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Matrix Organizations, What Are They?

Until the 1970's, typical, large organizations tended to function in "silos", 
logical divisions where essentially isolated groups of workers reported to a 
line manager or functional manager. Imagine columns on a page with a line 
manager at the top of each column and a group of workers inside each column 
under the manager.

As these groups operated autonomously, it was not unusual to find functions 
replicated in each silo.

In an Information Technology company for example, you might find software 
programmers in the development area, some more in the customer support area, 
and yet more in the quality assurance area, because each of these functional 
units had a programming need.

If your organisation still operates in this manner, give your boss a copy of 
this article.

And so it was in the 1970s that attempts to improve traditional organization 
structures, led to the creation of the “Matrix" organizational structure.

In the matrix organization, considering our IT example above, all programmers 
are now in a separate programming department and report to a functional manager 
in charge of programming, and that manager would control almost all of their 
work. In a matrix we usually refer to the line manager as a functional manager 
because all of their workers perform similar functions.

So workers in a matrix organization are compartmentalized by their required 
skills into silos, like columns in a matrix, each with its dedicated manager. 
The workers report to and are responsible to their functional manager, who in 
turn usually has sole responsibility for the advancement of their workers, as 
well as the administration of their area, including budgeting.

So far the matrix organization sounds much like the traditional organization, 
except that all workers within a silo (a column in the matrix) are partitioned 
by a particular skill-set.

The other difference between traditional organisations and matrix organisations 
is that matrices have rows (lines running across the columns, not fights).

Traditional organizations operated quite well, but they were inefficient, with 
lots of duplication of skills around the company. But their major weakness was 
when they tried to manage projects.

The problem was that in the traditional organisation, the concept of a project 
team, which is my nature cross-functional, did not exist, because the project 
manager's "team" team comprised of people from different functional areas, 
managed and controlled by different functional managers -- not by the project 
manager. And this is not a recipe for successful projects.

So we have our columns of functionally similar workers in each column of our 
matrix, with a functional manager at the head of each column.
Now picture rows running across the page, with a project manager at the "head" 
(i.e. the left hand side) of each row. The rows intersect the columns and so 
intersect the columns of workers. So each row is a silo of workers of differing 
functionality, headed by a project manager.
In such a matrix structure there is an obvious tension between the project 
managers at the head of each row (each project) and the managers at the head of 
each column (each functional area) as they are sharing the same workers, and as 
each manager (project and functional) has a job to do, we have a conflict of 
interest.

There are different types of matrix organization, designed to balance the power 
struggle-struggle between the managers conflicting needs. The main types are 
listed below.

The Weak Matrix
---------------
This type of organizational structure is a bit of a nightmare for Project 
Managers because they are effectively reduced to being project facilitators. 
They make plans and monitor the execution, but they have no real authority over 
staff, and are almost totally reliant upon the functional managers to provide 
resources.

The workers have little loyalty to the project managers (or the project), 
because it is the functional managers who decide the advancement of the workers 
within the organization. And the workers' performance is usually measured only 
on the work that they do for their functional manager -- not on their project 
work -- so in fact working on a project may be seen by the worker as 
undesirable as they will have less time to do their regular work, so the 
project manager may find them unmotivated.

And as the PM has no real authority over the team members, then they often have 
to report the problem of workers not performing, to the functional managers in 
the hope that they will encourage the workers to work more on the project.

But remember that the functional managers are primarily responsible for the 
performance of their own functional areas, so their workers performing project 
tasks can actually reduce the productivity of their area (often projects are 
ignored in the benchmarks). So this leads to a clear conflict of interest 
between the PM, the functional managers and the various workers.

In this situation the PM usually loses -- and that’s the easy to remember it -- 
the PM is weak in a weak matrix. 

The Strong Matrix
-----------------
All these problems led to the creation of the “strong matrix” organization 

In the strong matrix the tables are turned, it is the project managers that 
have responsibility for the workers, not the line managers. But the PMs are not 
responsible for the human resource administration.

This empowers the project managers to manage the workers directly, and thus 
properly manage the whole project, but without tying the PMs up in HR 
administration.

I have worked in organizations like this, where I managed my teams and was 
responsible for everything except the HR functions, and I found it a very 
satisfying environment from a project point of view. So my teams would have me 
as project manager and I had sole authority and responsibility to direct their 
work, but they also had staff managers who looked after anything that was not 
project-related, i.e. performance reviews (but I provided the key input to 
these) training, vacation administration, employment contracts etc. And this 
meant that I could focus on the projects. 

So when a project manager starts a new project, they discuss their staffing 
requirement with the functional managers and the functional managers try to 
make the resources available (and provide training fro them, where necessary). 
Usually the functional managers will draw up plans and charts (e.g. Gantt 
charts) of how “their people” will fit inside projects, and they might move 
staff between projects and project managers as required (after consulting with 
the project managers).

Effectively the PM and the functional managers work together, but overall 
control of everything project-related is the function of the project manager -- 
so in a strong matrix, the project manager is the stronger party. 

The Balanced Matrix
-------------------
There is an old saying, “power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts 
absolutely”. In each type of matrix organization there is a struggle for power, 
and so there needs to be some way to bring this into balance, otherwise one 
group will dominate the other, to the detriment of the project, and ultimately 
to the detriment of the organization as a whole (although individual projects 
or functional areas may blossom for a while). A very dominant project manager 
for example may bully the functional managers into always giving them the best 
team members for their projects. 

One way of reducing the problem is to make rules within the organization that 
varies who can manage a worker, depending upon certain circumstances. For 
example there could be a rule that says if an worker is to work on a project 
for less than one week then the functional manager (or project manager) has 
sole control over the worker, but if the requirement is for more than one week, 
control changes hands.
Or there may be rules that the same worker can’t work for the same PM, on two 
consecutive projects.

There are many possible rules that could be made of course, but the goal is to 
balance the power between the PM and the functional managers so that we don’t 
have a win/lose situation, and I’m sure you can guess that this type of 
organizational structure is called a “balanced matrix”. 

So weak, strong, or balanced, the "strength" is always from the viewpoint of 
the project manager.

Summary
-------
Until the 1970's, typical, large organizations tended to function in "silos", 
logical divisions where essentially isolated groups of workers would report to 
a line manager or functional manager. Matrix organizations are an attempt to 
restructure to make project management possible.

Article Source: http://www.ApprovedArticles.com 

GoodLuck,
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