超越合弄制炒作

Beyond the Holacracy Hype

HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW · 2016
被引 61
人大 AFT50ABS 3

中文导读

基于Zappos、Morning Star等公司案例,客观分析合弄制等自我管理模式的运作机制、共同特征及适用条件,指出全面采用风险高,但部分元素对各类企业有价值。

Abstract

Most observers who have written about holacracy and other forms of self-management take extreme positions, either celebrating these “bossless,” “flat” work environments for fostering flexibility and engagement or denouncing them as naive experiments that ignore how things really get done. To gain a more accurate, balanced perspective, the authors—drawing on examples from Zappos, Morning Star, and other companies— examine why these structures have evolved and how they operate, both in the trenches and at the level of enterprise strategy and policy. Self-organization models typically share three characteristics: • Teams are the structure. Within them, individual “roles” are collectively defined and assigned to accomplish the work. • Teams design and govern themselves, while nested within a larger structure. • Leadership is contextual. It’s distributed among roles, not individuals, and responsibilities shift according to fit and as the work changes. Adopting self-management wholesale—using it to determine what should be done, who should do it, and how people will be rewarded across an entire enterprise—is hard, uncertain work, and the authors argue that in many environments it won’t pay off. But their research and experience also suggest that elements of self-organization can be valuable tools for companies of all kinds, and they look at circumstances where it makes more sense to blend the new approaches with traditional models. INSET: What They're Talking About When They Say....

组织管理自我管理组织结构企业管理