Reverse hierarchy
A reverse hierarchy (or inverted pyramid) is a conceptual organizational structure that attempts to "invert" or otherwise "reverse" the classical pyramid of hierarchical organizations.
In the proposed structure, key decisions are made by the employees in direct contact with customers, while progressively senior management positions provide support and help to the customer-facing employees.[1]
History and examples
The creation of the reverse hierarchy has been attributed to the Nordstrom retail organization.[1] Other notable adopters of this structure include the United Parcel Service and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce.[2]
gollark: Well, it doesn't have `unsafe` in it, but it's also 50 lines.
gollark: I too like 100KB template error messages.
gollark: I'm writing a Rust program right now.
gollark: I agree.
gollark: You should obviously just write VC4/VC6 assembly directly.
References
- Mosley, Donald (2014). Supervisory Management (1st ed.). Cengage Learning. p. 125.
- Harigopal, K (April 14, 2006). Management of Organizational Change: Leveraging Transformation (1st ed.). SAGE. p. 154.
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