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The Self-Managing Organization : How Leading Companies Are Transforming the Work of Teams for Real Impact
 
 
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The Self-Managing Organization : How Leading Companies Are Transforming the Work of Teams for Real Impact [Hardcover]

Ronald Purser (Author, Draft Writer), Roland E. Purser (Author), Steven Cabana (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

November 18, 1998
This text argues that efforts at reengineering fail because the process is conducted in an authoritarian, top-down manner. At the leading edge of the management revolution, innovative companies are implementing "Participative Design" - an approach that gives the power back to the employees.

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Business consultants Ronald Purser and Steven Cabana argue that it's time for democracy to replace bureaucracy at work. In The Self-Managing Organization, they warn that high-tech, knowledge-based businesses perform best with the flexibility, creativity, and information sharing that come with more freedom on the job. "We need the real medicine now: democracy at work," write the authors, consultants to such companies as Motorola and Procter & Gamble.

Building on research by social scientists at the Tavistock Institute in London in the 1950s, Purser and Cabana explain the theory and provide examples of two self-managing techniques for improving work: Participative Design and the Search Conference. The Participative Design method asks workers themselves to determine what's wrong at the company and suggest solutions. And the Search Conference method has workers develop new business strategies to help the company succeed. The Self-Managing Organization thus offers provocative ideas to business managers and students. --Dan Ring

From Booklist

Using principles and methods drawn from case studies of such companies as American Express, Hewlett Packard, and Motorola, Purser and Cabana offer a blueprint for designing the self-managing organization. It is written for executives, middle managers, and frontline supervisors in all types of businesses participating in the new knowledge economy, which is dependent on knowledgeable workers. The book provides a set of tools that can be used at all levels of an organization to transform rigid bureaucracies into flexible work systems, with self-managing work groups serving as the basic building block. The authors explain and demonstrate how organizations can create social learning contexts, or "44 communities of trust," where people can engage in open dialogue and chart the future while redesigning their own work. The authors are consultants in the field of organizational behavior. They contend that their theories are not just another fad but essential to growth and profitability in the new corporate reality, where knowledge workers are the essential core of corporate activity. Mary Whaley

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Free Press (November 18, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 068483734X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0684837345
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,229,035 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Ronald Purser is Professor of Management in the College of Business and the Educational Doctorate in Leadership program in the College of Education at San Francisco State University. Prior to this, he was a tenured professor and Graduate Program Director at the Center for Organization Development at Loyola University of Chicago. Dr. Purser earned his Ph.D. in Organizational Behavior from the Weatherhead School of Management at Case Western Reserve University and his B.A. in Psychology from Sonoma State University. He is past Division Chair of the Organization Development and Change division of the Academy of Management. He is currently Chair of SFSU's Academic Freedom Committee, and a member of California Faculty Association's (CFA) executive board.

His scholarship has focused on temporality in organizations, virtuality and cyberspace, social creativity, organizations and the natural environment, Buddhist social theory, psychoanalysis and organizations, sociotechnical systems redesign of knowledge work, organizational learning and democratic self-management . He has published over fifty refereed journal articles and book chapters and is co-author and co-editor of five books including, The Search Conference (Jossey-Bass, 1996), Social Creativity, Volumes 1 & 2 (Hampton Press, 1999), and The Self-Managing Organization (The Free Press, 1998), and 24/7: Time and Temporality in the Network Society (Stanford University Press, 2007). Dr. Purser has been a recipient of numerous U.S. Department of Education and National Science Foundation grant awards. .

Dr. Purser is currently Associate Editor of the Business Discipline Editorial Board for the Multi-media Educational Resource for Online Learning and Teaching (MERLOT). He has been an active consultant and researcher in both the private and public sector. He is currently on the board of the Center for Creative Inquiry, and President of Timeless Wisdom--both non-profit 501(c)(3) educational organizations.

