Under What Conditions Do Rules-Based and Capability-Based Management Modes Dominate?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
3. Methodology
4. Results
5. Discussion
5.1. Contribution to the Literature and Practical Implications
5.2. Limitations and Future Research Directions
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Ten Items to Characterize the Modes
Factor | Definition | Foundation |
---|---|---|
1 Purpose | How are people energized: by finding purpose in what they do or through extrinsic motivation? Purpose is the source of motivation in a knowledge driven environment. A deep sense of purpose helps people to follow their self-motivated inner beliefs. Extrinsic motivation comes from the outside of a person, for example through financial rewards or threat of punishment. | Purpose comes from the task and activity itself. In a knowledge intense environment, purpose is superior to extrinsic motivation (Deci and Ryan 2000). |
2 Motivation | Where is the locus of motivation: assuming that people are self-responsible or in need of outside control? Motivation is the internal condition that activates behaviors and gives direction. Self-determination means that people perform based on what they belief is the right thing to do. Outside control refers to leaders that motivate people to perform. | The nature of control in organization follows the two opposite images of mankind: self-determination and control through leaders (Ryan and Deci 2000). Control assumes direct leadership interferences. In the setting where knowledge is distributed, identity and self-responsibility is a better motivator than managerial control (George and Qian 2010; Weibel 2010). |
3 Knowledge | Who has the knowledge: decision-making through accessing collective wisdom or hierarchy and power? Knowledge is seen as a scarce resource in today’s economy. Collective wisdom assumes that knowledge is distributed with groups of people making decisions, whereas, in a hierarchy, decisions are allocated to individual with superior insights. | When knowledge is distributed and the context is dynamic, the wisdom of crowds leads to better decisions (Surowiecki 2004). Hierarchy (Adler and Borys 1996) is seen as a vertical process that works well in a stable environment with asymmetric knowledge with managers or experts when consistent outcomes are needed. For example, clan control systems work better under ambiguous conditions than bureaucratic controls (Ouchi 1980). |
4 Information | How is information shared: by providing access to information through transparency and open sharing or through selective distribution? Transparency means that individuals and self-organized teams can align to goals. Obliquity refers to keeping information back due to the fear of perceived loss of control. | In a knowledge-driven, information-rich context, sharing enables people to use their talent (Hamel 2008). Transparency refers to the open source concept of sharing knowledge enabled through digitalization (Girard 2009). Obliquity refers to limited information in support of control, power, and limited risk. |
5 Complexity | How does the organization deal with complexity by structuring work: coordination through self-organization or through bureaucratic procedures? Bureaucracy relies on formal rules and procedures to produce consistent outputs. Self-organization relies on the emerging, spontaneous coordination through self-interested behaviors. | As organizations grow and add complexity, coordination of activities (Coase 1937; Williamson 1975) is increasingly important. Self-organization (Beer 1981; Kaufmann 1993): in situations where innovation and adaptation are needed emerging approaches work well (Beinhocker 2006). Bureaucracy refers to applying rules and procedures to coordinate work (Weber 1947) in a stable context. In general, less is more. In complex settings, self-organization through teams outperforms bureaucracy (Haken 2000; Von Foerster 1960). |
6 Volatility | How does the organization deal with a volatile market environment: adapting to a changing environment through developing flexibility or more efficiency? Efficiency refers to restructuring to adapt to the change. Flexibility requires dynamic systems to address change. At the edge of chaos, systems can most effectively change. | In highly dynamic contexts, agility beats efficiency. Agility requires flexible systems. Efficiency and scale require rigid routines for consistency and quality. Systems with more structure are too rigid, whereas systems with less structure are too disorganized (Brown and Eisenhardt 1998). |
7 Uncertainty | Where is the power to decide and act in an uncertain context: with delegated responsibility to teams, networks, markets or power to individual managers? | Power and authority, under specific circumstances, are effective tools (Leavitt 2005). However, strategies at various levels of uncertainty require non-linear approaches (Courtney et al. 1999). Digitalization makes it possible to dramatically decentralize decision-making without giving up control (Malone 2004). For example, networks provide flexibility in scaling work up and down. |
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Organizations | 54 |
---|---|
Participants | 15 companies with 1 to 5 participants; 28 companies with 6 to 19 participants; 7 companies with 20–99 participants; 3 companies with 100–999 participants; 1 company with more than 1000 participants |
Time period | 2006 through 2015 |
