organizing
Business
Management
(verb)
To constitute in parts, each having a special function, act, office, or relation.
Examples of organizing in the following topics:
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Organ Transplants
- Organ transplantation involves moving organs between bodies (or from donor sites on patients' bodies) for the purpose of replacing recipients' damaged or absent organs.
- Tissue transplants occur much more frequently than organ transplants.
- Organ donors may be living or brain dead.
- Organ trafficking is one problem.
- Organ transplants are not regulated by the FDA.
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Plant Tissues and Organ Systems
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Formal Structure
- Formal structure of an organization or group includes a fixed set of rules for intra-organization procedures and structures.
- Practical experience shows no organization is ever completely rule-bound: all real organizations represent some mix of formal and informal characteristics.
- Tended effectively, the informal organization complements the more explicit structures, plans, and processes of the formal organization.
- This deviation was referred to as informal organization.
- A formal organization is a fixed set of rules of intra-organization procedures and structures.
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Flat versus tall organizations
- By definition, a small business is typically a flat, centralized organization.
- Flat organizations follow the decentralized approach, or organic system.
- More decisions are made at the middle levels of the organization.
- Internally, the organization as a whole encourages more participation between all levels of the organization.
- A tall structure is a more formal, bureaucratic organization or mechanistic system.
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Layers in an Organization: Tall vs Flat Organizations
- A tall organization is a more formal bureaucratic or mechanistic organizational structure and management system.
- Tall organizations have several tiers in their structural hierarchy and multiple levels of management control with regard to the daily operations of the organization.
- Flat organizations follow the decentralized approach or organic system of organization and management.
- Internally, the organization as a whole encourages more participation between all levels within the organization, promoting closer working relationships that potentially lead to better communication and creativity.
- Various factors, both internal (i.e. management style, culture, etc.) and external (i.e. competition, regulation, etc.) to the organization, influence what type of structure an organization assumes.
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Development of Human Resources
- Human resources development (HRD) as a theory is a framework for the expansion of human capital within an organization through the development of both the organization and the individual to achieve performance improvement.
- Groups within organizations use HRD to initiate and manage change.
- Organization development (OD), empowering the organization to take advantage of its human resource capital.
- TD alone can leave an organization unable to tap into the increase in human, knowledge, or talent capital.
- HRD does not occur without the organization, so the practice of HRD within an organization is inhibited or promoted upon the platform of the organization's mission, vision, and values.
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Levels of Organization
- Living organisms are made up of four levels of organization: cells, tissues, organs, and organ systems.
- An organism is made up of four different levels of organization.
- These levels are cells, tissues, organs, and organ systems.
- Most organs contain tissues such as parenchyma (tissue used to perform the organ functions) stroma (connective tissue specific to organs) and epithelial tissue (the outer covering of the organ).
- An organism contains organ systems that are made of organs that are made up of tissues, which are made up of cells.
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Growth Terminology
- This reduction process forms an organic compound that stores chemical energy.
- Autotrophs, and their formation of organic compounds, are an important component of the food chain because they produce the food necessary for larger, more complex organisms to grow.
- Chemoautotrophs are thought to be the first organisms to inhabit earth.
- A heterotroph is an organism that, unlike an autotroph, cannot fix carbon and uses organic carbon for growth.
- These organisms use inorganic energy sources or organic energy sources to sustain life.
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Circumventricular Organs
- Circumventricular organs are situated adjacent to the brain ventricles and sense concentrations of various compounds in the blood.
- These organs secrete or are sites of action of a variety of different hormones, neurotransmitters, and cytokines.
- These organs secrete or are sites of action of a variety of different hormones, neurotransmitters, and cytokines.
- These organs include:
- Vascular organ of lamina terminalis: Responsible for the homeostatic conservation of osmolarity.
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Photoautotrophs and Photoheterotrophs
- Not all phototrophs are photosynthetic but they all constitute a food source for heterotrophic organisms.
- An autotroph is an organism able to make its own food.
- Photoautotrophs are organisms that carry out photosynthesis.
- A heterotroph is an organism that depends on organic matter already produced by other organisms for its nourishment.
- Photoautotrophic organisms are sometimes referred to as holophytic.