficiently. The Reception teams’ dynamics are not good, and there is a blame culture with staff not working constructively and there is a clash of some strong personalities within the Department. He is going to review: the way the teams are structured; the individual performance of staff in terms of performance and productivity; the rewards and benefit being offered for good performance; and training and development needs. He also intends to develop and co-ordinate a team-based approach to managing the staff. The poor data issues can be dealt with through improved use of the IT systems (PMS) although the animosity within and between working teams will be more difficult to resolve

 

 

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Problem 5: Back of house staff (Housekeeping, Kitchen, Maintenance) – poor operating and control procedures in place with stock being regularly pilfered and evidence of staff not meeting basic Standard Operating Procedures (SOPS) resulting in unusually high operating costs Staffing the Housekeeping Department at the Imperial hotel is always a challenge. There are up to 400-500 rooms to service a day, and this overseen by the Executive Housekeeper and 12 supervisory and administration staff. In the past year, it has proved very difficult to recruit room attendants, and those who are employed only tend to stay for no longer than 6 months. The staff turnover in the department is currently 60% a year. The hotel therefore resorted, two years ago to using a recruitment agency, ABC (International) to fill 30 of the 50 room attendants jobs in the departments. The 20 in-house staff are a hardcore of long-term employees who have worked for the company for many years.

ABC (International) is a recruitment company run by Charles Santos who has considerable experience in the hotel industry in England and Spain. Each candidate is interviewed and assessed on their English before they are included on the database. All candidates produce three references which are checked by ABC prior to their departure from Spain. They must have considerable practical experience of working in a hotel housekeeping department before taking up a post. If the hotel cannot provide staff accommodation then ABC will organise it for them.

The quality of the Spanish staffs’ work is good overall, and the cost of employing the staff through the agency is only marginally more expensive that employing home staff. The Spanish staff tend to stay with the hotel for up to a year. The Spanish staff prefer to work together in their shifts with other Spanish staff, and are supervised and provided on-the-job training as to the brand standards for the hotel by the in-house Assistant Head Housekeeper, herself a fluent Spanish speaker.

There has been considerable discontent from the in-house room attendant claiming that the Spanish staff are un-cooperative when asked to work with non-Spanish staff. The Spanish staff are used to working in teams in their shifts, working together in pairs who are allocated 20 room a day to service. The standard of the in- house staffs’ working has been dropping. The hotel uses the Texlon system, which is a hand-held tracker system whereby a supervisor will undertake a sample check of the room standards and rank and score the standards of a serviced room. The results are subsequently plugged into the hotel computer and each member of staff is given a ranking out of 100. The Spanish staff (75%+ scores) consistently score higher than the in-house staff (60%-65%), which again has caused considerable resentment. The attendance of the in-house staff, all employed on full-time contracts, is getting progressively worse which has put pressure on the housekeeping budget.

There have recently been a number of complaints from hotel guests, who have not been happy with the general level of cleanliness in the hotel bedroom and in particular the bathroom. There have also been a number of complaints about housekeeping room attendants being abrupt and sometimes rude. When these cases have been investigated, it is becoming clear that full-time staff have poor motivation levels.

 

 

 

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General information relevant to all the problems listed Staff Incentive Schemes

There are currently a number of incentive schemes to encourage staff to meet excellent standards of work, and to improve productivity. These include: Employee of the Month (for the whole hotel – £200) and employee of the month for each department (£50); staff (including agency staff) consistently meeting individual and performance targets in three consecutive months within the department (£200 vouchers towards staying in any one of Star Hotels); department, end-of-year parties (funded by the hotel); college fees being paid (NVQ levels 2-4).

 

 

 

 

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Tasks As an independent consultant, you have been asked by Peter Farnsworth to take responsibility for analysing one of the five problems, putting forward and prioritise the problem. Tasks for the report:

• Discuss the problem’s likely causes from a management and operational perspective including any relationships with the other 4 problems • Put forward a 3 point plan for resolving the problem particularly in terms of improving the quality of service, staff morale, operational efficiency

and productivity to make the hotel financially sustainable. • Support your answer with management and operations theories and principles

The expectation is that within 12 months there should be dramatic improvement and change in performance in all five areas. You have asked to write a 2,000 word report addressing your single problem topic to attempt to resolve that problem in the hotel.

 

End of case

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Marking criteria: Individual report element: 2,000 words (100% weighting for the module)

o A review of management theory to one specific problem in the case with appropriate use of essential texts and academic reading 30%

o An analysis of one specific problem within the case demonstrating an understanding of the processes and procedures for effective management 40% o A summary and justification of key proposals for the resolution of the problem in the organisation 20%

o Reflection on your Report (Re-sit students only) 10%

 

Suggested report format:

§ Title Page § Introduction – Explain the background to your individual problem in the context of the case (250 words approx). § Analysis of the individual problem – Summarise and interpret the data from your secondary research into published literature and management theory.

Describe and present your results for effective management of the problem. A summary and justification of key proposals for the resolution of the problem in the organisation (1500 words approx.)

§ Conclusion – This should be a brief summary of findings of the analysis of the individual problem. (250 words) § Bibliography

Support and feedback on assessment You will be offered support throughout the planning and writing of our report. Please contact Guy Bohane the Module Convenor for a tutorial. g.bohane@roehampton.ac.uk. He will be on annual leave on Friday 14th June returning to the University on Monday 24th June. I will also be unavailable between 13th to 26th July inclusive.

