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Summary of Introduction to Organisation Design - MAN-BCU360

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A clear and easy-to-understand summary of the entire Introduction to Organisation Design course. All key theories, models, and concepts are explained step by step, with a strong focus on what you actually need for the exam. Ideal for quick revision, understanding difficult topics, and studying efficiently without going through all the lectures again.

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MAN-BCU360 - Introduction to Organisation Design




Organisation Design – Summary
2025/2026

Lecture 1
1. What is Organisation Design?

Organisation Design is about making deliberate choices about how work is organised in
order to achieve intended outcomes.

From the lecture:

Designing = making choices about function, form, and structure with an intended effect

What exactly do we design?

In OD, we design:

 Structure (who does what, who decides)
 Division of labour
 Coordination mechanisms
 Rules, procedures, hierarchy
 Degree of specialisation

All of these shape:

 Performance
 Quality
 Employee stress
 Innovation capacity

Principle 1: Hierarchy & Centralisation

What it means

 Decisions are concentrated at the top
 Control via rules, procedures, supervision
 Lower levels execute, upper levels decide

This comes straight from Taylorism and bureaucracy.

Why organisations use it

 Predictability
 Control


1

, MAN-BCU360 - Introduction to Organisation Design


 Standardisation
 Efficiency in stable environments

Problem

 Top cannot know everything
 Rules cannot cover all exceptions
 Decision-making becomes slow
 Employees lose autonomy

Principle 2: Specialisation

What it means

Work is split into:

 Small, narrow tasks
 Functional departments (HR, finance, production, etc.)

This idea goes back to Adam Smith and later Taylor.

Benefits

 Economies of scale
 Efficiency
 Expertise
 Lower training costs

Van Hootegem explicitly says:

The traditional organisation was hugely successful in the 20th century

Problems of excessive specialisation

 Fragmentation
 No overview of the whole process
 Many handovers → errors
 Customer is nobody’s responsibility
 Employees feel alienated

Classic metaphor: Silos that optimise themselves but harm the whole system




2. Changing organisational environment

Three pressures



2

, MAN-BCU360 - Introduction to Organisation Design


1. Demographic
2. Economic
3. Societal

Van Hootegem frames this as a shift from:

SSST (Stable, Secure, Simple, Transparent)
→ VUCA (Volatile, Uncertain, Complex, Ambiguous)

A. Demographic Pressures (The "War for Talent")

 The Aging Population: As the workforce ages, there are fewer young people entering
the market.
 Labor Market Tightness: In many sectors (especially healthcare), demand for
workers exceeds supply.
 Retention: Organizations must design "manageable work" to keep employees
healthy and motivated for longer careers.

B. Economic Pressures: The Shift to VUCA

Traditional designs worked in stable environments. However, modern markets are VUCA:

 Volatile: Rapid, unpredictable changes.
 Uncertain: Lack of clarity about the future.
 Complex: Many moving parts and interdependencies.
 Ambiguous: Unfamiliar environments where cause-and-effect are unclear.

C. Societal & Customer Pressures

 Cumulative Demands: Organizations used to focus only on Productivity. Now, they
must simultaneously master Quality, Flexibility, Innovation, Sustainability, and
Workability.
 Customer Centricity: Modern customers demand personalized, high-quality, and fast
service, which "siloed" functional organizations struggle to provide.

Van Hootegem argues: these are structural problems, wrongly interpreted as behavioural
ones




3. Quality of Work & Karasek Model

Stress depends on:

 Job demands
 Job control (decision latitude)



3

, MAN-BCU360 - Introduction to Organisation Design


High demands + low control = high strain jobs
High demands + high control = active jobs

Van Hootegem uses this to show:

 Functional organisations → high strain
 Redesign → more active jobs



4. Introduction to Total Workplace Innovation (TWIN)

This is the bridge to the rest of the course.

Core idea of TWIN: Organise differently to work better; fully focus on the customer AND the
employee

Traditional organisation:

 Looks inward
 Groups similar activities

TWIN:

 Looks outward
 Groups customers/orders
 Designs end-to-end responsibility

Order-based vs functional organisation

Instead of:

 HR → Production → Quality → Logistics
TWIN creates:
 Parallel order streams
 Autonomous, multidisciplinary teams
 Minimal interdependence

This reduces complexity inside the organisation.



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