260 likes | 439 Views
Making Invisible Work Visible: Using Social Network Analysis to Support Strategic Collaboration. By Rob Cross, Stephen P. Borgatti and Andrew Parker. Research Motivation. Informal networks are becoming more important as organizations become less hierarchical
E N D
Making Invisible Work Visible: Using Social Network Analysis to Support Strategic Collaboration By Rob Cross, Stephen P. Borgatti and Andrew Parker
Research Motivation • Informal networks are becoming more important as organizations become less hierarchical • Informal networks can promote organizational flexibility, innovation, and efficiency • A variety of factors can cause these informal networks to break-down, such as formal network structures, work processes, geographic dispersion, human resource management, leadership style, and culture.
Data • Consortium of Fortune 500 companies and government agencies • 40 informal networks from 23 different organizations
Use of Social Networks • Social Network Analysis can supplement traditional organizational diagrams in understanding the networks that are important within an organization • SNA is a useful tool for assessing and intervening at critical points in informal networks
Surveys • The best way to begin a social network analysis is to conduct surveys • 10-15 minute questionnaires on information and knowledge flows between members of the group • Each member of the group is asked about the relationships they have with other members of the group
An Example of SNA • An information sharing network is revealed to have 2 separate sub-groups • These groups had developed due to common interests • Members acting as bottle-necks • To fix this, the manager started a series of white-papers written by one member of each group, implemented projects that required the two units to work together, and added new communication forums
Effect of Intervention • Began to sell more work that integrated the two group’s expertise • Allowed for differentiation of their consultancy from other firms
Collaboration across Functional Boundaries • In order to develop a network in which each unit understood what other units did enough to combine appropriate resources, the authors constructed a table of the percentages of collaborative relationships
Strategic Benefit • One of the most important aspects of SNA is that not all relationships should be developed • Time required to develop relationships is a scarce resource • Therefore, one of the most important decisions is which relationships are strategically the most important to develop
Hierarchies • One of the most important boundaries to informal networks is the traditional hierarchy within organization • The authors studied 62 executives of an organization with 9 top executives • This can be useful to discover potential biases from top executives
SNA After Strategic Change Initiatives • The authors studied a firm that was combining smaller groups into one larger global network • The firm wanted members of different groups to work together better in this new strategic structure • Three tightly-knit social groups remained despite the restructuring • One division between groups was based on politics, the other two on geographic separation
Results of the SNA • Partner informed managers of the problem • Made more of an effort to integrate across groups • Started a skill-profiling system and a virtual environment • Face-to-face meetings were conducted to help members of different groups meet each other • Several steps were taken to bridge the political problem
Informal Networks: The Company Behind the Chart By David Krackhardt and Jeffrey R. Hanson
Types of Networks • Advice Network- can uncover political conflicts and failures at strategic objectives • Trust network- can reveal the causes of non-routine problems • Communication network- can identify gap in information flow, the inefficient use of resources, or the failure to generate new ideas
Steps to Analyzing Informal Networks • Step 1: Conduct a survey • Step 2: Cross-checking the Answers • Step 3:Processing the Information with a SNA program
Sample Survey Question • Whom do you talk to every day? • Whom do you go to for help or advice at least once a week? • With one day of training, whose job could you step into? • Whom would you recruit to support a proposal of yours that could be unpopular? • Whom would you trust to keep in confidence your concerns about a work-related issue?
Differences between Types of Networks • Often different types of networks can cause success or failure of strategic proposal • Sometimes, a person can be an expert but not trusted • Employees would then rely on this person for technical advice but not trust them personally.
Quality not Quantity • The quality of communication is what is important, not the quantity of communication • Nonhierarchical organizations in which communication occurs regardless of level are often more profitable • Two-way communication and encouragement of communication can be more important than sending out more communications from higher levels of a hierarchy • The most important factor is fit with strategic goals
Network Holes • Imploded Relationships: groups do not speak to people outside of their group • Irregular Communication Patterns: employees only speak with those outside of their group • Fragile Structures: employees only speak to their group and 1 other group • Holes in the Network: places where you would expect relationships but don’t find them • Bow Ties: many are dependent on one employee not on each other.