Contingency approach
Contingency approach, also known as situational approach, is a concept in management stating that there is no one universally applicable set of management principles (rules) by which to manage organizations. Organizations are individually different, face different situations (contingency variables), and require different ways of managing. Contingency approaches remain less common than change management approaches.
History
Contingency approach evolved during the 1960s. Management theory and research began to adopt a new orientation, one that embodied a simple concept and enabled significant advancements in the study of management and organizations, now referred to as the contingency approach. It emphasized the importance of situational influences on the management of organizations and questioned the existence of a single, best way to manage or organize. Today, the contingency approach dominates theory and research in the management literature. Contingency approach challenged the classic process and models designed by management theorists such as Frederick Winslow Taylor (Scientific management) and Henri Fayol (Fayolism). Various researchers concentrated on different contextual factors. Joan Woodward (1958)[1] studied the production technology, Blau and Schoenherr (1971)[2] the size of the organizations, Burns and Stalker (1961)[3] as well as Lawrence and Lorsch (1967)[4] into the economic environment, in particular market competition and technological change. A broader approach was developed by a British team of researchers at the University of Aston, widely known as Aston Group by developing a conceptual scheme for the comparative analysis of organizational structure which took account of several contextual factors at the same time (Pugh, Hickson, et al., 1963).[5]
of the contingency approach was developed by Kieser and Kubicek.[6] According to the model, the formal structure of an organization defines the roles of its members in a specific way and thereby directs their behavior to a certain degree. The performance of the organization depends on the degree to which these role definitions enable members to cope with the requirements resulting from the context of the organization.
References
- ↑ J. Woodward (1958). Industrial Organization. Theory and Practice. London.
- ↑ Blau, P.M., & Schoenherr, R.A. (1971). The Structure of Organizations. New York.
- ↑ Tom Burns, and George Macpherson Stalker (1961). The Management of Innovation. London
- ↑ Paul R. Lawrence Lawrence, and Jay William Lorsch Lorsch (1967). Organization and Environment. Cambridge, Mass.
- ↑ Derek S. Pugh, and David J. Hickson et.al (1963). A Conceptual Scheme for Organizational Analysis. Administrative Science Quarterly, 8, 289 – 315
- ↑ Alfred Kieser, and Herbert Kubicek (1983). Organization, (3rd ed. 1992), Berlin – New York
Further reading
- Stephen P Robbins, phi, 8th edition, Management
- Hickson, D.J., & McMillan?, C.J. (eds) (1981). Organization and Nation. The Aston Programme IV. Westmead – Farnborough.
- Kubicek, H. (1975). Empirische Organisationsforschung. Stuttgart.
- Valarie A. Zeithaml, P. "Rajan" Varadarajan, Carl P. Zeithaml, The Contingency Approach Contingency, its Foundations and Relevance Approach to Theory Building and Research in Marketing
- Pugh, D. S., & Hickson, D. J. (eds) (1976). Organizational Structure in its Context. The Aston Programme I. Westmead – Farnborough.
- Pugh, D. S. & Hinings, C. R.. (eds) (1976). Organizational Structure. Extensions and Replications. The Aston Programme II. Westmead – Farnborough.
- Pugh, D. S. & Payne, R. L. (eds) (1977). Organizational Behavior in Iis Context. The Aston Programme III. Westmead – Farnborough.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Contingency theory |