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Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Organizational Theory,
Design, and Change
Fifth Edition
Gareth R. Jones
Chapter 3
Managing in a
Changing Global
Environment
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
What is the Organizational
Environment?
 Environment: the set of forces
surrounding an organization that
have the potential to affect the way it
operates and its access to scarce
resources
 Organizational domain: the
particular range of goods and
services that the organization
produces, and the customers and
other stakeholders whom it serves
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Figure 3-1: The
Organizational Environment
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
The Specific Environment
The forces from outside stakeholder
groups that directly affect an
organization’s ability to secure
resources
 Outside stakeholders include customers,
distributors, unions, competitors,
suppliers, and the government
The organization must engage in
transactions with all outside
stakeholders to obtain resources to
survive
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
The General Environment
The forces that shape the specific
environment and affect the ability of all
organizations in a particular
environment to obtain resources
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
The General Environment
(cont.)
Economic forces: factors, such as
interest rates, the state of the
economy, and the unemployment rate,
determine the level of demand for
products and the price of inputs
Technological forces: the
development of new production
techniques and new information-
processing equipment, influence many
aspects of organizations’ operations
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
The General Environment
(cont.)
Political and environmental
forces: influence government policy
toward organizations and their
stakeholders
Demographic, cultural, and
social forces: the age, education,
lifestyle, norms, values, and customs
of a nation’s people
 Shape organization’s customers,
managers, and employees
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Sources of Uncertainty in the
Organizational Environment
All environmental forces cause
uncertainty for organizations
Greater uncertainty makes it more
difficult for managers to control the
flow of resources to protect and
enlarge their domains
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Sources of Uncertainty in the
Environment (cont.)
 Environmental complexity: the
strength, number, and
interconnectedness of the specific
and general forces that an
organization has to manage
 Interconnectedness: increases
complexity
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Sources of Uncertainty in the
Environment (cont.)
 Environmental dynamism: the
degree to which forces in the specific
and general environments change
over time
 Stable environment: forces that
affect the supply of resources are
predictable
 Unstable (dynamic) environment:
it is difficult to predict how forces will
change that affect the supply of
resources
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Sources of Uncertainty in the
Environment (cont.)
 Environmental richness: the
amount of resources available to
support an organization’s domain
 Environments may be poor because:

The organization is located in a poor country
or in a poor region of a country

There is a high level of competition, and
organizations are fighting over available
resources
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Figure 3-2: Three Factors
Causing Uncertainty
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Resource Dependence
Theory
The goal of an organization is to
minimize its dependence on other
organizations for the supply of scare
resources and to find ways of
influencing them to make resources
available
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Resource Dependence
Theory (cont.)
 An organization has to manage two
aspects of its resource dependence:
 It has to exert influence over other
organizations so that it can obtain
resources
 It must respond to the needs and
demands of the other organizations in
its environment
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Interorganizational Strategies for
Managing Resource Dependencies
 Two basic types of interdependencies cause
uncertainty
 Symbiotic interdependencies:
interdependencies that exist between an
organization and its suppliers and distributors
 Competitive interdependencies:
interdependencies that exist among
organizations that compete for scarce inputs and
outputs
 Organizations aim to choose the
interorganizational strategy that offers the
most reduction in uncertainty with least loss
of control
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Figure 3.3: Interorganizational Strategies
for Managing Symbiotic Interdependencies
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Strategies for Managing Symbiotic
Resource Interdependencies
Developing a good reputation
 Reputation: a state in which an
organization is held in high regard and
trusted by other parties because of its fair
and honest business practices
 Reputation and trust are the most
common linkage mechanisms for
managing symbiotic interdependencies
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Strategies for Managing Symbiotic
Resource Interdependencies (cont.)
 Co-optation: a strategy that
manages symbiotic
interdependencies by neutralizing
problematic forces in the specific
environment
 Make outside stakeholders inside
stakeholders
 Interlocking directorate: a linkage
that results when a director from one
company sits on the board of another
company
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Strategies for Managing Symbiotic
Resource Interdependencies (cont.)
 Strategic alliances: an agreement
that commits two or more companies
to share their resources to develop
joint new business opportunities
 An increasingly common mechanism for
managing symbiotic (and competitive)
interdependencies
 The more formal the alliance, the stronger
and more prescribed the linkage and
tighter control of joint activities

