100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Introduction to Organisation Design Summary

Rating
5.0
(1)
Sold
1
Pages
103
Uploaded on
26-12-2025
Written in
2025/2026

A simplified full summary for each lecture. Perfect for studying.

Institution
Course












Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
December 26, 2025
Number of pages
103
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Summary

Subjects

Content preview

Organisation Design Summary


Table of Content

Lecture 1 - Introduction .....................................................................................................2
Lecture 2: Bureaucracy......................................................................................................8
Lecture 3 – Sociotechnical Theory I ..................................................................................21
Lecture 4 - Sociotechnical Theory II..................................................................................29
Lecture 6 – Sociotechnical Theory III ................................................................................34
Lecture 7 - Networks .......................................................................................................43
Lecture 8 - Lean Management, Part 1 ..............................................................................55
Lecture 9 - Lean Management, Part 2 ..............................................................................60
Lecture 10 - Motivation & (Work) Design ........................................................................66
Lecture 11 - Work Design Part 2 ......................................................................................75
Lecture 12 – Work Design (Part 3) ...................................................................................81
Lecture 13 – Organizational Change ................................................................................94

,Lecture 1 - Introduction
Definition of Organisation Design

- Organisation design is about how a company or institution divides and groups its work
among people, teams, departments, and units.

- It’s basically about who does what, how work is shared, and how everything fits together so
that the organisation runs smoothly.

- So, when a company designs its organisation, it decides things like:
• Which tasks go to which departments (e.g., HR handles recruitment, Marketing
handles promotions)
• Who reports to whom (e.g., employees → supervisors → managers)
• How teams work together and coordinate tasks

→ So organisation design = creating a structure that helps people work together efficiently
and effectively.

The “socio-technical theory”

- Organisation design is not only about people — it also involves technology.

- According to the socio-technical theory, companies should design both:

• their social system (people, roles, and teamwork), and
• their technical system (IT systems, machines, workflow processes)

→ Why? Because these two things influence each other.

- For example, if a hospital installs a new IT system for patient records, it also changes how
doctors and nurses work together. So, technical design and social design must be coordinated.

Questions in Organisation Design
- Designing an organisation raises questions like:
• “What will be the consequences of this design?”
• “How will this affect our stakeholders - like our employees, clients, or customers?”

- So when you design an organisation, you’re making choices about:
• Function: what each part does
• Form: how it looks or is arranged
• Structure: how it’s organised and who reports to whom

- These choices aim to create an intended effect - the outcome you want.

- But that effect can be:
• Desired or unwanted (some results may surprise you)
• Known or unknown (some you can predict, others not)

, • And it can be measured in technical (efficiency, performance) or fundamental (values,
ethics, satisfaction) ways.

Principles of Design
Two main principles shape most organisations:

1. Hierarchy and Centralisation

- This means the organisation has many layers (like an upside-down pyramid).

- At the top are executives and top management — they make most of the decisions.

- Those decisions move downward through supervisors and managers until they reach regular
employees.

→ Centralised = decisions come from the top.

- But this structure can be slow and inflexible.

- If every small decision has to go through the boss, employees can’t respond quickly to
changes or customer needs.

- That’s why modern organisations are trying to become flatter - meaning fewer layers, and
more autonomy (independence) for employees.

- When employees are trusted to make some decisions, things become faster and more
flexible.

2. Specialisation

- This means dividing work so that each department focuses on one specific task.

- For example:
• Marketing only handles advertising
• HR only handles recruitment
• Finance only handles money

- This helps people become experts in their area - but it can also cause problems, like poor
communication between departments or a lack of understanding of the overall process.




Relevance to the Healthcare Sector
- The healthcare sector faces serious challenges, such as:
• Long waiting times for patients
• Rising costs (especially because the population is getting older)
• High stress and burnout among doctors, nurses, and other workers

,- Many of these issues come from structural problems — meaning how the organisation is
designed.

- For instance, poor coordination between departments or unclear responsibilities can cause
delays and stress.

→ So, by redesigning the organisation structure, healthcare institutions can help fix these
problems.




Changing Organisational Environment
- The world around organisations keeps changing.

- This environment can change in three ways:
1. Demographic (related to people and population)
2. Economic (related to markets and money)
3. Societal (related to society’s values and expectations)

→ When environments become unstable, organisations need to reinvent themselves to
survive - this idea is called organisational ecology (like how species evolve to survive in
nature).

1. Demographic Pressures
Examples:
• Fewer working-age employees (people are aging, fewer young people)
• Higher demand for skilled workers
• Competition between sectors for the same talented people

- So, companies need retention management — keeping the good employees longer than their
competitors can.

→ That means making the organisation a place where people want to stay.

- Retention management (Johnsson, 2000) = “The ability to hold onto those employees you
want to keep for longer than your competitors.”

- To achieve this, organisations must:
• Retain experienced employees
• Attract new employees
• Convince people from similar organisations to come work for them

- This relates to the quality of working life — how good the job feels for employees in terms
of satisfaction, growth, and work environment.

2. Economic Pressures (VUCA)
- The economy today is described as VUCA, meaning:
• Volatile: Things change fast and unpredictably. Example: sudden changes in energy
prices.

, • Uncertain: You have to act without knowing what will happen. Example: new
technology enters the market, and you don’t know how people will react.
• Complex: Many factors interact. Example: companies working across countries with
different laws.
• Ambiguous: The situation is unclear, and you don’t know what something means.
Example: launching a completely new kind of product.

- Each of these pressures makes it harder for organisations to plan — they must become
flexible and quick in decision-making.

3. Societal Pressures (Cumulative Demands)
- Society has changed over time and expects different things from organisations.

- Here’s how it evolved:
• 1960–1970: Supply-driven → Companies focused on producing as much as possible.
• 1970–1980: Product-driven → Focus on improving products.
• 1980–1990: Demand-driven → Focus on market demand.
• 1990–2000: Customer-driven → Focus on customer satisfaction.
• 2000–2010: Employee-driven → Focus on employees’ well-being and engagement.

- So now, good organisational design must consider both customers and employees — not
just profit.

Types of Organisation Structures
1. Functional Organisation

- This type is based on specialisation — each department does one job.

- Example: finance, HR, marketing, etc.
• Work is short-cycle (repetitive tasks)
• Inspired by Ford’s production line idea (mass production)
• Everything is designed for efficiency

- But problems appear:

• Work orders go back and forth between departments — slow communication
• Little cooperation between employees
• Not customer-focused
• Nobody oversees the entire process, so errors happen easily

→ In short: functional organisations can be efficient in theory, but inefficient in practice due
to poor coordination.

2. Structural Organisation

- This moves away from the functional model.

Reviews from verified buyers

Showing all reviews
1 week ago

5.0

1 reviews

5
1
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0
Trustworthy reviews on Stuvia

All reviews are made by real Stuvia users after verified purchases.

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
EmmaRadB Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
32
Member since
1 year
Number of followers
0
Documents
15
Last sold
22 hours ago

4.3

3 reviews

5
2
4
0
3
1
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions