Organisation of Management
THEE Historical Note: This was the first ever Structural Hierarchy to be discovered. It was developed in the early 1980s at Brunel University, based on experiences in consulting to the UK's National Health Service (NHS). This section updates the model published in 1990 in the Journal of Applied Systems Analysis. More details here.
Differentiation and Integration
You will recall that work is hard to describe. It is now evident that the work-to-be-done is never as simple as it first appears. Rather, the «same-sounding work» needs to be done at 7 different levels of progressively greater scope. This work-responsibility is expressed as duties as shown in the diagram at right.
Reminder of the 7 Levels
WL7 |
Total Coverage
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Determination of organizational identity.
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Define basic parameters i.e.► define the basic nature of needs, services and whatever else is required to deal with this mission; plus anything that must be taken as given by all lower levels.
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WL6 |
Multi-field Coverage |
Policy formulation and control |
Frame operational fields i.e. ► produce frameworks to bridge the divide between basic definitions and all fields or territories of actual operations.
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WL5 |
Field Coverage |
Strategy design and implementation |
Shape overall operations i.e.► shape the totality of operations and structure needs and services in a particular field and social territory.
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WL4 |
Comprehensive Provision |
Management control of developments |
Develop multiple services i.e.► comprehensively balance and develop a range of services to meet the needs of some social territory.
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WL3 |
Systematic Provision |
Operational control of concrete systems |
Manage a specific service i.e.► manage available staff, resources and facilities so as to handle presenting demand, taking into account any higher level priorities and the inevitable fluctuations both in workload and staffing.
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WL2 |
Situational Response |
Resolution of open-ended concrete cases. |
Assess and handle complex situations i.e.► deal immediately with concrete situations by allocating resources and acting or instructing others.
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WL1 |
Prescribed Output |
Responses to concrete demands. |
Take actions whose results are fully specifiable in advance i.e.► perform in a given acceptable style as instructed in the specific case or in accord with general expectations.
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This differentiation of the work-to-be-done to enable effective management immediately poses issues of how work (including management work i.e. meta-work or 'work on work') can be integrated. «Organising management» has as its over-riding goal the integration of the «[management] work-to-be-done» within any organization.
The Structural Hierarchy
The taxonomic form that provides for the necessary integration is a Structural Hierarchy. Each Level in such a hierarchy is a Grouping and contains all Levels of the originating hierarchy. This section will investigate the Groupings and offer formulations which have been well tested in practice.
Technical Details:
Structural Hierarchies are developed by progressively grouping adjacent Levels of THEE’s 7-Level holistic hierarchies in all possible ways. «Holistic» means that Levels in the hierarchy broadly imply or include each other, and this applies here.
The first «Level» in a Structural Hierarchy is a Grouping of 1 Level i.e. Grouping-1 (G1) contains 7 Groups that are Monads i.e. made up of 1 original Level. The next «Level» will contain all Groups of 2 adjacent Levels i.e. G2 contains 6 Dyads…and so on until we reach G7, the Heptad Grouping where there is just one Group consisting of all 7 original Levels. As a result, every G-Level contains all the Levels of the originating hierarchy i.e. the original differentiation of an entity into Levels has been replaced by a re-unification applicable at each G-Level.There are 28 Groups (components) in a Structural Hierarchy.
However, definition of this THEE form is far more complex. Internal Levels i.e. the Levels within any Group, have distinctive qualifiers, and are labelled with a lower case 'g', e.g. g4 refers to the 4th Level in each of the Tetrads, Pentads, Hexads and the Heptad; and so g4 does not exist in the Monads, Dyads or Triads which have less than 4 internal Levels.
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The Groupings and their Groups are ways to integrate work and overcome the differentiation and discontinuity demanded by the hierarchical stratification of duties. They have unique functions and properties and explain phenomena regularly highlighted by management consultants.
Unlike the framework of accountability, where personal factors are virtually irrelevant, the requirements of handling accountability within organizations must now be integrated with a variety of personal and social factors. The result is to provide for management that can not only get the work done and generate achievement, but can also deliver on the varied expectations and obligations intrinsic to employment.
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Originally posted: 19-Mar-2014