Open allocation

Open allocation refers to a management style in which employees are given a high degree of freedom in choosing what projects to work on, and how to allocate their time. They do not necessarily answer to a single manager, but to the company and their peers. They can transfer between projects regardless of headcount allowances, performance reviews, or tenure at the company, as long as they are providing value to projects that are useful to the business goals of the company.[1] Open allocation has been described as a process of self-organization. Rather than teams and leadership arrangements existing permanently in a company, such relationships form as they are needed (around important projects) and disband when they are no longer necessary. Additionally, open allocation implies that projects are not unilaterally created and staffed by executive mandate. Rather, the person forming the project (who might not be an official manager) is responsible for convincing others to invest their time, energy, and careers into the effort.

History

The term lattice organization for an organization using open allocation was coined by Bill Gore in 1967. He used the term to describe the company he founded, W. L. Gore and Associates.

Google introduced and publicised an unusual perk known as 20% time, in which - in theory - employees have freedom over one-fifth of their working time, which may be put into a personal project or a high-priority internal effort outside of management's direction. However, the other 80% of the time employees would be still working under closed allocation, and also may not in practice be able to use their 20% time all of the time, for example due to deadline pressures.

While startups vary wildly in work environment quality and employee autonomy, one of the main selling points of technology startups in the early 21st century has been a claim - demonstrably true of the best startups, but not of all of them - that employees enjoy a high level of autonomy, at a level traditionally only seen in basic research labs.[2]

GitHub and Valve, in the early 2010s, became well known for having such environments. In 2013, Tom Preston-Werner gave a talk at Oscon in which he spoke about the importance of open allocation to GitHub's success.

Leadership under open allocation

Organizations using open allocation do not give middle managers unilateral control over their reports' work. People management, product direction, and project-specific leadership are, in this way, decoupled. One argument in favor of this is that when the people defining projects no longer have the unilateral ability to terminate employees or deprive them of opportunity, better projects and leaders (those that can convince, rather than coerce) will emerge. Middle management may play roles, however, in mentoring, handling of conflict (as an absolute last line of dispute resolution), and (especially) ensuring that new hires are appropriately "onboarded" into the open allocation system.

Leadership in an open-allocation organization is typically organic; the person to propose the project will lead it, if he or she can convince others to follow.[1][3] When projects end, the leaders may rotate back into being "followers", and there is no stigma attached to this.[4] Leading and following are temporary distinctions and largely by choice; one may choose to follow in order to learn more about a different part of the business, for example. Ideally, the leader for each project will be the most committed, capable or passionate person involved, and companywide rank (which may not exist at all) has little to no bearing on the selection.

Performance reviews in open allocation companies are handled in a variety of ways. Valve uses stack ranking driven by peer review to determine raises and bonuses, but unlike the hated stack-ranking regimes of other technology companies, these do not initiate termination or interfere with internal mobility, but are strictly used to determine compensation.[5]

Benefits of open allocation

Problems

Because open allocation is an unusual organizational style, it can be at odds with external demands on an organization. For example, consulting companies that promise a certain number of staff will work on a project must assign work to people in order to meet those commitments. Additionally, regulatory pressures such as Sarbanes-Oxley may require that people are assigned to certain duties.

Additionally, open allocation's strongest successes are in businesses in the areas of science, technology, and in particular, software - the most successful of which are typically staffed by highly competent and educated people. Whether the successes of open allocation apply more generally to other types of organizations is an open question.

Finally, terminating employees in an open-allocation environment can be challenging, because establishing a performance-based case in such a flexible environment is difficult. While open allocation generally creates fewer of the "unlucky" low-performers who landed on the poorly-fitting projects or with incompatible managers, and therefore tends to reduce turnover (voluntary and involuntary) dramatically, it doesn't provide a mechanism for getting rid of severe under- or non-performers who "hide" in the organization. This has not been an issue to this point, if only because the companies using open allocation have been highly selective ones that can hire people with strong track records. Furthermore, the increase in performance among high performers under open allocation is typically so dramatic as to counteract any risk of decline among the lower performers.

Organizations using open allocation

Organization Industry Type Number of employees Used open allocation
Valve Corporation[1] Video games Private company 400[1] Founding year - date[5]
GitHub[1] Technology Private company 175[1] Founding year - 2014[6]
Treehouse[7] Technology Private company 60 June 20, 2013 - date[8]
W. L. Gore and Associates Manufacturing Private company 9,840[9] 1958 (founding year) - date[10]
Monk Development[11] Software as a Service Private company 25-30 2013 - date
Targetprocess[12] Software as a Service Private company 110 2016 - date

Mechanics

At Valve Corporation, employees' desks have wheels under them, allowing them to move to another team with ease - a symbolic as well as practical marker of Valve's open allocation approach - and physically reorganize as their projects demand.[5]

GitHub, on the other hand, has many remote employees, so team membership is to some extent determined by which chat rooms an employee is in.[1]

Treehouse allows any team member to switch teams at any time, but says that it is "not cool" to leave a team at a critical time or when you are needed by your team-mates, and such an action would be reflected in poor performance reviews.[7]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Dannen, Chris (18 October 2013). "Inside GitHub's Super-Lean Management Strategy--And How It Drives Innovation". Fastcolabs. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  2. Roach, Michael (24 September 2014). "Founder or Joiner? The Role of Preferences and Context in Shaping Different Entrepreneurial Interests". Social Science Research Network. Retrieved 8 December 2014.
  3. Simon Caulkin (2 November 2008). "Gore-Tex gets made without managers". The Observer.
  4. "Why There Are No Bosses at Valve". Bloomberg BusinessWeek. 27 April 2012. Retrieved 1 September 2013.
  5. 1 2 3 4 Leo Kelion (23 September 2013). "Valve: How going boss-free empowered the games-maker". BBC News. Retrieved 1 October 2013.
  6. Evelyn, Rusli (17 July 2014). "Harassment claims make startup GitHub grow up". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 18 July 2014.
  7. 1 2 Ryan Carson (18 September 2013). "How to set priorities, create budgets and do project management in a #NoManager company". Retrieved 2 November 2013.
  8. Ryan Carson (17 September 2013). "No Managers: Why We Removed Bosses at Treehouse". Retrieved 2 November 2013.
  9. "W. L. Gore & Associates - Best Companies to Work For 2013". Fortune. February 4, 2013. Retrieved October 31, 2013.
  10. "Our Culture". W. L. Gore & Associates. Retrieved 2 November 2013.
  11. Cutting Edge Agile, Part II: Open Allocation Agile SD. 5 January 2015.
  12. How we (un)plan the future How we (un)plan the future, October 2016.

Further reading

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