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Sukhbir Sandhu

Carol T Kulik

November 14th, 2018

Data analytics, inclusion, sustainability: new roles multiply in organisations

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Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

Sukhbir Sandhu

Carol T Kulik

November 14th, 2018

Data analytics, inclusion, sustainability: new roles multiply in organisations

0 comments

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

New roles are multiplying in organisations. Look around your own organisation and you can probably spot some of these new roles: Is there a data analytics manager? An inclusion manager? A sustainability manager? Organisations often struggle with how to best support new roles. New roles do not come with a blueprint, nor can they be copied from other organisations. They have to be built from scratch. Too much structure will stifle creativity and innovation; too much freedom will lead to ambiguity and chaos. This challenge of “how much to tighten and how much to let go” continues to confound organisations.

As an example, consider the specific case of sustainability managers. Societal and regulatory concerns about businesses’ environmental and social impact (e.g., rising emissions and depleting resources) are forcing organisations to take action. Many organisations are now appointing managers to oversee their environmental and social responsibilities. Our research finds that organisations structure new sustainability roles within three configurations (prospecting, orchestrating and championing). Each configuration has distinct implications for the manager occupying the role, and the manager’s ability to fulfil a sustainability agenda.

The three configurations

Organisations with the prospecting configuration have the least formalised commitment to sustainability. In the absence of formal structures, the managers feel that they are on an uncharted journey. They struggle to access organisation resources and have limited discretion. They have trouble explaining their roles to colleagues and feel lost and adrift. Managers in prospecting configurations are trapped in an Oliver Twist scenario, continually asking their organisations to “please, sir” pay more attention to sustainability concerns.

Organisations with the orchestrating configuration have highly formalised and centralised sustainability programs. The sustainability initiatives in this configuration are developed and formalised at the corporate level. In these organisations, the sustainability manager has to justify their activities to managers in other functional areas (who resist the sustainability programs as another corporate imposition). Sustainability managers’ roles in these organisations are tightly orchestrated with low discretion. When they suggest initiatives to their organisations, the projects only get a green light if they fit the formal organisational agenda. To avoid being perceived as a bull in a china shop, they learn to curb their passion for social and environmental issues and end up feeling disempowered.

Organisations with the championing configuration have a broad overall commitment to sustainability, but the specific sustainability initiatives are not rigidly formalised. Sustainability managers in this configuration have considerable discretion to launch and champion innovative social and environmental initiatives. They leverage their discretion to successfully collaborate with internal (i.e., colleagues in other functional areas) and external (i.e., communities and regulators) stakeholders. Sustainability programs are decentralised, so social and environmental initiatives are not viewed as top-down directives but are embedded in the routine activities of other functions. Managers in championing configuration feel empowered. They see themselves as music conductors who work with their colleagues to co-create a sustainable future.

Stuck in a rut or evolving toward the ideal?

The championing configuration provides the Goldilocks fit to structuring new roles. But structure does not have to be destiny and organisations do not have to be stuck in the other configurations. As organisational programs grow, a need for efficiency and standardisation can lead the programs to evolve from low formalisation (in the prospecting configuration) to high formalisation (in the orchestrating configuration). However, evolving to the semi-structured championing configuration is not a natural outcome of the forces of growth. Evolving towards this elusive balance between structure and discretion demands both managerial and organisational engagement. A deliberate and considered transition toward the ideal configuration occurs only when active managerial championing takes place in a mature organisational context.

Can the evolution be fast tracked?

When their structures prevent organisations from achieving their desired outcomes, but progress is urgently needed, organisations may need to consider “structural overlays”. Organisations that are fumbling with creating structure around new managerial roles (i.e., organisations with the prospecting configuration) can consciously incorporate mechanistic overlays to give new managers resources, authority and a clear focus to advance specific projects. The more rigidly formalised organisations (i.e., organisations with the orchestrating configuration) can loosen the iron fist of formalisation by consciously introducing organic overlays, such as “sandboxes” for specific projects that demand innovative and collaborative responses. This will temporarily exempt managers from the organisational bureaucracy and give them the freedom to experiment and innovate. This deliberate attention to structural overlays for new roles can help organisations fast track their journey towards achieving that “just right” balance between how much to tighten and how much to let go.

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Notes:


Sukhbir Sandhu is a senior lecturer in sustainability and ethics at the University of South Australia Business School. She received her PhD in management from Lincoln University, New Zealand. Sukhbir’s research examines organisational engagement with social and environmental issues. Her current projects are investigating the drivers of corporate social and environmental initiatives, inclusive business strategies and organisational responses to climate change.

 

Carol T. Kulik is a professor of human resource management at the University of South Australia Business School. She received her PhD in business administration from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Carol’s research focuses on understanding how human resource management interventions influence the fair treatment of people in organisations. Her current projects are investigating strategies for closing the gender gap in salary negotiations, reducing stereotype threat among mature-age workers, and motivating organisations to invest in diversity management.

 

 

About the author

Sukhbir Sandhu

Sukhbir Sandhu is an Associate Professor in sustainability and ethics at the University of South Australia, UniSA Business. She received her PhD in management from Lincoln University, New Zealand.

Carol T Kulik

Carol T Kulik is a Bradley Distinguished Professor at the University of South Australia, UniSA Business. She received her PhD in business administration from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Carol’s research focuses on understanding how human resource management interventions influence the fair treatment of people in organisations. Her current projects are investigating strategies for closing the gender gap in salary negotiations, reducing stereotype threat among mature-age workers, and motivating organisations to invest in diversity and inclusion initiatives.

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