Prior to his academic career, he was a journeyman industrial electrician at a number of factories in Chicago, including the historic Pullman-Standard plant. He was a member of the IBEW. His other interests and hobbies include playing electric guitar (blues), qigong, tai chi, weight-lifting and Zen and Tibetan Buddhist meditation.

 

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Two Fundamental Choices of Organizational Design", April 22, 2001
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This review is from: The Self-Managing Organization : How Leading Companies Are Transforming the Work of Teams for Real Impact (Hardcover)
"We soon realized that many companies which adopted such methods were caught in the middle between two competing organizational paradigms: the bureaucratic and democratic. In our analysis, these methods failed to transform the DNA, or fundamental design principle, that informs how organizations are structured and managed...When we understood that these two diamectrically opposed traditions for designing and managing organizations were competng for dominance, it became clear to us why managrs and employees were often being bombarded by mixed messages and a confusing mishmash of structures, management styles, and techniques. The bureaucratic and democratic design principles are based on different logics; each constitutes a distinct class with a specific genetic order...When these logics are mixed together in efforts to shore up the failings of bureaucracy, empowerment and reengineering efforts often fizzle because the basic tenets of a traditional hierarchy have not been uprooted...This book describes the principles and methods for designing the self-managing organization. We show how companies in any industry can change and evolve to become fully self-managing organizations"(from the Preface).

In this context, Ronald E. Purser and Steven Cabana, in Chapter 8, outline fundamental choices of two competing organizational design paradigms as following:

I- Bureaucratic Structure: Coordination and control of work tasks is done by supervisor.

1. Mind Set...*People have specialized skills and are easily replaced. *The work (technical system) is designed first. The people (social system) must adopt and fit in. *Workers are cogs in the machine of the enterprise, a commodity. *Total specialization of everything. *Within a complex organization, simple jobs are created. *Tthe building block of the organization is one person- one task. *Competitive structures, processes and reward systems are the best way to produce high performance.

2. People Act As If...*The environment our enterprise exists in is stable and unchanging. *There is little to learn at work; success comes from reacting resourcefully to problems. *Procedures are sufficient to guide behavior. Change interferes with productivity and can often be postponed. *Responsibility, and blame can be shifted to others; we are separate and therefore I can win at your expense. *We don't need to coordinate work closely with other functions. Their problems are their problems. *Unspoken assumptions need not to be explored. Simple solutions to problems are adequate.

II- Democratic Structure: Coordination and control of work is done by those doing the work.

1. Mind Set...*People possess many skill sets and can do many jobs/functions. *The needs of the work (technical system) are balanced with the needs of the doers of the work (social system). *People are learners. Machines and information systems can extend the skill set of employees to many functions. *As little as possible is specified, leaving the rest to the skill and discreation of the workers. *Complex jobs are created within a simple organizational structure. *The building block of organization is the self-managed work team. *Cooperative structures and reward systems are the best way to produce high performance.

2. People Act As If...*The environment our enterprise exists in is constantly changing. *Skepticism and doubt are valuable and enable continuous learning. *Outcomes are best reached with flexibility built into the approach. *I am fully responsible for any work I agree to perform. *Every task is part of some larger whole. I can't win at your expense. *Everyone's ideas are taken seriously. Cooperation is essential for our mutual survival. *Making our assumptions explicit and exploring them is worth the temporary discomfort.

Hence, in order to transform an entire enterprise to self-management, they discuss these choices within the context of Participative Design method. And they argue that "Dmocratic business organizations won't solve all the world's problems, but they will be places where people can find meaning in their work. Work becomes meaningful when people have attained real membership status, when work is restored to its rightful place, which adds value to both the customer and to the worker, and when people are shapers and creators of the organization's future."

Highly recommended.

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Seminal Work on Leadership!, September 30, 1999
This review is from: The Self-Managing Organization : How Leading Companies Are Transforming the Work of Teams for Real Impact (Hardcover)
If you are struggling with questions related to your business strategy, how work is designed, and the way your organization ought to be managed - READ THIS BOOK. "The Self Managing Organization" (by Ronald E. Purser and Steven Cabana) explains why we have been on a merry-go-round of quick fixes and false promises, and what to do about it. The concepts and real applications in this book move everyone back to ground zero. By the time you finish reading, your thinking will have changed about what it takes to produce effective change, and how self-organization can be facilitated.

