Authority—Establishing Organizational Relationships

  1. What tools do companies use to establish relationships within their organizations?

Once companies choose a method of departmentalization, they must then establish the relationships within that structure. In other words, the company must decide how many layers of management it needs and who will report to whom. The company must also decide how much control to invest in each of its managers and where in the organization decisions will be made and implemented.

Managerial Hierarchy

Managerial hierarchy (also called the management pyramid) is defined by the levels of management within an organization. Generally, the management structure has three levels: top, middle, and supervisory management. In a managerial hierarchy, each organizational unit is controlled and supervised by a manager in a higher unit. The person with the most formal authority is at the top of the hierarchy. The higher a manager, the more power he or she has. Thus, the amount of power decreases as you move down the management pyramid. At the same time, the number of employees increases as you move down the hierarchy.

Not all companies today are using this traditional configuration. One company that has eliminated hierarchy altogether is The Morning Star Company, the largest tomato processor in the world. Based in Woodland, California, the company employs 600 permanent “colleagues” and an additional 4,000 workers during harvest season. Founder and sole owner Chris Rufer started the company and based its vision on the philosophy of self-management, in which professionals initiate communication and coordination of their activities with colleagues, customers, suppliers, and others, and take personal responsibility for helping the company achieve its corporate goals.[1]

An organization with a well-defined hierarchy has a clear chain of command, which is the line of authority that extends from one level of the organization to the next, from top to bottom, and makes clear who reports to whom. The chain of command is shown in the organization chart and can be traced from the CEO all the way down to the employees producing goods and services. Under the unity of command principle, everyone reports to and gets instructions from only one boss. Unity of command guarantees that everyone will have a direct supervisor and will not be taking orders from a number of different supervisors. Unity of command and chain of command give everyone in the organization clear directions and help coordinate people doing different jobs.

Matrix organizations automatically violate the unity of command principle because employees report to more than one boss, if only for the duration of a project. For example, Unilever, the consumer-products company that makes Dove soap, Ben & Jerry’s ice cream, and Hellmann’s mayonnaise, used to have a matrix structure with one CEO for North America and another for Europe. But employees in divisions that operated in both locations were unsure about which CEO’s decisions took precedence. Today, the company uses a product departmentalization structure.[2] Companies like Unilever tend to abandon matrix structures because of problems associated with unclear or duplicate reporting relationships, in other words, with a lack of unity of command.

Individuals who are part of the chain of command have authority over other persons in the organization. Authority is legitimate power, granted by the organization and acknowledged by employees, that allows an individual to request action and expect compliance. Exercising authority means making decisions and seeing that they are carried out. Most managers delegate, or assign, some degree of authority and responsibility to others below them in the chain of command. The delegation of authority makes the employees accountable to their supervisor. Accountability means responsibility for outcomes. Typically, authority and responsibility move downward through the organization as managers assign activities to, and share decision-making with, their subordinates. Accountability moves upward in the organization as managers in each successively higher level are held accountable for the actions of their subordinates.

Span of Control

Each firm must decide how many managers are needed at each level of the management hierarchy to effectively supervise the work performed within organizational units. A manager’s span of control (sometimes called span of management) is the number of employees the manager directly supervises. It can be as narrow as two or three employees or as wide as 50 or more. In general, the larger the span of control, the more efficient the organization. As (Figure) shows, however, both narrow and wide spans of control have benefits and drawbacks.

Table 7.2
Narrow and Wide Spans of Control
Advantages Disadvantages
Narrow span of control
  • This approach allows a high degree of control.
  • Fewer subordinates may mean the manager is more familiar with each individual.
  • Close supervision can provide immediate feedback.
  • More levels of management mean that it is more expensive.
  • Decision-making is slower due to vertical layers.
  • Top management are isolated.
  • This approach discourages employee autonomy.
Wide span of control
  • Fewer levels of management means increased efficiency and reduced costs.
  • Increased subordinate autonomy leads to quicker decision-making.
  • This approach allows for greater organizational flexibility.
  • This approach creates higher levels of job satisfaction due to employee empowerment.
  • This approach allows for less control.
  • Managers may lack familiarity with their subordinates due to the large number.
  • Managers can be spread so thin that they can’t provide necessary leadership or support.
  • There may be a lack of coordination or synchronization.

If hundreds of employees perform the same job, one supervisor may be able to manage a very large number of employees. Such might be the case at a clothing plant, where hundreds of sewing machine operators work from identical patterns. But if employees perform complex and dissimilar tasks, a manager can effectively supervise only a much smaller number. For instance, a supervisor in the research and development area of a pharmaceutical company might oversee just a few research chemists due to the highly complex nature of their jobs.

concept check

  1. How does the chain of command clarify reporting relationships?
  2. What is the role of a staff position in a line-and-staff organization?
  3. What factors determine the optimal span of control?

Summary of Learning Outcomes

  1. What tools do companies use to establish relationships within their organizations?

The managerial hierarchy (or the management pyramid) comprises the levels of management within the organization, and the managerial span of control is the number of employees the manager directly supervises. In daily operations, individuals in line positions are directly involved in the processes used to create goods and services. Individuals in staff positions provide the administrative and support services that line employees need to achieve the firm’s goals. Line positions in organizations are typically in areas such as production, marketing, and finance. Staff positions are found in areas such as legal counseling, managerial consulting, public relations, and human resource management.

Glossary

authority
Legitimate power, granted by the organization and acknowledged by employees, that allows an individual to request action and expect compliance.
chain of command
The line of authority that extends from one level of an organization’s hierarchy to the next, from top to bottom, and makes clear who reports to whom.
delegation of authority
The assignment of some degree of authority and responsibility to persons lower in the chain of command.
managerial hierarchy
The levels of management within an organization; typically includes top, middle, and supervisory management.
span of control
The number of employees a manager directly supervises; also called span of management.

  1. “Morning Star’s Success Story: No Bosses, No Titles, No Structural Hierarchy,” Corporate Rebels, http://corporate-rebels.com, November 14, 2016.
  2. Justin Young, “Unilever’s Organizational Structure for Product Innovation,” Panmore Institute, http://panmore.com, February 21, 2017; “Unilever UK Gets Its House in Order,” Grocer, February 12, 2005; “From Rivalry to Mergers: Anglo-Dutch Companies,” The Economist, February 12, 2005, p. 61.