Abstract
The bureaucratic organizational structure has been recently challenged by a number of organizations that claim to offer employee emancipation and autonomy through self-management, self-organizing, or “holacracy.” To facilitate theorizing about such organizational-level self-management, I examine it as an ideal type of organizational form, comparing it to two more established organizational forms, Weberian bureaucracy and Mintzberg’s adhocracy. More particularly, building on the four universal problems every organization needs to solve—two of which I divide into two sub-problems—I utilize a framework of six fundamental problems of organizing—task division, task allocation, rewarding desired behavior, eliminating freeriding, providing direction, and ensuring coordination—to demonstrate how these three forms of organizing have found different solutions to them. The radically decentralized model of authority at the heart of self-managing organizations is shown to lead to solutions to these problems that are based on peer-based accountability and rewarding, transparency of key information, and bottom-up emergent processes where employees have the authority and responsibility to identify necessary tasks and ensure that they get done. It is concluded that the self-managing organization indeed is a novel form of organizing that can better explain certain real-life organizational outliers than the existing paradigms of organizing. It is argued to be especially viable in industries where interdependence between units is low, outputs are highly tailored, and employee expertise and motivation are high. Accordingly, research on such organizations can offer several new insights relevant to both the practice and theory of organization design.
Highlights
Recent years have seen an upsurge of academic (Puranam and Håkonsson 2015; Martela and Kostamo 2017; Burton et al 2017), influential business review (Hamel 2011; Bernstein et al 2016), and popular interest (Gelles 2015; Robertson 2016) in selfmanaging organizations (SMO), which are defined as organizations that have radically (2019) 8:23 and systematically decentralized authority throughout the organization to the degree of almost abolishing the whole layer of middle management and supervisor-subordinate relationships (Lee and Edmondson 2017)
The promise is that this new way of organizing work leads to employee potential being unleashed as self-directedness and bottom-up innovativeness are able to bloom no longer constrained by the hierarchical and bureaucratic obstacles. This ought to lead to significant cost cuts as one no longer needs to have middle management on the payroll (Hamel and Zanini 2016), while contributing to a more motivated, innovative, and loyal workforce (Martela and Kostamo 2017)
Organizations are “systems of coordinated action” (March and Simon 1993, p. 2) that somehow need to solve the problems of how the individual agents are motivated, assigned tasks, and their actions coordinated in order to contribute to the organizational goals (Puranam et al 2014)
Summary
Suggested Citation: Martela, Frank (2019) : What makes self-managing organizations novel? Comparing how Weberian bureaucracy, Mintzberg's adhocracy, and self-organizing solve six fundamental problems of organizing, Journal of Organization Design, ISSN 2245-408X, Springer, Cham, Vol 8, Iss. 23, pp. Standard-Nutzungsbedingungen: Die Dokumente auf EconStor dürfen zu eigenen wissenschaftlichen Zwecken und zum Privatgebrauch gespeichert und kopiert werden. Terms of use: Documents in EconStor may be saved and copied for your personal and scholarly purposes. You are not to copy documents for public or commercial purposes, to exhibit the documents publicly, to make them publicly available on the internet, or to distribute or otherwise use the documents in public. If the documents have been made available under an Open Content Licence (especially Creative Commons Licences), you may exercise further usage rights as specified in the indicated licence
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