Organizational silofication: implications in grouping experts for organizational performance

Author: Dave Silberman, Rob E. Carpenter, Elena Cabrera and Jasmine Kernaleguen
Publisher: Development and Learning in Organizations: An International Journal,

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Purpose This paper presents a viewpoint that considers the construction of ‘expertise’ as an impediment to successfully using cross-functional expertise in the organization. The construction of expertise forms a bounded perspective that creates hidden impediments to success that culminate in organizational underachievement. Design/methodology/approach Experiential knowledge of the authors that incorporated 20 years of organizational management experience and extensive practice of hiring experts to progress organizational learning, knowledge, and development is the primary basis of this work. Findings A common misperception of ‘expertise’ relates to a limiting perspective on what expertise is? Organizations segregate expertise (silo) as a way of increasing functionality and division of labor in an organizational structure. However, organizational underachievement is not due to functional arrangement in the organization’s structure (which is a commonly held belief) rather a byproduct of a bounded perspective necessary to construct expertise. Practical implications Organizations who understand that the bounded perspective of expertise is the source constraining use of their acquired expertise gain insight to an actionable opportunity to rectify cross-functional restraints. Core elements are offered to minimize the impact of organizational silofication. Originality/value This paper is unique in that it introduces a bounded perspective as the source impeding the use of workplace expertise rather than functional placement.

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