Do Middle Managers Contribute to Their Organisation’s Strategy?
Tony Kealy
Abstract
This paper presents an empirical study on the contribution made by middle managers to the development of
strategy in an organisation. The data was collected using semi-structured interviews with middle-managers and
top-managers in companies large enough to have the middle management layer in the organisational hierarchy.
The data was analysed using a qualitative approach. Previous studies in this field were found to be wide and
varied. An early study by Mintzberg (1978) found that strategy mainly forms from emergent influences at middle
and lower levels of the organisation, as well as from deliberate influences emanating at the top. In the same year
Miles and Snow (1978) subsequently declared that not all organisations have the same level of strategic
management activity. This research found that the most common role for middle managers is to implement
deliberate corporate strategy. The synthesis of information appeared to be the only area where middle managers
exerted a restricted upward influence. These findings would appear to conflict somewhat with those of a seminal
study by Floyd and Wooldridge (1992) who developed a typology of middle managers roles in strategy. They
suggest that middle managers have the potential to exert both upward influence on top managers and downward
influence on operational level managers. Porter (1996) argued that managers who operate beneath the top
strategic level lack the perspective and the confidence to maintain a strategy. He claims the middle level
managers’ main role is tactical, not strategic. This would appear to concur with this present study. Other themes
that emerged in this research regarding middle managers contribution to an organisation are also evident in the
literature. These include middle manager’s soft skills, their political astuteness and the ability to use power well.
All research participants in this study agreed that the possession of excellent ‘soft skills’ by middle managers was
a hugely important aspect of their role. They felt that these soft skills were essential for the smooth execution of
strategic change and implementation. These findings concur with Hardy (1996) who argues that to overcome the
shortcomings regarding an organisational strategy, middle managers must be capable of acting politically and
using their power. Hardy (1996) declares that power is needed to orchestrate and direct actions that are crucial
to the realisation of strategic goals within organisations. Similar declarations were made by participants of this
study. One additional interesting interpretation of this study was that it appears desirable that middle managers
are ‘effective followers’ as described by Kelley (1992) mainly because of their position in the organisational
hierarchy. The author claims that effective followers and effective leaders are often the same people playing
different roles at different parts of the day. It seems that the main contribution by middle managers to strategy
development, primarily implementing deliberate strategy, should not be seen as a lesser task than choosing the
strategy in the first case. It appears from this study that middle managers can, and do, make a significant
contribution to the strategic development of an organisation. However, contrary to declarations in the literature,
the findings would appear to conclude that middle managers have little influence on the choice of strategy
adopted by their organisation. It may be that not every middle manager should aspire to be top managers because
their own role as middle manager is unique in itself and therefore has a very important place within the structure
of an organisation. A wise middle manager, acting with integrity and possessing the necessary soft skills can pave
the way for a smooth transition of strategic change and implementation which may be crucial to the outcomes of
their organisation.
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