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Chapter Three Organizational Structures

Chapter Three Organizational Structures. Types of organizations where projects reside:. Corporations Government Agencies (EPA, Department of Energy, TSA) Healthcare institutions International bodies (World Health Organization, World Trade Organization, UNICEF, etc.)

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Chapter Three Organizational Structures

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  1. Chapter Three Organizational Structures

  2. Types of organizations where projects reside: • Corporations • Government Agencies (EPA, Department of Energy, TSA) • Healthcare institutions • International bodies (World Health Organization, World Trade Organization, UNICEF, etc.) • Professional Associations

  3. Organizational Culture • Described by shared values, norms, beliefs, and expectations • Design policies and procedures according to these beliefs • Authority and relationships are defined by culture

  4. Project-Based Organizations • Operations consist “primarily” of projects. • Architectural firms, engineering firms, consultants, etc. • Organizations who adopted management of projects ( ex: their finance system is designed to track, control multiple projects)

  5. Non-project based organizations • Projects are invisible in the organization • Have classical management structure • Departmental division of work

  6. The Functional Structure General Manager Adminis-tration Director Level Admin. Engineering Production Sales Marketing Division Level Project coordination Department Level Section Level Functional Responsibility x x x

  7. Functional Structure Advantages • Easier budgeting and cost control are possible • Better technical control is possible • Specialists can be shared • Personnel can be used on many different projects.

  8. Advantages (Continued) • It provides continuity in the functional disciplines; policies, procedures • Lines of responsibility are easily defined and understandable.

  9. Functional Structure Disadvantages • No one individual is directly responsible for the total project (i.e., no formal authority; committee solutions). • It does not provide the project-oriented emphasis necessary to accomplish the project tasks. • Coordination becomes complex, and additional lead time is required for approval of decisions.

  10. Disadvantages (Continued) • Decisions normally favor the strongest functional groups. • There is no customer focal point. • Response to customer needs is slow.

  11. Departmental Project Management Division Manager Department X Department Z Department Y Project Leaders Project Leaders Project Leaders Section Level Section Level Section Level

  12. Project Expeditor ENGINEERING DIVISION LIAISON DEPT. PIPING HVAC CHEMICAL DRAFTING legend Formal authority / reporting flow Informal authority / reporting flow

  13. Project Coordinator (Line-Staff organization) DIVISION MGR. LEGEND FORMAL FLOW PROJECT MGR. INFORMAL FLOW DEPT. MANAGER DEPT. MANAGER

  14. Project Coordinator Weaknesses • Shared authority with upper management. • Line-staff project managers who reported to a division head did not have any authority or control over those portions of a project in other divisions; that is, the project manager in the engineering division cannot direct activities in the manufacturing division.

  15. Pure Project (Projectized) Structure General Manager Project coordination Project BManager Project AManager Project CManager ENG. MFG. ENG. MFG. ENG. MFG.

  16. Projectized Structure Advantages • Complete line authority over the project • The project participants work directly for the project manager. • Strong communications channels. • Staffs can maintain expertise on a given project without sharing key personnel. • Rapid reaction time is provided.

  17. Advantages (Continued) • A focal point develops for out-of-company customer relations • Interface management becomes easier as unit size is decreased.

  18. Projectized Structure Disadvantages • Cost of maintaining this form • Duplication of effort, facilities, and personnel; inefficient usage • Tendency to retain personnel on a project long after they are needed.

  19. Disadvantages (Continued) • No share of Technology • There is a lack of career continuity and opportunities for project personnel.

  20. The Matrix Management Structure General Manager Engineering Operations Finance Others Project Responsibility Project Mgr. X Project Mgr. Y Functional Responsibility Project Mgr. Z

  21. Matrix Development • Horizontal as well as vertical channels must exist for making commitments. • There must be quick and effective methods for conflict resolution. • There must be good communication channels and free access between managers.

  22. Matrix Development (Continued) • All managers must have input into the planning process. • Both horizontally and vertically oriented managers must be willing to negotiate for resources. • The horizontal line must be permitted to operate as a separate entity except for administrative purposes.

  23. Matrix Structure Advantages • Policies and procedures can be set up independently for each project • Rapid responses are possible • Each person has a “home” after project completion. • Because key people can be shared, the program cost can be minimized

  24. Matrix Structure Advantages (Continued) • Authority and responsibility are shared • Stress is distributed among the team (and the functional managers)

  25. Matrix Structure Disadvantages • Multidimensional information flow. • Multidimensional work flow. • Dual reporting. • Continuously changing priorities. • Management goals different from project goals. • Potential for continuous conflict and conflict resolution. • Difficulty in monitoring and control.

  26. The Strong Matrix Structure (With a Director of Project Management) General Manager Director: Project Mgmt. Director: Engineering Director: Manufacturing Director: Finance/Admin. Project Mgr. X Project Mgr. Y Project Mgr. Z

  27. Composite Organization • Most organizations have all of these structures at various levels called composite organization Ex: New product development with a skunks work team (HP disk drives)

  28. PMO • Can exist in any organizational form • Can have advisory influence or • Can have formal grant authority • PM directly reports to PMO

  29. Which Structure Is Best For Project Management?

  30. Factors For Selecting An Organizational Form • Project size • Project length • Project management experience • Philosophy and visibility of executives • Project location • Available resources • Unique aspects of the project

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