Managing projects in a functional organization

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Contents

Abstract

Functional organisations, where the employees are grouped based on skills and job type, are useful to increase knowledge sharing within the groups. I.e. a functional group with programmers allows the programmers to help and learn from one another during working hours. This results in more specialized groups with self-increasing skills, though limiting the connection between people with different skill sets. Divisional organisations, where the employees are divided into groups based on location, product or market instead, have a broad variety of people with different skills in each group. This allows for better interactions among the different skill sets during working hours but takes away the knowledge sharing with like-minded people. [1]


Projects are generally complex and require people with various skills to be done. Thus, the divisional organisation structure seems like the better fit for projects, as the need for inter-group communication is far less crucial. In a functional organization, all groups involved with the project have to be in close communication with one another in order to maintain a common direction for the project. This is where the project manager becomes important.

This article highlights the common challenges that a project manager must deal with when doing projects in a functional organization.

Introduction

Pending... When designing an organization, several initial design decisions have to be made like vision, strategy


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Organizational structure

Figure 1: Model displaying the matrix structure of a functional organization with cross-functional product/project teams. Each organization has to define a balance between functional and product based teams to ensure a clear line of power. Model is created by the author of this article and is based on content from [2]

The term "organizational structure" covers the formal system of task and job reporting relationships between employees and how the organizations ressources should be spent to obtain its goals. The structure is determined by managers, typically based on the four factors described by the contingency theory; organizational environment, strategy, technology and human resources. This process is described by the term "organizational design" which includes job design (division of the tasks required to run the organization into jobs) and design of the organizational structure.

Overall, there are two distinct types of organizational structures; divisional and functional. However, large and complex organisations can create matrix structures which combine divisional and structural elements. The final design is determined so that it maximizes the efficiency and effectiveness of the organization.

Functional structure

Grouping the jobs based on skill requirements, so that employees with resembling skill sets work together, is the idea of the functional structure. A functional organization is composed of all the departments that are required for the organization to deliver its products, being goods or services. I.e. a car manufacturing company could be composed of a marketing department, a procurement department, a production department and an engineering department. This structure is broadly applied, both because it is easy for functional managers to evaluate the performance of the employees in their respective departments but also because each department can be more specialized due to knowledge-sharing among the employees. Thus, the performance of all departments will be higher in a functional structure. Tasks that are completed within the departments might often share common attributes and will be completed faster due to increased collaboration among like-minded employees. From an ideal point of view, the functional structure provides the highest performing departments.

Divisional structure

However, when organizations grow too large and begin to produce a wider range of goods or services and deal with a larger variety of customers, functional managers might become so busy supervising their departments and keeping up with departmental goals, that they lose sight of the organizational goals and strategy. This is where the divisional structure becomes useful. Instead of having large functional units dealing with large numbers of different tasks, divisional departments can be implemented to split the number of tasks out to i.e. product specific departments. Instead of having a marketing department that sells all types of products from the organization, there would be departments for each product type, employing a limited number of marketing experts along with production-, engineering-, and procurement experts with focus on these particular products. The product manager would then have a more manageable amount of tasks to supervise. Though, the cost of this structure is the lack of knowledge-sharing and departments with lower levels of skill development. However, it is a necessary structure to keep the departments aligned with the organizational strategy and to provide the highest possible level of efficiency and effectiveness. As a side benefit, doing cross-functional projects in a divisional structure can be easier, since a project can be contained within a department instead of being cross-departmental.

Project management in functional organizations

Pending...

Good practices

Common challenges

Limitations

References

  1. J. M. G. Gareth R. Jones, Essentials of Contemporary Management, Sixth edit. New York, NY 10121: McGraw-Hill Education, 2015.
  2. J. M. G. Gareth R. Jones, Essentials of Contemporary Management, Sixth edit. New York, NY 10121: McGraw-Hill Education, 2015.
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