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TECHNOLOGY AND SPAN OF CONTROL: WOODWARD REVISITED

Paul D. Collins and Frank Hull

Journal of Management Studies, 1986, vol. 23, issue 2, 143-164

Abstract: This study of production operations in 95 New Jersey manufacturing firms explains the widely replicated curvilinear relationship between first line supervisory span of control and Woodward's technological complexity scale. Revisiting Woodward led to the initial proposition that the relationship was a by‐product of the differing degree of task variability among the major types of production operations. A subsequent literature review of administrative requirements suggested the importance of size, complexity and automaticity on supervisory span of control. Our data indicate that variations in the span of control of production operations classified according to Woodward's scale are attributable to the underlying effects of size and task complexity. Technology, whether operationalized as Woodward's production types or automaticity of machinery explained little variation in the span of control of first line supervisors.

Date: 1986
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https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-6486.1986.tb00417.x

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