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Book

Organization Design

Book

Organization Design

DOI link for Organization Design

Organization Design book

The Practitioner’s Guide

Organization Design

DOI link for Organization Design

Organization Design book

The Practitioner’s Guide
ByNaomi Stanford
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2004
eBook Published 6 November 2004
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780080479859
Pages 224
eBook ISBN 9780080479859
Subjects Economics, Finance, Business & Industry
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Stanford, N. (2004). Organization Design: The Practitioner’s Guide (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780080479859

ABSTRACT

Organization Design looks at how you need to change the ways your organization does things in order to increase productivity, performance, and profit. Providing the knowledge and method to handle the kind of recurring organisational change that all businesses face, those which do not involve transforming the entire enterprise but which necessitate significant change at the business unit, divisional, functional, facility or local levels. The problem lies in knowing what needs to change and how to change it. Taking the organisation as a designed system, it describes four major elements of organizations: the work - the basic tasks to be done by the organisation and its parts, the people - characteristics of individuals in the organization, formal organization - structures eg the organisation hierarchy, processes, and methods that are formally created to get individuals to perform tasks, informal organization - emerging arrangements including variations to the norm, processes, and relationships, commonly described as the culture or 'the way we do things round here'. The way these four elements relate, combine and interact affects productivity, performance and profit. Most books on this subject target a wide management audience rather than HR, this is specifically written for HR practitioners and line managers working together to achieve the goal. It clarifies why and how organisations need to be in a state of readiness to design or redesign and emphasises that people as well as business processes must be part of design considerations.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|14 pages

What is Organization Design?

chapter 2|16 pages

You and Organization Design

chapter 3|12 pages

Finding the Right Sponsor

chapter 4|26 pages

Phase One – Preparing for Change

chapter 5|24 pages

Phase Two – Choosing to Re-design

chapter 6|18 pages

The Communications Plan

chapter 7|18 pages

Managing Stakeholders

chapter 8|26 pages

Phase Three – Creating the High-level Design and the Detailed Design

chapter 9|24 pages

Risk

chapter 10|22 pages

Project Management

chapter 11|22 pages

Phase Four – Handling the Transition

chapter 12|20 pages

The People Planning

chapter 13|24 pages

Phase Five – Reviewing the Design

chapter 14|22 pages

Trends in Organization Design

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