Industries | Technology (12 companies); Logistics and Infrastructure (7); Pharma and Chemicals (6); Professional Services (6); Telecom (5); Financial Services (4); Manufacturing BtoB (4); Consumer BtoC (3); Public Services (3); Education (1); Healthcare (1); Resources (1); Tourism and Media (1) |
Firm size (Number of employees) | 1–99 (16 companies); 100–999 (11); 1000–9999 (3); >10,000 (24) |
Life cycle stage | Creativity/Start-up (7 companies); Direction (4); Delegation (20); Coordination (16); Collaboration (7) |
Country (of origin) | Europe (44 companies); US/Canada (8); Asia (2) |
Ownership | Public shareholders (32 companies); Owner managed/Family (18); Public services (2); Foundations/NGO (2) |
Scope | Global (13 companies); International (17); Regional (13); Local (11) |
Number | Questions | Observations | Mean | Std. Dev. | Min. | Max. | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 Purpose | We hire talent by offering attractive salary, benefits, and bonuses | vs. | The right talents join us because they identify with what we do and for our contribution to society | 54 | 52.06777 | 21.21753 | 10 | 90 |
2 Motivation | When people work long hours it is because they are seeking to get ahead and/or to get larger bonus | vs. | When people work long hours it is because they enjoy their work | 54 | 51.09919 | 21.72813 | 10 | 90 |
3 Knowledge | Managers prefer to rely on their own experience and knowledge | vs. | Managers prefer to tap into the collective wisdom of their team and other sources | 54 | 49.68359 | 20.91084 | 10 | 90 |
4 Information | We assume that information (budgets, quality, goals) are confidential and provided on a need-to-know basis | vs. | We assume that information about internal processes is available and open for discussion | 54 | 49.15999 | 24.00034 | 10 | 90 |
5 Complexity | Normally, we achieve results through formal management processes that coordinate our work and efforts | vs. | As complexity rises, we achieve results through informal and spontaneous coordination and by individuals that act in the best interest | 54 | 54.06669 | 20.81504 | 10 | 90 |
6 Volatility | Cost savings, high productivity, and efficiency are our ways to respond to change | vs. | Flexibility, room to move, and learning are the means to deal with a volatile market environment | 54 | 59.11815 | 23.07328 | 10 | 90 |
7 Uncertainty | The accountability for the decision-making rests with specific individuals when clarity and speed matter | vs. | In uncertain situations, decision-making is viewed as a collective responsibility with teams | 54 | 51.39787 | 27.07854 | 10 | 99 |
Items | Purpose | Motivation | Knowledge | Information | Complexity | Volatility | Uncertainty |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Purpose | 1 | ||||||
Motivation | 0.4923 *** | 1 | |||||
Knowledge | 0.4045 *** | 0.4061 *** | 1 | ||||
Information | 0.3538 *** | 0.3825 *** | 0.5406 *** | 1 | |||
Complexity | 0.2469 * | 0.0876 | 0.2852 ** | 0.3533 *** | 1 | ||
Volatility | 0.0749 | 0.2597 * | 0.4138 *** | 0.0862 | 0.3436 ** | 1 | |
Uncertainty | 0.0556 | 0.1682 | 0.4773 *** | 0.1825 | 0.4837 *** | 0.5989 *** | 1 |
Number | Questions | Factor 1: Management | Factor 2: Environment | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 Purpose | We hire talent by offering attractive salary, benefits, and bonuses | vs. | The right talents join us because they identify with what we do and for our contribution to society | 0.714 | 0.064 |
2 Motivation | When people work long hours it is because they are seeking to get ahead and/or to get larger bonus | vs. | When people work long hours it is because they enjoy their work | 0.774 | −0.106 |
3 Knowledge | Managers prefer to rely on their own experience and knowledge | vs. | Managers prefer to tap into the collective wisdom of their team and other sources | 0.694 | 0.402 |
4 Information | We assume that information (budgets, quality, goals) are confidential and provided on a need-to-know basis | vs. | We assume that information about internal processes is available and open for discussion | 0.765 | 0.026 |
5 Complexity | Normally, we achieve results through formal management processes that coordinate our work and efforts | vs. | As complexity rises, we achieve results through informal and spontaneous coordination and by individuals that act in the best interest | 0.369 | 0.537 |
6 Volatility | Cost savings, high productivity, and efficiency are our ways to respond to change | vs. | Flexibility, room to move, and learning are the means to deal with a volatile market environment | 0.165 | 0.809 |
7 Uncertainty | The accountability for the decision-making rests with specific individuals when clarity and speed matter | vs. | In uncertain situations, decision-making is viewed as a collective responsibility with teams | 0.254 | 0.732 |
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Michel, L.; Anzengruber, J.; Wölfle, M.; Hixson, N. Under What Conditions Do Rules-Based and Capability-Based Management Modes Dominate? Risks 2018, 6, 32. https://doi.org/10.3390/risks6020032
Michel L, Anzengruber J, Wölfle M, Hixson N. Under What Conditions Do Rules-Based and Capability-Based Management Modes Dominate? Risks. 2018; 6(2):32. https://doi.org/10.3390/risks6020032
Chicago/Turabian StyleMichel, Lukas, Johanna Anzengruber, Marco Wölfle, and Nick Hixson. 2018. "Under What Conditions Do Rules-Based and Capability-Based Management Modes Dominate?" Risks 6, no. 2: 32. https://doi.org/10.3390/risks6020032
APA StyleMichel, L., Anzengruber, J., Wölfle, M., & Hixson, N. (2018). Under What Conditions Do Rules-Based and Capability-Based Management Modes Dominate? Risks, 6(2), 32. https://doi.org/10.3390/risks6020032