Greater formality preferred with uncertainty
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Types of Strategic Alliances
 Long-term contracts
 Networks: a cluster of different
organizations whose actions are
coordinated by contracts and
agreements rather than through a
formal hierarchy of authority
 Minority ownership
 Keiretsu: a group of organizations,
each of which owns shares in the other
organizations in the group, that work
together to further the group’s interests
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Figure 3-4: Types of Strategic
Alliances
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Figure 3-5: The Fuyo Keiretsu
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Types of Strategic Alliances
(cont.)
 Joint venture: a strategic alliance
among two or more organizations that
agree to jointly establish and share
the ownership of a new business
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Figure 3.6: Joint Venture
Formation
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Strategies for Managing Symbiotic
Resource Interdependencies (cont.)
 Merger and takeover: results in
resource exchanges taking place
within one organization rather than
between organizations
 New organization better able to resist
powerful suppliers and customers
 Normally involves great expense and
problems managing the new business
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Strategies for Managing Competitive
Resource Interdependencies
Collusion and cartels
 Collusion: a secret agreement among
competitors to share information for a
deceitful or illegal purpose

May influence industry standards
 Cartel: an association of firms that
explicitly agrees to coordinate their
activities

May influence price structure of market
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Et fiyatları Rekabet Kurulu'na şikayet edildi
Tüketiciler Birliği Başkan Vekili Mehmet Muta Şahin
''Et fiyatları üzerinden haksız kazanç elde etmeye
çalışan firmaları Rekabet Kuruluna şikayet ettik'' dedi.
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Strategies for Managing Competitive
Resource Interdependencies (cont.)
 Third-party linkage mechanism:
a regulatory body that allows
organizations to share information and
regulate the way they compete
 Strategic alliances: can be used to
manage both symbiotic and
competitive interdependencies
 Merger and takeover: the ultimate
method for managing problematic
interdependencies
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Figure 3-7: Interorganizational Strategies
for Managing Competitive
Interdependencies
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Transaction Cost Theory
Transaction costs: the costs of
negotiating, monitoring, and governing
exchanges between people
Transaction cost theory: a theory
that states that the goal of an
organization is to minimize the costs of
exchanging resources in the
environment and the costs of
managing exchanges inside the
organization
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
2009 Nobel Prize in Economics:
Economic governance
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Sources of Transaction Costs
Environmental uncertainty and bounded
rationality
 Bounded rationality: refers to the limited
ability people have to process information
Opportunism and small numbers
 Attempt to exploit forces or stakeholders
Risk and specific assets
 Specific assets: investments that create
value in one particular exchange
relationship but have no value in any other
exchange relationship
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Figure 3-8: Sources of
Transaction Costs
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Cooperation vs. opportunism:
The prisoner’s dilemma
Prisoner B Stays Silent Prisoner B Betrays
Prisoner A Stays Silent Each serves 6 months Prisoner A: 10 years
Prisoner B: goes free
Prisoner A Betrays Prisoner A: goes free
Prisoner B: 10 years
Each serves 5 years
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Transaction Costs and
Linkage Mechanisms
 Transaction costs are low when:
 Organizations are exchanging
nonspecific goods and services
 Uncertainty is low
 There are many possible exchange
partners
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Transaction Costs and Linkage
Mechanisms (cont.)
 Transaction costs are high when:
 Organizations begin to exchange more
specific goods and services
 Uncertainty increases
 The number of possible exchange
partners falls
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Transaction Costs and
Linkage Mechanisms (cont.)
Bureaucratic costs: internal
transaction costs
 Bringing transactions inside the
organization minimizes but does not
eliminate the costs of managing
transactions
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Using Transaction Cost Theory to
Choose an Interorganizational Strategy
 Transaction cost theory can be used
to choose an interorganizational
strategy
 Managers can weigh the savings in
transaction costs of particular linkage
mechanisms against the bureaucratic
costs
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Using Transaction Cost Theory to Choose
an Interorganizational Strategy (cont.)
 Managers deciding which strategy to pursue
must take the following steps:
 Locate the sources of transaction costs that may
affect an exchange relationship and decide how
high the transaction costs are likely to be
 Estimate the transaction cost savings from using
different linkage mechanisms
 Estimate the bureaucratic costs of operating the
linkage mechanism
 Choose the linkage mechanism that gives the
most transaction cost savings at the lowest
bureaucratic cost
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Keiretsu
Japanese system for achieving the
benefits of formal linkages without
incurring its costs
 Example: Toyota has a minority
ownership in its suppliers

Affords substantial control over the exchange
relationship

Avoids bureaucratic cost of ownership and
opportunism
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Franchising
A franchise is a business that is
authorized to sell a company’s
products in a certain area
The franchiser sells the right to use its
resources (name or operating system)
in return for a flat fee or share of profits
Copyright 2007
Prentice Hall 3-
Outsourcing
Moving a value creation that was
performed inside the organization to
outside companies
Decision is prompted by the weighing
the bureaucratic costs of doing the
activity against the benefits
 Increasingly, organizations are turning to
specialized companies to manage their
information processing needs

