Monday, March 19, 2012

BLEEDING ORANGE BLOOD  Part 3


Organizational Analysis 

Structural Frame

            Bernie and Arthur believed in decentralizing operations as much as possible. Once a store was built most decisions were made by the store management team along with the District Manager and supported by the regional office.  It was rare for the Atlanta-based headquarters staff to make specific decisions the affected individual store operations.  Newly minted managers as young as 23 or 24 years old were responsible for making hiring decisions and had an unlimited checkbook to purchase merchandise for their stores.  Mottos heard frequently throughout the stores were “stack it high and watch it fly,” and “sales cures all.”

            Nardelli seemed to follow Max Weber’s “monocratic bureaucracy” model and initiated organization restructuring protocols that focused on the five norms of rationality: A fixed division of labor; a hierarchy of offices; a set of rules governing performance; a separation of personal from official property and rights;  and the use of technical qualifications for selecting (store) personnel (Bolman & Deal, 2008). Nardelli quickly began changing THD’s organic culture into what he thought was necessary in order to get to the next level of corporate growth.  He instituted control systems throughout the organization, began centralizing operations, promulgated performance metrics and changed the everyday mantra to “accountability and compliance.” Adherence to policy gradually overtook the free-wheeling mentality and rules were mandated that dictated in no-uncertain-terms where the responsibility lay for every aspect of Home Depot life.

Human Resource Frame

            With the imposition of external controls over store operations, the Home Depot concept of “family” began to erode.  What began as a four-legged stool analogy, values/customers/work/family, turned into a three-legged stool during the Nardelli regime (work, customers, values).  Store Manager discretionary funds, commonly used for employee cookouts and impromptu celebrations for achieving sales milestones, were outlawed.  Store personnel were prohibited from assisting other stores with special events such as Grand Openings, inventory preparation, training, and sales promotions. The locus of leadership began shifting from the store level to a hierarchical or vertical model with the home office often trumping locally made decisions. 

The application of external controls also affected the one-on-one relationship customers had with “their” stores and the sales associates who assisted them. Store managers could no longer hire knowledgeable trades-people due to new salary-caps and long-term employees were targeted for removal and replaced with inexperienced individuals making half as much pay. As employee empowerment became a thing of the past, with the corresponding loss of loyalty and team spirit, the unique blend of products and expertise so attractive to THD’s customer base disappeared.  Ultimately, so did the customers.

Political Frame

Store associates hired BN (before Nardelli) were accustomed to having unlimited access to anyone in the company.  If more of a popular “special buy” product was needed to satisfy customer demand, just pick up the phone and call the corporate buyer who was happy to accommodate the request.  Have a HR question?  Call the regional office and get your answer. BN associates were empowered to be creative, develop relationships inside and outside the organization and get stuff done.  THD’s advertising slogan, “You can do it, we can help,” applied equally to customers seeking DIY information and store associates seeking answers to customer service issues.

With power coalescing around Nardelli and his inner circle, and Home Depot employees rapidly leaving the company by choice or fiat, it did not take long for organizational politics, with its resultant emphasis on conflict and positional power, to become the dominant form for  workplace relationships.  Now, if a store required more merchandise to satisfy customer demand, store managers needed a well-developed power base of influential people to get the request approved.  Without this requisite self-advocacy and political savvy on the part of the store manager, the customer would be forced to go elsewhere to make the purchase.

           The new emphasis on political power trumped the old focus on growing sales and acquiring product knowledge. Political power trumped getting stuff done. Political power trumped the Home Depot values of respect for all people, providing excellent customer service and giving back to the community.  Political power trumped Bernie and Arthur.

Symbolic Frame

           Desolate, bereft, discouraged, soul-less.  Although these are the words that described the survivors of the Nardelli organizational reframing, there was inspiration in the concluding moments of his reign.  During the annual shareholders meeting in 2006, Nardelli refused to answer any questions from individual or corporate stockholders.  He was unconcerned that he had embarrassed the board, upset the shareholders, turned off customers and was acting in his usual arrogant manner (Bolman & Deal, 2008).  Nardelli did not survive a vote of confidence and was forced to resign.

           The new CEO, Frank Blake, took immediate steps to rectify the destructive legacy caused by Nardelli’s missteps and brought back Bernie and Arthur.  Blake recognized the power of symbolism and knew he needed to do something dramatic to recreate hope and faith.  In an elaborately staged ceremony and after four years in exile, Bernie and Arthur were back on Home Depot’s closed circuit television dressed in their customary orange aprons. 

Bleeding Orange Blood trumped Bob Nardelli!