학술논문

How Apple Is Organized for Innovation.
Document Type
Article
Source
Harvard Business Review. Summer2021 Special issue, p100-108. 9p. 1 Color Photograph, 3 Diagrams.
Subject
*Innovations in business
*Organizational structure
*Leadership
*Chief executive officers
iPhone (Smartphone)
Apple Watch
Language
ISSN
0017-8012
Abstract
When Steve Jobs returned to Apple, in 1997, it had a conventional structure for a company of its size and scope. It was divided into business units, each with its own P&L responsibilities. Believing that conventional management had stifled innovation, Jobs laid off the general managers of all the business units (in a single day), put the entire company under one P&L, and combined the disparate functional departments of the business units into one functional organization. Although such a structure is common for small entrepreneurial firms, Apple—remarkably—retains it today, even though the company is nearly 40 times as large in terms of revenue and far more complex than it was in 1997. In this article the authors discuss the innovation benefits and leadership challenges of Apple’s distinctive and ever-evolving organizational model in the belief that it may be useful for other companies competing in rapidly changing environments [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]