Mess is Good for Business: Some Companies Would do Better If They Embraced Disorganization

Meeting desk
A meeting hot desk at the Jellyfish office space in London. Efficiency can sometimes pay off or be misguided. Neil Hall/REUTERS

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

Organization is big business. Whether our lives—all those inboxes and calendars—or how companies are structured, a multi-billion dollar industry helps to meet this need.

We have more strategies for time management, project management, self-organization than at any other time in human history. We are told that we ought to organize our company, our home life, our week, our day and even our sleep all as a means to becoming more productive. Every week, countless seminars and workshops take place around the world to tell a paying public that they ought to structure their lives in order to be more productive.

This rhetoric has also crept into the thinking of business leaders and entrepreneurs, much to the delight of self-proclaimed perfectionists with the need to get everything right. The number of business schools and graduates has massively increased over the past 50 years, essentially teaching people how to organize well.

Ironically, however, the number of businesses that fail has also steadily increased. Work-related stress has increased. A large proportion of workers from all demographics claim to be dissatisfied with the way their work is structured and the way they are managed.

This begs the question: what has gone wrong? Why is it that on paper the drive for organization seems a sure shot for increasing productivity, but in reality falls well short of what is expected?

New solutions to old problems

This has been a problem for a while now. Frederick Taylor was one of the forefathers of scientific management. Writing in the first half of the 20th century, he designed a number of principles to improve the efficiency of the work process that have since become widespread in modern companies. But even though the issues have been around for a while, new research suggests that this obsession with efficiency is misguided.

The problem is not necessarily the management theories or strategies we use to organize our work; it's the fundamental assumptions we hold in approaching how we work. Here it's the assumption that order is a necessary condition for productivity. This assumption has also fostered the idea that disorder must be detrimental to organizational productivity. The result is that businesses (and people) spend time and money organizing themselves for the sake of organizing, rather than actually looking at the end goal and usefulness of such an effort.

What's more, recent studies show that order actually has diminishing returns. Order does increase productivity to a certain extent, but eventually the usefulness of the process of organization and benefit it yields reduces until at one point any more increase in order reduces productivity. Some argue that in a business if the cost of ordering something outweighs the benefit of ordering it, then that thing ought not to be ordered. Instead, the resources involved can be better used elsewhere.

In fact, research shows that, when innovating, the best approach is to create an environment void of structure and hierarchy and enable everyone involved to engage as one organic group. These environments can lead to new solutions that, under conventionally structured environments (filled with bottlenecks in terms of information flow, power structures, rules, and routines), would never be achieved.

Who's on board?

In recent times companies have slowly started to embrace this disorganization. Many of these organizations embrace it in terms of perception (embracing the idea of disorder, as opposed to fearing it) and in terms of process (putting mechanisms in place to reduce structure).

A large Danish manufacturer of hearing aids, Oticon, for example, used what it called a "spaghetti" structure in order to reduce the organization's rigid hierarchies. This involved scrapping formal job titles and giving staff huge amounts of ownership over their own time and projects. This approach proved to be highly successful initially, with clear improvements in worker productivity in all facets of the business.

In similar fashion, the former chairman of General Electric embraced disorganization, putting forward the idea of the "boundaryless" organization. Again, it involves breaking down the barriers between different parts of a company and encouraging virtual collaboration and flexible working. Google and a number of other tech companies have embraced (at least in part) these kinds of flexible structures, facilitated by technology and strong company values to glue people together.

A word of warning to others thinking of jumping on this bandwagon: the evidence so far suggests disorder, much like order, also seems to have diminishing utility, and can also have detrimental effects on performance if overused. Like order, disorder should be embraced only so far as it is useful. But we should not fear it—nor venerate one over the other. This research also shows that we should continually question whether or not our existing assumptions work.

Dinuka Herath is Lecturer in Organization Studies at the University of Huddersfield

Uncommon Knowledge

Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.

Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.

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Dinuka Herath

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