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  • 1. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Organizational Theory, Design, and Change Fifth Edition Gareth R. Jones Chapter 3 Managing in a Changing Global Environment
  • 2. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- What is the Organizational Environment?  Environment: the set of forces surrounding an organization that have the potential to affect the way it operates and its access to scarce resources  Organizational domain: the particular range of goods and services that the organization produces, and the customers and other stakeholders whom it serves
  • 3. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Figure 3-1: The Organizational Environment
  • 4. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- The Specific Environment The forces from outside stakeholder groups that directly affect an organization’s ability to secure resources  Outside stakeholders include customers, distributors, unions, competitors, suppliers, and the government The organization must engage in transactions with all outside stakeholders to obtain resources to survive
  • 5. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- The General Environment The forces that shape the specific environment and affect the ability of all organizations in a particular environment to obtain resources
  • 6. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- The General Environment (cont.) Economic forces: factors, such as interest rates, the state of the economy, and the unemployment rate, determine the level of demand for products and the price of inputs Technological forces: the development of new production techniques and new information- processing equipment, influence many aspects of organizations’ operations
  • 7. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- The General Environment (cont.) Political and environmental forces: influence government policy toward organizations and their stakeholders Demographic, cultural, and social forces: the age, education, lifestyle, norms, values, and customs of a nation’s people  Shape organization’s customers, managers, and employees
  • 8. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Sources of Uncertainty in the Organizational Environment All environmental forces cause uncertainty for organizations Greater uncertainty makes it more difficult for managers to control the flow of resources to protect and enlarge their domains
  • 9. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Sources of Uncertainty in the Environment (cont.)  Environmental complexity: the strength, number, and interconnectedness of the specific and general forces that an organization has to manage  Interconnectedness: increases complexity
  • 10. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Sources of Uncertainty in the Environment (cont.)  Environmental dynamism: the degree to which forces in the specific and general environments change over time  Stable environment: forces that affect the supply of resources are predictable  Unstable (dynamic) environment: it is difficult to predict how forces will change that affect the supply of resources
  • 11. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Sources of Uncertainty in the Environment (cont.)  Environmental richness: the amount of resources available to support an organization’s domain  Environments may be poor because:  The organization is located in a poor country or in a poor region of a country  There is a high level of competition, and organizations are fighting over available resources
  • 12. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Figure 3-2: Three Factors Causing Uncertainty
  • 13. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Resource Dependence Theory The goal of an organization is to minimize its dependence on other organizations for the supply of scare resources and to find ways of influencing them to make resources available
  • 14. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Resource Dependence Theory (cont.)  An organization has to manage two aspects of its resource dependence:  It has to exert influence over other organizations so that it can obtain resources  It must respond to the needs and demands of the other organizations in its environment
  • 15. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Interorganizational Strategies for Managing Resource Dependencies  Two basic types of interdependencies cause uncertainty  Symbiotic interdependencies: interdependencies that exist between an organization and its suppliers and distributors  Competitive interdependencies: interdependencies that exist among organizations that compete for scarce inputs and outputs  Organizations aim to choose the interorganizational strategy that offers the most reduction in uncertainty with least loss of control
  • 16. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Figure 3.3: Interorganizational Strategies for Managing Symbiotic Interdependencies
  • 17. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Strategies for Managing Symbiotic Resource Interdependencies Developing a good reputation  Reputation: a state in which an organization is held in high regard and trusted by other parties because of its fair and honest business practices  Reputation and trust are the most common linkage mechanisms for managing symbiotic interdependencies
  • 18. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Strategies for Managing Symbiotic Resource Interdependencies (cont.)  Co-optation: a strategy that manages symbiotic interdependencies by neutralizing problematic forces in the specific environment  Make outside stakeholders inside stakeholders  Interlocking directorate: a linkage that results when a director from one company sits on the board of another company
  • 19. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Strategies for Managing Symbiotic Resource Interdependencies (cont.)  Strategic alliances: an agreement that commits two or more companies to share their resources to develop joint new business opportunities  An increasingly common mechanism for managing symbiotic (and competitive) interdependencies  The more formal the alliance, the stronger and more prescribed the linkage and tighter control of joint activities  Greater formality preferred with uncertainty
