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  2. Hierarchical organization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierarchical_organization

    A hierarchy is typically visualized as a pyramid, where the height of the ranking or person depicts their power status and the width of that level represents how many people or business divisions are at that level relative to the whole—the highest-ranking people are at the apex, and there are very few of them, and in many cases only one; the base may include thousands of people who have no ...

  3. Corporate taxonomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate_taxonomy

    Corporate taxonomy is the hierarchical classification of entities of interest of an enterprise, organization or administration, used to classify documents, digital assets and other information. Taxonomies can cover virtually any type of physical or conceptual entities (products, processes, knowledge fields, human groups, etc.) at any level of ...

  4. Organizational structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organizational_structure

    Hierarchy-Community Phenotype Model of Organizational Structure. In the 21st century, even though most, if not all, organizations are not of a pure hierarchical structure, many managers are still blind to the existence of the flat community structure within their organizations. [38] The business is no longer just a place where people come to work.

  5. List of business terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_business_terms

    The following terms are in everyday use in financial regions, such as commercial business and the management of large organisations such as corporations. Noun phrases [ edit ]

  6. Anthony triangle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Triangle

    Anthony's Triangle. The Anthony triangle [1] (also Anthony's triangle) is an organizational model.The triangle takes a hierarchical view of management structure, with many operational decisions at the bottom, some tactical decisions in the middle and few but important strategic decisions at the top of the triangle.

  7. Hierarchy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierarchy

    Hierarchy is an important concept in a wide variety of fields, such as architecture, philosophy, design, mathematics, computer science, organizational theory, systems theory, systematic biology, and the social sciences (especially political science). A hierarchy can link entities either directly or indirectly, and either vertically or diagonally.

  8. Heterarchy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heterarchy

    In a group of related items, heterarchy is a state wherein any pair of items is likely to be related in two or more differing ways. Whereas hierarchies sort groups into progressively smaller categories and subcategories, heterarchies divide and unite groups variously, according to multiple concerns that emerge or recede from view according to perspective.

  9. Span of control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Span_of_control

    In a hierarchical business organization of some time in the past [when?] it was not uncommon to see average spans of 1-to-4 or even less, i.e. one manager supervised four employees on average. In the 1980s corporate leaders flattened many organizational structures causing average spans to move closer to 1-to-10.