- is an organisation that wishes to attain defined goals,
- is build around its specific skeleton, its organisational chart that defines the relationships between the different employees,
- is defined by a set of processes that regulates its internal relationships as well as the relationships with the environment,
- is more or less clearly separated from its environment.
Our experience working for Bulgarian companies during the last 2 years has given us a different picture of the reality. We will address the first two of the characteristics below. The third and major issue will be addresses separately in one of our next newsletter.
Collective goal(s)?
Let us start with the goal of the organisation. The definition states that the goal should be collective, which means that it should be embraced by all the members of the organisation. We do not mean that you should run a democratic process to defines goals for your business. What we mean is that you should know where you want to go, so that others can follow and support you on your way. It is not even necessary to define a five year strategy plan. Just give your organisation a sense of purpose.
This is only rarely taken seriously by the management. What happens in the best case is that the management team and/or the owner of the company have worked together on defining what they want to achieve. The major problem is that they have probably forgotten to communicate it to the rest of the employees or did not communicate it clearly.
As a result different goals will be defined at different levels in the organisation which will lead to contra productive actions. Indeed, do not believe that your employees can read in your mind or can work without defining their own purpose. They will try to second guess you or will define their goals to defend their own interest, which may or may not be yours.
As a result, the company will be torn apart, your market positioning weakened and resources spent carelessly.
One example:
the management team may decide, after a careful analysis of the market, that the company has to concentrate on its home market. Kept without clear information, the manager responsible for the Russian market may pursue a very costly strategy by trying to increase the market share in this country.What happens in the worst case is that there are no collective goals.
We often ask the top management team members what are their major goal for the company and we almost never get a clear answer. Each of them has a different big picture. Each of them pursue his/her own strategy and pushes his/her resources in the desired direction without taking into account the wellbeing of the company. The absence of cohesion at the top of the company will be noticed by the employees. As a result they may play the management board members against each other for their own benefit, they may stop working productively, not knowing what to do, they may leave the company with the impression that their work is not valued properly.
Ask the employees and they will tell you that they do not know which war they are fighting and against which enemy.
Well designed structure?
Like so many other company around the world, your company will be ISO certified. As a result of the certification, you will proudly show us a decent organisational chart with clear roles and responsibilities and clear management relationships.We would suggest you to perform a very simple reality check.
Please chose 20 employees randomly in your organisation, ask them to whom they are supposed to report, who their colleagues are and, if they are managers, how many employees report to them.The answer may give you a picture of your organisation that is quite far away from the polished design of the ISO analysis.
Over and over, we meet with employees who do not know who their manager is, report to more than one managers and do not know who report to them. The official skeleton is in place, but nobody notices. As is for the goals, so for the structure. The skeleton is not supposed to be a decorative element in your office. It is supposed to structure the organisation in such a way that collective goals can be achieved.
One dysfunctional form of organisation that we have met on many occasions in Bulgaria, is the so-called taxi-organisation. You probably know how a taxi company is structured. The managers of the company buy cars, keep them in more or less good condition and look for drivers to rent them. The drivers generate the sales they can, pay the rental fee and keep the difference.
Adapted to a production company, the situation will be as follows: the management of the company buys some machines, maintains them properly and finds employees that are interested to produce some finished goods by using them. The amount produced is defined by the employees who get a more or less fixed salary in exchange of the production. Nobody leads them, because "they know best how to use the machine and produce. So why bother".
The major problems with this type of organisation is the lack of collective goal of course, as well as the lack of integrative structure. Each employee is treated as a separate entity. As a result, the machines are not delivering the maximum productivity. The return on investment is poor and the financial resources lack to replace the worn out machines. Moreover the production processes are not integrated which again results in a poor productivity.Please do act swiftly if you recognise your organisation in that description.
The second example concerns the absence of delegation.
Your company has a well defined management culture in place. Its structure is understood by all the employees. The major challenge that you face is that more than 80% of the decisions are made by the CEO of the company and/or the owner. As a matter of fact your organisational structure is dysfunctional. You just use your managers as wheels to deliver your instructions to the employees and to report news from the front to you. You may face two major challenges:
- You will be overwhelmed by the number of decisions that you have to make, which will slow down your organisation, and or push you to make the wrong decision (as nobody will have the courage to argue with you).
- You will be confronted with a dear situation on the day you will decide or have to transfer your business to the next generation. Indeed nobody will have been used to make decisions, nobody will know what to do and you act responsibly.
A successful business needs clear decision and delegation rules. Give your managers chances to made wrong decisions, so that they can learn from it and benefit from your lifelong experience. Prepare them to take over from you when the time has come and thus allow your creation to further develop successfully.
The third and more complex example is related to holding structures.
Indeed the activities of many companies in Bulgaria are regrouped in holding structures. The problem is that there are different types of holding that will deliver different results in different situations.
- A financial holding is an organisation that only manages the participations in different companies, without further involvement than buying or selling share.
- A strategic holding is trying to generate synergies in its portfolio of companies by reducing costs, increasing sales or both. This type of organisation is suitable for holding operating in different industries in similar markets for example.
- An operative holding is basically one company where the different departments (production, sales, accounting, maintenance) may be in different legal entities. In this situation most of the decisions are made at holding level. This type of organisation is particularly suitable for holdings operating in a specific industry or market.
The main issue is to define clearly what your goal is and to act accordingly. If, for example, you are an operative holding and have centralised sales, then the production units have no right any more on the sales people that formally are still employees of the production unit. These people will only be managed by the sales director in the holding. If you do not respect the rule, the whole group will suffer and nobody will understand what role this holding should play apart from generating additional costs that have to be supported by the production units.
If you decide to implement a financial holding, then do not make operational decisions. Just define financial goals for the managers of the companies you own and implement corrective action if the goals are not met (ie change the managers).
These are of course only a few of the challenges arising from a few simple questions: what type of organisation do you lead, why and how? The question is simple, the answer and the communication of the answer internally and externally is very complex.
As management consultants we are confronted daily with organisations and are used to ask the necessary clarifying questions, as well as to propose the necessary improvements. You only have one organisation to play with. Do not compromise its success by making the wrong decision. Call us for a free assessment.