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  2. Informal organization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Informal_organization

    The informal organization is the interlocking social structure that governs how people work together in practice. [1] It is the aggregate of norms, personal and professional connections through which work gets done and relationships are built among people who share a common organizational affiliation or cluster of affiliations.

  3. Formal organization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Formal_organization

    Formal rules are often adapted to subjective interests—social structures within an enterprise and the personal goals, desires, sympathies and behaviors of the individual workers—so that the practical everyday life of an organization becomes informal. Practical experience shows no organization is ever completely rule-bound: instead, all real ...

  4. Organization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organization

    As most organizations operate through a mix of formal and informal mechanisms, organization science scholars have paid attention to the type of interplay between formal and informal organizations. On the one hand, some have argued that formal and informal organizations operate as substitutes as one type of organization would decrease the ...

  5. Organizational structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organizational_structure

    Further, the informal organization, which is the structure of social interactions that emerges within organizations, may be subject to restrictions also tends to lag in its integration into the newly established formal organisation, whereas formal organization or the subjective norms system created by managers can be changed relatively quickly ...

  6. Institution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Institution

    Organizations and institutions can be synonymous, but Jack Knight writes that organizations are a narrow version of institutions or represent a cluster of institutions; the two are distinct in the sense that organizations contain internal institutions (that govern interactions between the members of the organizations). [8] An informal ...

  7. Types of social groups - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Types_of_Social_Groups

    The concept of the primary group was first introduced in 1909 by sociologist Charles Cooley, a member of the famed Chicago school of sociology, through a book titled Social Organization: A Study of the Larger Mind. Although Cooley had initially proposed the term to denote the first intimate group of an individual's childhood, the classification ...

  8. Organizational theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organizational_theory

    This differs from informal organization, such as a human group, that consists of individuals and their interactions, but do not require these to be coordinated toward some common purpose, although formal organizations also consist of informal organizations, as sub-parts of their system. [33]

  9. Organizational culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organizational_culture

    They reflect a long-standing tension between cultural and structural (or informal and formal) versions of organizations. Further, it is reasonable to suggest that complex organizations might have many cultures, and that such sub-cultures might overlap and contradict each other.