It will take a while to read the book. Take the time. The first half analyzes the key management methods of the recent past and dissects what went wrong. You'll understand the principles which facilitate organizational learning, put in place a team-based system of shared responsibility, and re-energize the workforce and management at all levels of the business. You'll also understand why we continue to make costly mistakes when we go about changing organizations and what it takes to be successful right now.

In the second half of the book, Purser and Cabana describe the "how" of moving from today's inadequate practices, to a lean, non-bureaucratic, and powerful future. You'll learn how to develop an urgency for change, get the right people involved, develop common, tangible goals and accelerate their implementation. One benefit of the approaches described is a results-oriented future built from a shared understanding of the business environment. Another is an energized leadership with a shared vision, and a workforce whose local knowledge is translated into effective work designs. Swift deployment throughout the organization occurs.

You might see alignment of the practical concepts in "The Self Managing Organization" with those of John P. Kotter. The alignment is, in fact, perfect with Kotter's Eight-Stage Process of Creating Major Change, as written in his "Leading Change" book. Kotter beautifully frames the steps that EVERY successful organization goes through when making fundamental change. What Purser and Cabana do is describe HOW to rapidly and effectively move your organization through those major changes. There are only two books on my recommended list. "The Self Managing Organization" pushed Kotter's book out of the number one slot. If you need permanent, pervasive change in your business, don't miss it!

Rob McClusky, Baldrige Manager, Picker International, Cleveland, Ohio

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Insights into self-managed organizations abound in this book, February 2, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Self-Managing Organization : How Leading Companies Are Transforming the Work of Teams for Real Impact (Hardcover)
This book contains a number practical nuggets for executives and middle managers who are seeking to move from a command and control management style to a style that systematically enlists the participation of employees at every level of the organization. Purser and Cabana provide insightful analyses of how some of the world's most successful organizations have initiated efforts toward higher employee participation that have resulted in superior organizational performance.

This is an easy to read book that blends practical theory with best practices. This book will satisfy the interests of bottom-line focused executives, human resource professionals, and academics who are looking for actual implementations of sound theory about self-managing organizations.

The book introduces a set of organizing principles that are valid across a variety of industries. These principles are introduced in the context of case studies of distinctly different companies such as Motorola, Microsoft, and Charles Schwab. The authors shed light on age-old management dilemmas such as, "How can I give people more autonomy, but still ensure that we have order and productivity in the organization?" and "How can I accelerate people's learning that I know will be critical to our future, but still have them accomplish their business tasks that need to be finished today?" The authors present solid self-management principles that I have seen work in small and large-sized firms, and for industries as diverse as professional services and hi tech manufacturing. I highly recommend this book for anyone interested in improving organizational performance by creating opportunities for higher employee participation.

-- Tom Devane (tdevane@iex.net)

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Management is coming to an end. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
democratic design principle, selfmanaging organization, bureaucratic design principle, critical human requirements, democratic workplace reform, participative design, strategic organization design, shared strategic intent, search conference, human relationists, selfmanaging teams, meritocratic norms, new organization design, core planning team, dominant hierarchy, design sessions, chartering process, design pathway, strategic conversations, bureaucratic paradigm, senior leadership team, social creativity, guiding coalition, traditional supervisors, redesign team
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Search Conference, Sequa Chemicals, Medical Products, Consumer Products Division, Fred Emery, Jack Cabrey, Bill Gates, Mine Mobile Maintenance, Jack Irving, John Duncan, Syncrude Canada, United States, Reliability Division, Charles Schwab, Mini-Chip Business Unit, New Jersey, Storage Technology, Edwin Land, Jack Welch, Management Message, Motorola's Mini-Chip, Volume Manufacturing, Wes Reid, Canada's Pooled Financial Services, Consumer Division
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