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The new corporate architecture

Authors :
Gregory G. Dess
Abdul A. Rasheed
Richard L. Priem
Kevin J. McLaughlin
Source :
Academy of Management Perspectives. 9:7-18
Publication Year :
1995
Publisher :
Academy of Management, 1995.

Abstract

Executive Overview For years the basic questions about how best to organize people and tasks remained the same: “Do we centralize or decentralize? Do we organize by product or function? Where do we stick the international operation?” The answers were seldom satisfactory. Typically, companies were organized by product, by customer, or by territory, and then switched when those structures stopped working. While senior managers felt the impact of such reshuffling, it rarely affected the rank and file who continued to operate in the same functional, vertical organization where all that changed was the boss's name. Today's management challenge is to design more flexible organizations that affect all members. With traditional structures failing, managers must evaluate innovative types of organization to see if these structures can deliver. In this article we examine three such structures—the modular, the virtual, and the barrier-free—which today have become part of the new corporate architecture.

Details

ISSN :
19434529 and 15589080
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Academy of Management Perspectives
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6636350f03bd8a0dfc7ba7d9abb4e0fb
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5465/ame.1995.9509210261