Perez, The New Technologies Part IV
If we look at the economy today, we see a pace of change that is refreshing in its ability to confront and confound the bureaucracy. Particularly in oil and gas, the management are flat-footed in their reaction to events. Going through the motions is the only reaction that management is able to muster. Pushing to optimize the inefficient and demand more from those that remain, these times are most certainly the beginning of the end, in my opinion.
In this post Professor Perez provides an understanding of what management will involve itself in this renewed economy.
A NEW MODEL FOR MANAGERIAL EFFICIENCY
In setting out what the role of management will fulfill in the new organization, Professor Perez provides a context of how the changes come about. Much of our experience in attempting to motivate the bureaucracy to fund this projects budget. Is really only the beginning of the difficulties that we should anticipate. Management does not share our concern for the markets demands for energy.
The diffusion of a new technological style is accompanied by a conflict-ridden trial and error process resulting in the construction of a new organizational model for the management of the firm. This process is extremely uneven and tends to spread by forced imitation under competitive pressures. The nature of the new model is shaped by the characteristics of the new technologies, in particular by those features most directly responsible for the quantum jump in productivity. In this section we shall explore some of the already visible elements of the new organizational model. p. 26As each of this blog post is closed, the comment is made that we are committing to finding the right way to organize an oil and gas firm. It starts with the Joint Operating Committee (JOC), and we should not lose sight of the need to fully explore the potential of that organizational construct.
It should be noted that we are here treading much more uncertain terrain than in the techno-economic sphere. The final form taken by the organizational model at the level of the firm will be profoundly influenced by social and political factors. The general framework governing the eventual upswing will tend to favor some organizational forms to the detriment of others. p. 26A. Systemation: The firm as an integrated network
It has been argued here before that management, due to a variety of reasons, have compromised corporate strategy across all divisions and properties. One of the advantages of using the Draft Specification is that each producer within a JOC can use their own unique strategy for the property. These strategies might be mutually exclusive to the other producers involved in the JOC. However, the strategy selected by the individual producer does not have to be a compromise strategy dictated as a result of too large a scope and scale of oil and gas company operations.
The typical organizational model of the previous paradigm was based on a clear separation between plant and economic management. Within each, the goal was to break down every activity into its component tasks, detecting repetitive routines which could be deskilled or mechanized. It was basically an analytic model, focusing on parts and elements of the process; it led to detailed definition of tasks, posts, departments, sections, divisions and responsibilities and resulted in complex hierarchies. The new paradigm is intrinsically synthetic. It shifts the focus towards links and systems of inter-relations for global techno-economic coordination. p. 27People, Ideas & Objects proposes to provide the oil and gas industry with an ERP styled software development capability. This is not a static situation. The role of the Community of Independent Service Providers in developing new and better ideas and ways for people to interact around the JOC will never stop. This iterative loop between the software users, CISP and developers is an integral part of the new organizational model that Professor Perez suggests.
This term [Systemation as opposed to automation] has the advantage of shifting the accent away from mere hardware and emphasizing the systemic, feedback nature of the organizational “software”. We believe this to be an essential distinguishing feature between the new and the old model of firm organization. p. 27and
Nor does it imply that they would constitute a single unit. If the old corporate structure managed multi-plant, multi-country operations, the new technological infrastructure would allow the efficient management of worldwide, giant, complex and rapidly changing conglomerate structures. p. 27C. Centralization and decentralization
Just as a homogenized centralized strategy provides efficient centralized control, innovation, reserves, production and profits suffer. A decentralized strategy as suggested here will enable the innovations that increase the reserves, production and profits.
From what we have seen the new paradigm tends to favor both the very large and the very small. The same sorts of trends seem to appear when considering the optimal model of organizational control. To begin with, the hierarchical bureaucracies and economies of aggregation are radically questioned. The new ideal system is based on decentralized networks with local autonomy under central coordination. p. 28And finally, rarely do we find the clarity of thought of where we are; as in this final quotation.
Bearing in mind the obvious limits to the analogy, it serves to make the organizational point quite clearly. A centralized decision-making system would have to be able to simulate every single possible combination of events with every single possible combination of elements and this is indeed a cumbersome and nearly impossible task. If organizations are to be diversified and flexible, to take full advantage of the new potential, they will probably tend to be based on flexible, interactive, relatively autonomous units, linked in adaptive on-line systems of coordination, under dynamic strategic management. p. 29March 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 30 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 here.
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