Transcript Document
BUSS 951
Critical Issues in Information
Systems
Lecture 3
Organisations, Communities and
Workplaces
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Notices (1)
General
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Notices (2)
Readings for Week 4
1. Watson, Rainer and Koh (1991)
“Executive Information Systems: A
Framework for Development and a
Survey of Current Practices”
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Agenda (1)
Organisational Metaphors
Machines
Organisms
Specific Organisational Theories
Complex Organisations
Network Organisations
Population Ecology Models
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Brief History of IS
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Organisational Metaphors (1)
Metaphors:
conventional ideas about organisations
and management are based on a small
number of ‘taken-for-granted’ beliefs
these ‘taken-for-granted’ ideas are
referred to as metaphors
but metaphors are ‘real’ in that they have
real social consequences
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Organisational Metaphors (2)
metaphors are a way of understanding
‘reality’ in organisations
need to understand them:
affect type of management practices that occur
determine what constitutes information
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Organisational Metaphors (3)
Several different metaphors. The most
common in IS are:
organisations as machines
organisations as organisms
organisations as brains
organisations as cultures
organisations as political systems
the most important organisational metaphors
are:
organisations as machines
organisations as organisms
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Organisations as Machines
a common IS Metaphor
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Organisations as Machines
carefully defined activities linked by clear
lines of command & communication, and
coordination & control
designing organisations: managers design
formal structure of jobs into which people
can be fitted
two types of management theory use this
metaphor
classical management theory
scientific management
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Organisations as Machines
Classical Management Theory (1)
unity of command
chain of authority from superior to
subordinate
span of control
distinction- staff and line (staff provides
advise but must not violate management
authority)
emphasises initiative at all levels
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Organisations as Machines
Classical Management Theory (2)
division of work- specialisation
authority and responsibility (right of
management to give orders and to exact
obedience)
centralisation of authority
discipline
subordination of individual interest to the
general interest of the company
stability of tenure- workers are rewarded
with permanent jobs
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Organisations as Machines
Scientific Management (1)
shift all responsibility for work from workers to
management
managers should do all the thinking relating to
the planning and design of work
workers are left to the task of implementation
use scientific methods to determine the most
effective way of doing work
design workers tasks accordingly
specify the precise way in which work should be
done
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Organisations as Machines
Scientific Management (2)
select the best person to perform the work
train the worker to do the work effectively
monitor worker performance to ensure
appropriate work procedures are followed
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Organisations as Organisms
another common IS Metaphor
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Organisations as Organisms (1)
many varied ideas about organisations, as:
open systems
contingency theory: adapting the organisation
to its environment
organisational health, behaviour, development
& ecology
understand relations between organisations &
environments
understand organisations as ongoing processes
rather than as collections of parts
management looks at organisational ‘needs’ to
help the organisation ‘survive’
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Organisations as Organisms (2)
organisations adapt to their environments
environments select the organisations that
will survive- but contrast this with the
Complex Organisations work of Perrow
who contradicts this tenant of IS Systems
Theory
assumes functional unity- but
organisations are often in conflict
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Organisational Metaphors
Summary (1)
dominant metaphor: Organisations as Organisms
to understand why, need to understand the
previous dominant metaphor of Organisations as
Machines
IS uses Systems Theory therefore it also uses the
dominant metaphor
metaphors are ways of thinking about organisations,
determine:
the way management is structured
organisations are managed
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Organisational Metaphors
Summary (3)
determines relationships between
management & worker function
determines what constitutes information
therefore the types of systems to be
developed and used
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Complex Organisations
Charles Perrow
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Complex Organisations
Industry & Environment
Perrow points out, that organisational theory has
always recognised the environment to some
extent
the Institutional School placed more emphasis on
it than any other theory or school
however, the Institutional School viewed the
environment:
fairly pragmatic, and
poorly conceptualised.
more recent theory and ideas are looking to better
conceptualise the environment
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Industry & Environment
Culture Industry
Perrow outlines his argument for the
importance of environment in determining
industry sector success and failure
he starts by examining bias in the culture
industry (such as TV, music, newspapers,
theatre, movies, etc)
and concludes that organisational owners and
producers can and do shape the cultural
products of the artists
he argued that this is not just a matter of
individual bias
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Industry & Environment
Culture Industry
Perrow believes that these products are shaped
by subtle selection processes that often involves
corporate sponsors who attempt to maximise
profits and instil their own brand of ideology on
selected groups of the public
he gives an account of the popular music industry
over the period from the 1920s through to the late
1960s- a very interesting account
Can we use this concept to explain Microsoft?
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Industry & Environment
Popular Music: Conclusions
the conclusions Perrow draws from this study
are as follows:
while changes in the environment such as
technological developments (TV, LP records,
transistor radios) and product substitutions
(TV for radio) do cause organisations to
adjust,
but the objective of such adjustment is to
gain control over, and thus manipulate, the
environment
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Industry & Environment
Popular Music: Conclusions
the turbulence in the environment may result
from their own efforts to rationalise the
industry and introduce new products and
services
new technological developments do not
determine cultural outcomes; but the way new
technologies are used by the elite
organisations of an industry can create ‘mass
culture’
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Industry & Environment
Popular Music: Conclusions
the most important environment of the elite
organisations in an industry are the other elite
organisations in the industry; despite competition
between them, they collectively implement
strategies to eliminate or absorb threatening smaller
competitors
the public is poorly served by this process; if we
have to rely on the unlikely conjunction of a number
of technological innovations to have diverse tastes
satisfied, then we are in great trouble as a public!
costs of these changes are generally displaced by
the elite organisations onto other dependent parts of
the industry
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Industry & Environment
Conclusions
From this Perrow draws the conclusion
that, in addition to the above list of
observations concerning the environment,
we add the following:
the power of the state to regulate and give
entitlements is probably the single most
important means available to organisations to
control their environment
and a corollary: the power of the state to block
attempts by organisations to control their
environment (eg, anti-trust and monopoly laws)
is substantial!
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Industry & Environment
Conclusions
Perrow notes a major debate about the role of the
state in capitalist societies
is it a ‘tool’ for the capitalist class
or an umpire reconciling diverse competing interests
or an independent entity with organisational needs of
its own, serving as a broker between the capitalist and
other classes, while meeting its own needs for growth
and power in the process?
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Organisational Networks
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Organisational Networks
Perrow looks at various levels of
organisational analysis
suggests that a fairly recent idea is an
extremely useful and powerful way of
analysing and understanding organisational
structure and behaviour...
Perrow notes a number of key problems with
the arguments
he fears that sociologists are again wasting
time and effort on infertile concepts
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Organisational Networks
... the network of organisations having
influence over the target organisation
as he points out, such an approach
reveals rational explanations of many
organisational behaviours and structural
arrangements that would be entirely
missed if the analysis was done purely at
the organisational level
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Population-Ecology Models
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Population-Ecology Models
Perrow briefly reviews more recent theory
that analyses organisations in terms of
social-Darwinism concepts of the struggle
for survival
Perrow notes a number of key problems
with the arguments
he fears that sociologists are again
wasting time and effort on infertile
concepts
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Population-Ecology Models
these look interesting but break down
quickly when critically appraised in terms
of what actually happens in organisations!
dissappointingly, these ideas while not
having much credence in sociology’
are getting recirculated in information
systems views of organisations
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