  • 20. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Types of Strategic Alliances  Long-term contracts  Networks: a cluster of different organizations whose actions are coordinated by contracts and agreements rather than through a formal hierarchy of authority  Minority ownership  Keiretsu: a group of organizations, each of which owns shares in the other organizations in the group, that work together to further the group’s interests
  • 21. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Figure 3-4: Types of Strategic Alliances
  • 22. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Figure 3-5: The Fuyo Keiretsu
  • 23. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Types of Strategic Alliances (cont.)  Joint venture: a strategic alliance among two or more organizations that agree to jointly establish and share the ownership of a new business
  • 24. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Figure 3.6: Joint Venture Formation
  • 25. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Strategies for Managing Symbiotic Resource Interdependencies (cont.)  Merger and takeover: results in resource exchanges taking place within one organization rather than between organizations  New organization better able to resist powerful suppliers and customers  Normally involves great expense and problems managing the new business
  • 26. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Strategies for Managing Competitive Resource Interdependencies Collusion and cartels  Collusion: a secret agreement among competitors to share information for a deceitful or illegal purpose  May influence industry standards  Cartel: an association of firms that explicitly agrees to coordinate their activities  May influence price structure of market
  • 27. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Et fiyatları Rekabet Kurulu'na şikayet edildi Tüketiciler Birliği Başkan Vekili Mehmet Muta Şahin ''Et fiyatları üzerinden haksız kazanç elde etmeye çalışan firmaları Rekabet Kuruluna şikayet ettik'' dedi.
  • 28. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Strategies for Managing Competitive Resource Interdependencies (cont.)  Third-party linkage mechanism: a regulatory body that allows organizations to share information and regulate the way they compete  Strategic alliances: can be used to manage both symbiotic and competitive interdependencies  Merger and takeover: the ultimate method for managing problematic interdependencies
  • 29. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Figure 3-7: Interorganizational Strategies for Managing Competitive Interdependencies
  • 30. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Transaction Cost Theory Transaction costs: the costs of negotiating, monitoring, and governing exchanges between people Transaction cost theory: a theory that states that the goal of an organization is to minimize the costs of exchanging resources in the environment and the costs of managing exchanges inside the organization
  • 31. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- 2009 Nobel Prize in Economics: Economic governance
  • 32. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Sources of Transaction Costs Environmental uncertainty and bounded rationality  Bounded rationality: refers to the limited ability people have to process information Opportunism and small numbers  Attempt to exploit forces or stakeholders Risk and specific assets  Specific assets: investments that create value in one particular exchange relationship but have no value in any other exchange relationship
  • 33. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Figure 3-8: Sources of Transaction Costs
  • 34. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Cooperation vs. opportunism: The prisoner’s dilemma Prisoner B Stays Silent Prisoner B Betrays Prisoner A Stays Silent Each serves 6 months Prisoner A: 10 years Prisoner B: goes free Prisoner A Betrays Prisoner A: goes free Prisoner B: 10 years Each serves 5 years
  • 35. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Transaction Costs and Linkage Mechanisms  Transaction costs are low when:  Organizations are exchanging nonspecific goods and services  Uncertainty is low  There are many possible exchange partners
  • 36. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Transaction Costs and Linkage Mechanisms (cont.)  Transaction costs are high when:  Organizations begin to exchange more specific goods and services  Uncertainty increases  The number of possible exchange partners falls
  • 37. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Transaction Costs and Linkage Mechanisms (cont.) Bureaucratic costs: internal transaction costs  Bringing transactions inside the organization minimizes but does not eliminate the costs of managing transactions
  • 38. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Using Transaction Cost Theory to Choose an Interorganizational Strategy  Transaction cost theory can be used to choose an interorganizational strategy  Managers can weigh the savings in transaction costs of particular linkage mechanisms against the bureaucratic costs
  • 39. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Using Transaction Cost Theory to Choose an Interorganizational Strategy (cont.)  Managers deciding which strategy to pursue must take the following steps:  Locate the sources of transaction costs that may affect an exchange relationship and decide how high the transaction costs are likely to be  Estimate the transaction cost savings from using different linkage mechanisms  Estimate the bureaucratic costs of operating the linkage mechanism  Choose the linkage mechanism that gives the most transaction cost savings at the lowest bureaucratic cost
  • 40. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Keiretsu Japanese system for achieving the benefits of formal linkages without incurring its costs  Example: Toyota has a minority ownership in its suppliers  Affords substantial control over the exchange relationship  Avoids bureaucratic cost of ownership and opportunism
  • 41. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Franchising A franchise is a business that is authorized to sell a company’s products in a certain area The franchiser sells the right to use its resources (name or operating system) in return for a flat fee or share of profits
  • 42. Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall 3- Outsourcing Moving a value creation that was performed inside the organization to outside companies Decision is prompted by the weighing the bureaucratic costs of doing the activity against the benefits  Increasingly, organizations are turning to specialized companies to manage their information processing needs