In our first post on this paper we introduced the scope of Professor Pisano's research in Science Based Businesses. It is reasonable to assume that everyone that is familiar with the processes of exploration and production would agree that it qualifies as a science based business. In this second post we will focus on the influence of Professor Alfred D. Chandler in Professor Pisano's work.
II. Chandler’s Core Propositions
Professor Pisano reintroduces us to Professor Alfred D. Chandler and his work on organizational capabilities and what Pisano calls "Chandler's core proposition". People, Ideas & Objects needs to build the software necessary to support and identify the industry standard Joint Operating Committee. This is in order for the earth science and engineering disciplines to be the driving force in what happens in oil and gas. Innovation on these sciences will be the source of value generation in the industry. Up until recently, innovation was focused on the management discipline and the desire to conduct "best practices" and balance some score-cards. Thankfully those days are over.
Through his studies of the rise of the modern corporation and managerial capitalism in the United States, Chandler advanced three core propositions: 1) technological innovation and organizational innovation are interdependent; 2) new forms of business organization and institutional arrangements are invented to solve specific economic problems; and 3) organizational and institutional innovation is an evolutionary process—nothing guarantees “we get it right” every time. Together, these propositions constitute what might be called a “Chandlerian perspective” on the structure and organization of economic activity. p. 5
1) The Interdependence of Technological and Organizational Innovation
It has been argued that moving the compliance and governance of the hierarchy into alignment with the JOC's cultural, legal, financial, operational decision making and communication frameworks will provide enhanced performance. When we identify and support these changes within the People, Ideas & Objects application modules. Innovation on the earth science and engineering disciplines will be facilitated and advanced. Chandler teaches us that technological innovation does not occur without organizational innovation.
A sub‐set of the innovation community, starting with the work of Nelson and Winter (1982), has long recognized that the “right” institutional arrangements play a critical role in facilitating technical advance and the diffusion of innovations. p. 5
These concepts were reinforced on this blog with recent posts from
MIT Professor Wanda Orlikowski and
Harvard Professor Carliss Baldwin. Orlikowski's Structurational Model of Technology was used in the
Preliminary Research Report to identify technologies influence in organizations. Summarizing her work in the statement that
SAP is the bureaucracy. Professor Baldwin's Mirror Hypothesis also identified similar points.
2) Organizational and Institutional Innovation as the Product of Human Invention
The
Draft Specification deals with a variety of problems that exist in the industry. One of these problems is the redundant building and rebuilding of capabilities within each producer firm. The ability to resolve any and all possible issues needs to be handled by the firm, and therefore, these capabilities are created within each producer. In the integrated producers we see the same technical capabilities being built within Exxon, Shell, BP, Chevron and others. These are duplications and have reached a size and scope that they can no longer be independently developed and maintained. The underlying sciences are advancing too quickly, and the population of human resources are reaching their limits. What the Draft Specification does is pool these capabilities within the
Resource Marketplace Module to enable each and every Joint Operating Committee the ability to dynamically generate the capabilities that they need.
Today, it is easy to take for granted such things as separation of ownership from management, hierarchical organizations, multi‐business corporations, capital markets, accounting and control systems, and other scaffolding of modern economies, as if they were somehow “natural.” Chandler teaches us that there is nothing natural about them. They were inventions. Indeed, virtually every aspect of the business world around us—every organizational form, every management technique, every formal and informal institutional arrangement, every principle of management, and every management function—is the product of human invention. Chandler also helps us understand that often‐but not always‐‐these inventions were made in response to very specific economic problems. pp. 6 - 7
To have this dynamic capability available to those within the industry requires the new organizational models, the JOC, and the People, Ideas & Objects software necessary to identify and support the JOC and the Resource Marketplace. Spontaneous order will not work when we are standing on the shoulders of so many generations of giants. We need to act!
3) Organizational and Institutional Innovation As an Evolutionary Process
We have many significant trends converging at the same time. The Information & Communication Technological Revolution, the transformation of the oil and gas industry to a more complex scientific footing, the boardroom power shifts, and the economic forces that are creating issues and opportunities for all concerned. The last thing we need to do is to sit back and wait for the eventual day when all these forces are correctly aligned and the world breaks out in peace. It doesn't happen that way. We have to act!
The first two points above provide a false impression that economic need and organizational / institutional innovation mesh tightly. But Chandler teaches us that such a strict functionalist interpretation is flawed. Economic needs arise, but the response of organizations is slow, uneven, and not always perfect. p. 7
I would assert that the slow industry response to People, Ideas & Objects is attributable to the fact that it is the bureaucracies that are dictating the pace of change. They know that if they don't sponsor these software developments, they won't get built. I know they know this because I told them in the
Preliminary Research Report. Their interpretation is wrong, however, they don't see it that way. That is why the appeal of these software developments are focused on the ownership class of the oil and gas industry. The bureaucracy has it pretty good right now, why change.
The notion that novel institutions and organizations always arise to enhance economic efficiency does not stand the test of historical analysis. p. 8
We must act. This muddling along is heading the oil and gas industry into a situation where the energy consumer will not be able to source their energy. Energy is oxygen to advanced economies. To restrict the volume of available energy limits the potential of man kind.
There are many potential transformative forces shaping business organization in the 21st century. The one I would like to focus on in the remainder of this essay concerns science, and in particular, the way in which business participates in and shapes science. Recent decades have witnessed intensive organizational experimentation in the way science is generated, diffused, and commercialized. Advances in the sciences of life, energy, and materials offer huge promise both to drive economic growth and improve welfare. Yet, to believe that promise will be realized without organizational and institutional innovation would be to ignore the lessons of Chandler. pp. 8 - 9
March 31, 2010 is the deadline for raising our 2010 operating budget. After which a variety of consequences, such as financial penalties and a loss of one years time will occur. Our appeal should be based on the 21 compelling reasons of how better the oil and gas industry and its operations could be handled. They may not be the right way to go, but we are committed to working with the various communities to discover and ensure the right ones are.
If your an enlightened producer, an oil and gas director, investor or shareholder, who would be interested in funding
these software developments and communities, please follow our
Funding Policies & Procedures, and our
Hardware Policies & Procedures. If your a government that collects royalties from oil and gas producers, and are concerned about the accuracy of your royalty income, please review our
Royalty Policies & Procedures and
email me. And if your a potential user of this software, and possibly as a member of the
Community of Independent Service Providers, please join us
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