The competing values framework is a model for judging the effectiveness of organisations (Quinn and Rohrbaugh, 1983), but it can also be used to assess and define supervision and management development programmes. The study by Quinn and Rohrbaugh (1983) was an attempt to gain a better understanding of organisational effectiveness criteria, which resulted in a multi-dimensional scaling or spatial model with three dimensions (Figure 22.1):
Figure 22.1 Competing values
Source: based on Quinn and Rohrbaugh (1983)
In an organisational context, the framework can be used in four ways:
The dimensions of the model reflect well-known organisational dilemmas. The first dimension (internal vs external organisational focus) represents a basic organisational dilemma in which, at one end of the scale, the organisation is viewed as a socio-technical entity, and at the other as a logically designed tool for accomplishing business goals.
Flexibility vs stability is another basic organisational dilemma. Order and control do not mix well with innovation and change. Many social theorists have (successfully) argued for authority, structure and coordination, while others have found evidence for individual initiative and organisational adaptability.
Finally, a study of organisational effectiveness cannot be complete without observation of the tendency of means, methods, procedures and rules to become functionally autonomous, i.e. to become goals in themselves.
The integration of these dimensions results in four basic models of organisational effectiveness:
While the models seem to be four entirely different perspectives or domains, they can be viewed as closely related and interwoven. They are four sub-domains of a larger construct: organisational and managerial effectiveness. The four models in the framework represent the unseen values for which people, programmes, policies and organisations live and die.
The debate surrounding the model that describes organisations and the issues they face is ongoing. In an effort to derive a framework for organisational analysis, Quinn and Rohrbaugh approached a large number of organisational researchers and experts to determine the key dimensions of organisational issues. The fact that the three dimensions of the model so closely describe three major areas of debate and research indicates that the authors have been quite successful in their effort to provide a framework for organisational effectiveness.
In anticipation of criticism, Quinn and Rohrbaugh agree that the spatial model is a type of oxymoron: a combination of seemingly contradictory and simple concepts. However, the theoretical paradoxes are not necessarily empirical opposites. They argue that an organisation might be cohesive and productive, or stable as well as flexible. Does its apparent simplicity limit the scope of the model? Quinn and Rohrbaugh would seem to argue the contrary, as they state that the process of creating the model is, in itself, productive. Quinn and Rohrbaugh present a number of alternative methods for comparing and describing their model; for instance, using Parson’s functional prerequisites model, in which core values, coordination mechanisms and organisational structures are presented.
O’Neill, R.M and Quinn, R.E. (1993) ‘Editor’s Note: Applications of the competing values framework’. Human Resource Management 32(1), 1–7.
Quinn, R.E. and Rohrbaugh, J. (1983) ‘A spatial model of effectiveness criteria: Towards a competing values approach to organisational analysis’. Management Science 29(3), 363–377.
Quinn, R.E. (1988) Beyond Rational Management: Mastering the Paradoxes and Competing Demands of High Performance. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.