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Case Study -1
Introduction: XYZ
-An Organizational Perspective
The Pre-OD Scenario: Our Strengths and Areas of Concern
In the years
1990-91 XYZ had grown into the largest Indian HARDWARE company with revenues of
over Rs. 1100 crores and racing towards achieving its vision of being global
top ten. As pioneers in the industry, XYZ’s strengths included on time
delivery, premier position in the industry in terms of revenues, focus on training
programs, quality initiatives, use of good technical tools and procedures and
encouragement of individual excellence in performance. However, XYZ’s was also,
at that point in time, grappling with a few areas of concern with regard to its
operational paradigm.
Mounting
revenue pressures: The
pressure to retain its strong premier position led the organization to tend
towards short-term revenues, and relatively lesser efforts were being put into
medium and long-term markets and activities (such as products and building up
knowledge). Though XYZ’s built relationships with individual customers,
Relationship Managers largely tended to focus on obtaining short-term projects
– there was lesser investment on aligning to long-term objectives of customers.
The approach, by and large, was of reactive project management and we were yet
to espouse the approach of architecting proactive solutions for the customer.
Selectivity
in projects: There was a
tangible tension at, XYZ’s between generating revenues and organizing
strategically, on basis of technology and business areas, impacting selectivity
in projects accepted. Pressures from customers on schedules was resulting in
faster delivery and hence, snowballing into further pressure on future
schedules.
Focus on
specialization: There was
diffusion of expertise and we were yet to focus on building strategic expertise
in individual centers. Employees were rotated across domains and skills in the
interest of learn ability as well as for meeting requirements. In a sense,
there was heightened focus on Voice of the Customer, in comparison to the Voice
of Employee.
Efforts
on Experimentation & Innovation: The management at XYZ’s felt that by and large, employees tended to go
straight by the book. Though Dr. De Bono’s techniques were introduced and
employees trained on these techniques to encourage innovation, there was a need
to scale up on perceived rewards for experimentation.
Rewards
and Recognitions: The
reward structure at XYZ’s was, at this point in time, primarily focused on
individual performance and we were yet to explore the institutionalization of
team based rewards at the organizational level.
Inter
group co-ordination & knowledge sharing: Sharing of knowledge was very centre-oriented, and although, informally,
best practices spread by interaction and word of mouth, we were yet to evolve a
formal system which would capture these for ease of replication across
projects. Multiple centers and multiple projects within the same centre ended
up resolving the same sort of issues, resulting in avoidable rework.
Branding
and PR: Image building
endeavors were not yet an area of focus and, in a subtle way, this affected the
sense of pride of employees. Among educational institutions, this meant greater
difficulty in terms of attracting quality talent, which further aggravated
stress among the few key performers in the organization. By the year 2002,
management felt the conscious need to bring in changes in our approach to the
aforementioned areas, in order to align more closely with the customer,
business and market requirements at an organizational level.
Questions
1. List the
various reasons in Organization xyz, which lead to its development?
2. If the
organization had not invested in its employee, would they have developed?
3. Site few
examples of Indian companies, similar to XYZ mentioned above?
4. What would
have been the drawback of the XYZ Company prior to 1991?
Case -2
The Great US
Meltdown: Privatization of Profits, Nationalization of Losses
AIG, Bear
Stearns, Freddie Mac & Fannie Mae required government bail-outs. Lehmann
Brothers has filed for bankruptcy. Merrill Lynch has been sold. Such grave
situation of affairs reflects immense failures in respect of management,
leadership and regulation of these firms. The government, like a
knight-in-shining-armor, comes to the rescue and lends bail-outs worth a
trillion dollars to these companies. Consider the fact that only 12 countries
in this world have a GDP more than $ 1 Trillion and a country of more than 1
Billion joined this elite club only last year. This act of bailing-out using
taxpayer's money has been rightly called "The Bail-out of all
Bail-outs". Also this raises serious questions on the way money has been
used to protect private companies, which was supposed to be used for benefits
of the society by large.
These bail-outs
would certainly be a bitter pill to swallow for all those who argued that free
market capitalism was the best, and there should be no regulations at all in an
unfettered market. And this idea has been most certainly put to rest in the
last few days with the US
government curbing short-selling and offering guarantees to money market mutual
funds on 19th of last month, as it attempted to bail-out hundreds of billions
of dollars mortgage debts. This follows the bail-out of three financial giants
early last month. The stocks soared in response to these actions. Though this
certainly re-affirms the requirement for regulations, but the question arises
as to what extent this marks a shift towards more interventions.
It is a fact
supported by many leading economists that history suggests that policy makers
demand de-regulation during good times and bailing out in a big way at the
times of crisis.
The present action
does address the short-term problems of liquidity crisis and mid-term problem
of dealing with bad assets, but on the longer term regulatory issue, there is
no strategic plan in place and that is really problematic. What is required is
a complete overhaul of present regulations and not just more regulations.
Moreover, the government rushed to rescue these firms without trying many of
the private sector solutions.
Questions
1. Is it fine to privatize profits and
nationalize losses, is it right for organizational development?
2. Was this a result of failure of
leadership of these firms?
Case - 3
Tata
Cummins Limited (TCL) is a 50-50 joint venture between Tata Motors and Cummins Engine Co.,
Inc., USA .
Tata Motors is the largest manufacturer of commercial vehicles in India , and
Cummins Engine Co. is the largest 200+ HP diesel engine manufacturer in the
world. The Joint Venture was incorporated in October 1993 and commercial
production commenced on January 1, 1996.
