Greiner Growth Curve
The "Greiner Growth Curve" is
a useful way of thinking about the crises that organizations experience as they
grow.
Fast growing companies can often be chaotic places to work.
As workloads increase exponentially, approaches which have worked well in the
past start failing. Teams and people get overwhelmed with work.
Previously-effective managers start making mistakes as their span of control
expands. And systems start to buckle under increased load.
While growth is fun when things are going well, when things go wrong, this chaos
can be intensely stressful. More than this, these problems can be damaging (or
even fatal) to the organization.
The "Greiner Curve" is a useful way of thinking about the crises that
organizations experience as they grow.
By understanding it, you can quickly understand the root cause of many of the
problems you're likely to experience in a fast growing business. More than this,
you can anticipate problems before they occur, so that you can meet them with
pre-prepared solutions.
Greiner Growth Curve Theory
Greiner's Growth Model
describes phases that organizations go through as they grow. All kinds of
organizations from design shops to manufacturers, construction companies to
professional service firms experience these. Each growth phase is made up of a
period of relatively stable growth, followed by a "crisis" when major
organizational change is needed if the company is to carry on growing.
Dictionaries define the word "crisis" as a "turning point", but for many of us
it has a negative meaning to do with panic. While companies certainly have to
change at each of these points, if they properly plan for there is no need for
panic and so we will call them "transitions".
Larry E. Greiner originally proposed this model in 1972 with five phases of
growth. Later, he added a sixth phase (Harvard Business Review, May 1998). The
six growth phases are described below:
Phase 1: Growth Through
Creativity
Here, the entrepreneurs who
founded the firm are busy creating products and opening up markets. There aren't
many staff, so informal communication works fine, and rewards for long hours are
probably through profit share or stock options. However, as more staff join,
production expands and capital is injected, there's a need for more formal
communication.
This phase ends with a Leadership Crisis, where professional management is
needed. The founders may change their style and take on this role, but often
someone new will be brought in.
Phase 2: Growth Through
Direction
Growth continues in an
environment of more formal communications, budgets and focus on separate
activities like marketing and production. Incentive schemes replace stock as a
financial reward.
However, there comes a point when the products and processes become so numerous
that there are not enough hours in the day for one person to manage them all,
and he or she can't possibly know as much about all these products or services
as those lower down the hierarchy.
This phase ends with an Autonomy Crisis: New structures based on delegation are
called for.
Phase 3: Growth Through
Delegation
With mid-level managers freed
up to react fast to opportunities for new products or in new markets, the
organization continues to grow, with top management just monitoring and dealing
with the big issues (perhaps starting to look at merger or acquisition
opportunities). Many businesses flounder at this stage, as the manager whose
directive approach solved the problems at the end of Phase 1 finds it hard to
let go, yet the mid-level managers struggle with their new roles as leaders.
This phase ends with a Control Crisis: A much more sophisticated head office
function is required, and the separate parts of the business need to work
together.
Phase 4: Growth Through
Coordination and Monitoring
Growth continues with the
previously isolated business units re-organized into product groups or service
practices. Investment finance is allocated centrally and managed according to
Return on Investment (ROI) and not just profits. Incentives are shared through
company-wide profit share schemes aligned to corporate goals. Eventually,
though, work becomes submerged under increasing amounts of bureaucracy, and
growth may become stifled.
This phase ends on a Red-Tape Crisis: A new culture and structure must be
introduced.
Phase 5: Growth Through
Collaboration
The formal controls of phases
2-4 are replaced by professional good sense as staff group and re-group flexibly
in teams to deliver projects in a matrix structure supported by sophisticated
information systems and team-based financial rewards.
This phase ends with a crisis of Internal Growth: Further growth can only come
by developing partnerships with complementary organizations.
Phase 6: Growth Through
Extra-Organizational Solutions
Greiner's recently added sixth
phase suggests that growth may continue through merger, outsourcing, networks
and other solutions involving other companies.
Growth rates will vary between and even within phases. The duration of each
phase depends almost totally on the rate of growth of the market in which the
organization operates. The longer a phase lasts, though, the harder it will be
to implement a transition.
References
http://www.mindtools.com/pages/article/newLDR_87.htm
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