Chapter 10 Organizing for Innovation Flashcards
What are some of the advantages of being a large size firm?
(1) capital markets are imperfect, and large firms are better able to obtain financing for R&D projects, and
(2) firms with larger sales volume over which to spread the fixed
costs of R&D would experience higher returns than firms with lower sales volume.
- Another advantage of size may arise in scale and learning effects. If large firms spend more on R&D in an absolute sense, they might also reap economies of scale and learning curve advantages in R&D—that is, they may get better and more efficient at it over
time - Large firms are also in a better position to take on large or risky innovation projects than smaller firms.
What are some of the disadvantages of small firms in comparison to larger firms?
- as a firm grows, its R&D efficiency might decrease because of a loss of managerial control.6 That is, the bigger a firm gets the more difficult it can
become to effectively monitor and motivate employees. - Large firms may also be less innovative because their size can make them less nimble and responsive to change
- High numbers of employees, large fixed-asset bases, and a large base of existing customers or supplier contracts can also be sources of inertia, making it difficult for the
firm to change course quickly. - Small firms are often considered more flexible and entrepreneurial than large firms.Wh
What is one primary method to make large firms feel small?
One primary method is to break the overall firm into several smaller subunits, and then encourage an entrepreneurial culture within these subunits. Multiple studies have observed that in industries characterized by high-speed technological change, many large and hierarchical firms have been disaggregated (or “unbundled”) into networks of smaller, often more specialized,
autonomous divisions or independent firms.
What are the key structural dimensions
- centralization
- formalization
- standardization
What is centralization / decentralization?
Centralization is the degree to which
decision-making authority is kept at top levels of management.
Decentralization is the degree to which decisionmaking authority is pushed down to lower levels of
the firm.
What are the advantages of decentralizing R&D?
- Decentralizing R&D activities to the divisions of the firm enables those divisions to develop new products or processes that
closely meet their particular division’s needs - The decentralization of development projects also enables the firm to take advantage of
the diversity of knowledge and market contacts that may exist in different divisions.
What are the disadvantages of decentralizing R&D?
Many redundant R&D activities may be performed in multiple divisions, and the full potential of the technology to create value in other parts of the firm may not be realized.
Furthermore, having multiple R&D departments may cause each to forgo economies of scale and learning-
curve effects.
What are the advantages of centralizing R&D?
if the firm centralizes R&D in a single department, it may maximize economies of scale in R&D, enabling greater division of labor among the R&D specialists and maximizing the potential for learning-curve effects through the development of multiple projects.
It also enables the central R&D department to manage the deployment of new technologies throughout the firm, improving the coherence of the firm’s new product development efforts and avoiding the possibility that valuable
new technologies are underutilized throughout the organization
What is formalization?
The degree to which the firm utilizes rules, procedures, and written documentation to structure the behavior of individuals or groups within the
organization.
Formalization can substitute for some degree of managerial oversight, and thereby help large companies run smoothly with fewer managers.
What is standardization?
Standardization is the degree to which activities in a firm are performed in a uniform manner.
The rules and procedures employed in formalization can facilitate the standardization of firm activities and help to regulate employee behavior by providing clear expectations of behavior and decision-making
criteria.
What are the downsides of formalization and standization?
If a firm codifies all of its activities with detailed procedures, it may stifle employee creativity. Employees may not
feel empowered or motivated to implement new solutions
by minimizing variation, standardization can limit the creativity and experimentation that leads to innovative ideas.
What is a mechanistic structure?>
An organization structure characterized by a high degree of formalization and standardization, causing operations to be almost automatic or mechanical.W
Why are mechanistic structures often deemed unsuitable?
Mechanistic structures, however, are often deemed unsuitable for fostering innovation. Mechanistic structures achieve efficiency by ensuring rigid adherence to stan-
dards and minimizing variation, potentially stifling creativity within the firm
What are organic structures?
An organization structure characterized by a low degree of formalization and standardization. Employees may not have well-defined job responsibilities and operations may be characterized by a high degree of
variation.
Why are organic structures better for innovation than mechanistic structures>
Because much innovation arises from experimentation and improvisation, organic structures are often thought to be better for
innovation despite their possible detriment to efficiency.
What do many large firms do?
Large firms often make greater use of formalization and standardization because as the firm grows it becomes more difficult to exercise direct managerial oversight.
Formalization and standardization ease coordination costs, at the expense of making the firm more mechanistic.
Many large firms attempt to overcome some of this rigidity and inertia by decentralizing authority, enabling divisions of the
firm to behave more like small companies.
What is an ambidextrous organization?
The ability of an organization to behave almost as two different kinds of companies at once. Different divisions of the firm may have different structures and control systems, enabling them to have different cultures and patterns of
operations.
How can an ambidextrous organization achieve both short-term efficiency and long-term innovation?
Such firms might utilize mechanistic structures in some portions of the firm and organic structures in others. This is one of the rationales for setting up an R&D division that is highly distinct (either geographically or structurally) from the rest of the organization; a firm can use high levels of formalization and standardization in its manufacturing and distribution divisions, while using almost no formalization or standardization in its R&D
division.