• Referencing – You MUST use the Harvard System. The Harvard system is very easy to use once you become familiar with it.

 

 

 

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Assignment submission:

A 2,000 words individual report will address one specific problem topic within the case (e.g. a human resource management challenge, an ethical problem, a performance and productivity issue, etc).

Those undertaking a resubmission please complete the reflective piece as shown above.

Dates : Submit by 2pm on 26th July 2019

Marks release date: 6pm on 16th August

StudentZone http://studentzone.roehampton.ac.uk/howtostudy/index.html.

Mitigating circumstances – The University Mitigating Circumstances Policy can be found on the University website – Mitigating Circumstances Policy

• Marking and feedback process (for Year 1 modules) – Between you handing in your final report and then receiving your feedback and marks within 20 days, there are a number of quality assurance processes that we go through to ensure that you receive marks which reflects their work. A brief summary is provided below:

• Step One – The module and marking team meet to agree standards, expectations and how feedback will be provided. • Step Two – A subject expert will mark your work using the criteria provided in the assessment brief above. • Step Three – A moderation meeting takes place where all members of the teaching and marking team will review the marking of others to

confirm whether they agree with the mark and the feedback that has been provided.

• Step Four – Your mark and feedback is processed by the Office and made available to you.

 

 

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Re-sit Assessment Rubric – Introduction to Management BUS020C414S

 

Report 2,000 words

 

100 Exemplary 85 Excellent

75 Very good

65 Good

55 Competent

45 Weak

35 Marginal Fail

20 Fail

A review of management theory to one specific problem in the case with appropriate use of essential texts and academic reading 30% weighting

Exceptional ability to examine complex issues in a way that potentially challenges existing theories. The quality of the examination demonstrates a potential to add value and novelty to the concepts studied.

Excellent application of management theories, supported by excellent interpretation skills of the topic and effective and review and analysis of the existing theories.

Clear ability of identifying the most relevant theories, and reasonable application of basic concepts to the problem, with predominance of analysis over description. Only minor gaps.

Displays and understanding of the problem but requires more systematic, critical analysis of the topic supported by a theoretical discussion.

Some application of basic management concepts and theories to the question involving an analytical approach, limited by description.

Very limited use of basic concepts and management theories in relation to the problem and work is largely descriptive..

Irrelevant and superficial application of any management theory and concepts to the examination of the problem.

Little or no analysis of management theory, even at a superficial level.

An analysis of one specific problem within the case demonstrating an understanding of the processes and procedures for effective management 40% weighting

Student has gone beyond what is expected to analyse the problem. Exceptional understanding of the subject area, with unique and additional contribution to

Excellent understanding of the subject area with very good analysis of the problem. Form grasp of knowledge. Demonstrates evidence of assessing sources beyond minimum.

Reflects understanding of the problem in question through the analysis. Relevant knowledge is presented accurately with only minor gaps.

Clear demonstration of knowledge but some gaps or lack of focus in the analysis.

Analysis demonstrated at a fairly basic level. Some attempt to demonstrate an understanding of processes and procedures for effective management.

Analysis demonstrated at a very basic level. Information briefly summarised and incomplete in parts. Limited understanding of effective management.

Very little attempt or effort to coherently analyse the problem in relation to effective management. Clear confusion of knowledge with obvious errors. Lack of understanding.

No real work done. The majority of information included is irrelevant to the problem in question

 

 

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existing knowledge.

A summary and justification of key proposals for the resolution of the problem in the organisation 20% weighting

An excellent summary with an outstanding, coherent justification for the proposals.

A very well considered and convincing justification for the proposals to the resolution of the problems.

The summary offers a reasonably convincing justification for the proposals.

A competent justification for the key proposals for the resolution of the problem.

The summary offers an adequate justification for the proposals but lack rigour

The summary and justification of the key proposals are at a very basic level and offer only limited coherence in the context.

The summary of proposals makes little sense in the context of the problem and would clearly fail to resolve the problem.

Summary offers little or no coherent justification for the proposals.

Clarity, structure, grammar, correct referencing 10% weighting

An outstanding report which would be considered excellent in a business context. The structure and use of language and report writing skills are exceptional. Faultless use of the Harvard system.

An extremely good, coherent report demonstrating a very convincing set of writing skills in terms of use of language and in the structuring of the report. Excellent use of the Harvard system.

A good report, clearly written and well communicated in terms of language and use of grammar. Sources and citations are well presented using the Harvard system.

A competent report demonstrating adequate report writing skills. Reasonably coherent use of language and grammar. Appropriate use of Harvard referencing.

Adequate report writing skills in evidence. Some minor errors in spelling, the use of appropriate language as well as in the application of the Harvard referencing system.

Weak report writing skills and poor structuring of the report. Some spelling errors and poor use of language. Some errors evident in the use of the Harvard referencing.

Very poor structure for the report which only partially meets the guidance on report structure. Numerous spelling and grammatical errors. Numerous errors in the use of Harvard referencing system.

No attempt to structure a coherent report in line with the guidance. No or limited referencing of sources with inappropriate use of the Harvard system. Extremely poor writing skills in evidence making the report largely incoherent.

 

 

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Appendix 2 A sample benchmark statement for the quality performance at the Imperial Hotel

 
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