Title :
A Newtonian metaphor for organizational change
Author :
Lind, Mary R. ; Sulek, Joanne M.
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Bus. & Econ., North Carolina A&T State Univ., Greensboro, NC, USA
fDate :
11/1/1994 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A Newtonian metaphor for describing the effect of a radical change stimulus on the productive ability of work groups is presented in this paper. The impact of a downsizing process on a Fortune 500 company was modeled in terms of its effect on employee perceptions of their work context and their capacity for doing productive work. Also investigated was the extent to which downsizing led to entropy (disorder) or negentropy (order) as employees revised their work schemas. The results indicate that a mechanistic shift in information processing perceptions and a decline in capacity to maintain effective work behaviors occurred as a result of the downsizing. An interesting finding was that the magnitude of this productivity decline depended only on the initial and terminal information processing perceptions of the managers and not their intermediate perceptions, suggesting that the managers´ perceptual state demonstrated the open systems property of equifinality
Keywords :
human resource management; management; management of change; personnel; systems re-engineering; Fortune 500 company; Newtonian metaphor; downsizing process; employee perceptions; information processing perceptions; organizational change; productive work capacity; radical change stimulus; work context; work group productive ability; Cognition; Context modeling; Entropy; Environmental economics; Information processing; Mathematical model; Open systems; Power generation economics; Productivity; Statistical analysis;
Journal_Title :
Engineering Management, IEEE Transactions on