The
vision of TCL is to be widely acknowledged and bench-marked as one of the best
companies in the world. The company, thus, abides by the following core values:
-
- Care for customers
- Obsession for quality
- Care deeply about people
- Do what's right and not what's
convenient
- Guarantee product leadership
- Responsible citizenship
- Relentless improvement
TCL is a QS 9000 company. TCL
Jamshedpur boasts of state-of-the-art, fully air-conditioned diesel engine
plant, with a computerized Building Management System for safety and energy
conservation. The plant has five major components manufacturing lines for
Cylinder Block, Cylinder Head, Connecting Rod, Crankshaft & Camshaft, with
the best measuring and gauging instruments to assure Consistent Quality. TCL
has very strong systems and IT infrastructure for controlling and facilitating
its operations. To further increase overall efficiency and visibility of
information, Oracle Applications and a web-based Supply Chain Management System
have been implemented in June 2000.
Products
The low emission Diesel Engines
manufactured by Tata Cummins are for use in a new generation of Tata Motors
Ltd's Medium and Heavy Commercial Vehicles. The engines conform to EURO-I,
EURO-II & EURO-III standards for emissions. The 78 to 235 Horsepower
engines have a high power to weight ratio and will enable Tata Motors Ltd.
access new markets worldwide with its advantage of emissions, power, oil
consumption and durability.
Plant
Tata Cummins has a modern
manufacturing facility located adjacent to Tata Motors Ltd., designed by Kevin
Roche, John Dinkeloo Associates of USA and C. P. Kukreja Associates of Delhi.
The unique plant comprises a fully air-conditioned 182 x 186 m building with
pre-cast concrete coffer roofing and 15 x 15 m bays.
The North and South walls are of
glazed curtain glass. Features such as a PLC controlled Fire Detection /
Suppression System, Skylights and Building Management System ensures high
levels of Safety and Energy efficiency.
Organizational
Strategy
At Tata Cummins, the
organizational strategy is designed by the leadership team which includes the
top management and the department heads. The department goals are then
formulated in accordance with the organizational goals. These goals are
reflected in a document called 'Goal-Tree'. The tree also contains the action
plan, the schedule for achieving the goals, and the persons responsible for
achieving them.
As per
the Goal-Tree, the three organizational goals for 2005 are: -
- Grow Sales to 853 crores
- Improve PBIT by 10% over last year and
achieve 25% ROANA
- Achieve and Sustain the respect of all
Stake Holders
The organizational goals are
broken down to the strategies. The initiatives for implementing the strategies
are then identified. The responsibility for implementing these initiatives is
then assigned to respective departments. Further, the tentative deadlines are
also reflected. The targets are reviewed quarterly.
Questions
1. Do the core values, really influence and have a
impact on organizational development? Explain.
2. Is
organizational development depended internally on employees and externally
influenced by customers? Discuss
Case -4
Benchmarking Performance
Key performance indicators
(KPIs) are the metrics deemed essential to understanding operational health.
Measuring performance allows an organization to objectively determine what is
working and what is not. In addition, by identifying successes, managers can
reward and learn from best practices.
"Measurement has the power
to focus attention on desired behavior and results," said Gardner . "People will pay attention
when they know their job is being measured, especially if the measurement is
linked to compensation." When targets are set using validated,
normalized data, measurement will support a means to determine operational
improvement. Of course, it is critical to tie process improvement to measures
that matter to an organization. In doing so, measures can provide:
- Feedback to guide change,
- Assessment and baseline information,
- A compelling business case,
- A diagnostic tool to identify areas for
improvement and set priorities, and
- A basis for communication (using a
consistent definition).
Most
measurement occurs at the process level, where the transformation from input
(resources applied) to output (goods and services) takes place. The four main
categories of metrics to assess performance at the process level are:
- Cost effectiveness (e.g., $ 6.22 per
invoice),
- Staff productivity (e.g., 93 invoices
processed per FTE),
- Process efficiency (e.g., 11.2 percent
error rate), and
- Cycle time (e.g., processing time of 3.8
days).
Cost
Effectiveness
Cost effectiveness measures tell
how well companies manage cost. Normalized data usually include cost per unit,
cost as a percentage of revenue, cost as a percentage of total budget, and
actual costs versus budgeted costs. Supporting indicators include cost
components as a percentage of total and disaggregated cost per unit. Examples
of measures follow:
- Customer service/call centers
- Cost per call (or cost per minute)
- Cost per reported complaint
- Finance and accounting
- Cost per invoice
- Cost per remittance
- Human resources
- Cost per recruit
- Benefits administration cost per
employee
Staff
Productivity
Measuring staff productivity
provides insights into how much output each FTE has produced. KPIs include
units of output (e.g., invoices and purchase orders) per FTE and workload
(e.g., customers and general ledger) per FTE. Supporting indicators can focus
on factors influencing staff productivity such as hours of training per FTE and
employee tenure. Examples of measures follow:
- Customer service/call centers
- Calls per representative
- Resolved complaints per FTE
- Finance and accounting
- Invoices processed per accounts
payable FTE
- Remittances processed per accounts
receivable FTE
- Human resources
- Total organization FTE per HR FTE
- Requisitions per recruiter
Questions
1) Measurement has the
power to focus attention on desired behavior and results," How it leads to
organizational development?
organizational development?
2) Discuss benchmarking techniques, are really
helpful for succeeding in I today’s scenario?
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