Tag Archives: organizations

Managing in the Presence of Hidden Influences

Michael D. Ryall and Olav Sorenson

Theoretical research on organizations generally presumes that their leaders have the ability to direct the organization towards a set of goals. But that presumption depends crucially on the ability of leaders to understand how particular actions or directives would influence organizational outcomes, a problem of causal inference. We develop a formal model of this problem. Our model reveals that hidden (unobserved) influences can stymie inference. However, these hidden influences only become problematic under a specific set of local conditions. That fact further suggests that organizational design features can help to mitigate this problem. We introduce three types of solutions to the problem of inference in the presence of hidden influences — experimentation, illumination, and substitution — and discuss how these solutions relate to a variety of organizational design features.

Flat firms, complementary choices, employee effort, and the pyramid principle

Olav Sorenson

I review Markus Reitzig’s book, Get Better at Flatter, and offer some critical observations on why managers might want to flatten their firms and on Reitzig’s advice to them. I also introduce the pyramid principle, a simple theory of why firms might end up taller than they would want to be.

Journal of Organizational Design, 11: 11-14 (OPEN ACCESS)