Business as Unusual: Translating Spans and Layers Principles from the Private Sector to Higher Education

This article is part of Censeo’s Summer School series. Learn how higher ed administrators and administrative professionals can prepare their institution for the coming semester, and explore innovative strategies for developing and executing strategies that can improve student services and reduce costs.

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Higher education institutions have the difficult task of balancing mission delivery while staying on budget; employees are stretched thin and many strategic objectives end up on the backburner until resources become available to pursue them. All the while, the board and/or state legislature is applying pressure, asking you to do more with the same (or fewer) resources. You may try to cut budget line items or squeeze a little more time out of your employees, but it can be challenging to find efficiencies.
Organizational structure is an often-overlooked, yet highly effective, means of finding both dollars and additional capacity to reinvest in other priorities. An organizational redesign can serve to maximize each employee’s time and skills, while further advancing other strategic objectives. Such a simple solution may sound too good to be true, but the private sector regularly utilizes this concept—Spans and Layers—to achieve similar goals. Spans and layers can be adapted and applied to higher education organizations to address some of these widespread problems. In this article, we will discuss common causes of issues identified by Spans and Layers, and will highlight why universities can benefit from this approach that, until recently, was typically used only in the private sector.

What is Spans and Layers?

Spans and Layers is a management tool used to diagnose and optimize an organization’s structure by assessing the width and depth of the organization.

Why do Spans and Layers matter?

Sub-optimal organizational structure, characterized by low span and a large number of layers, can create a number of efficiency and effectiveness challenges. In organization with low spans and a large number of layers:

If this sounds like your university, you can become more effective by tackling Spans and Layers. The benefits include:

Are there specific Spans and Layers targets I should keep in mind?

In the corporate world, many organizations aim for an average span of control of eight or more direct reports per manager. Within higher education, there is no blanket target or “right” answer. In addition, because universities perform such a diverse set of functions, from facilities to HR to biomedical research, university-wide span is typically less relevant than the span of individual units. However, there are several factor that lower the average span of control of universities in comparison to the private sector, including:

When determining the right span for your organization, it’s important to consider some of these exceptional situations within your organization rather than striving towards private sector targets, which are often unattainable.

In higher education, we very rarely take the time to step back and reconsider how we’re structured. This has been an extremely valuable process for us. We found a lot of savings, but even if we hadn’t saved a dollar, the process would have been worth it. We’re seeing big gains in effectiveness and morale from streamlining our management structure.” – University Provost

How should Spans and Layers be used in Higher Education?

In the private sector, it’s not uncommon for leadership to use top-down directives to manage their organizations, and this is largely how spans and layers is applied in corporations. However, higher education is unique in that achieving the educational mission is the primary consideration, and decision-making is much more collaborative and bottoms-up. Because of these differences, spans and layers should be used differently in higher education.

What benefits have other Colleges and Universities actually seen?

University leaders are under increasing pressure to keep costs down. Optimizing Spans and Layers can lead to significant headcount savings as a result of fewer expensive supervisory positions. In addition, going through an organizational redesign can often highlight areas where frontline staffing is too high or too low.
Our work with universities has shown that applying Spans & Layers principles can reduce the number of managers with only one or two direct reports by up to 30 percent, either by position elimination or removal of managerial responsibilities. These and other organizational changes create annual savings opportunities ranging from 1-3 percent of total labor costs. However, since faculty are excluded from Spans and Layers analysis due to their reporting structure and limited levels of supervision required, it is more accurate to say universities can expect to see savings of 2-6 percent of total non-faculty labor costs, depending upon the size and scale of the university.
Ultimately, it’s important to remember that Spans and Layers is a guiding principle that can be used by higher education institutions to successfully optimize budgets and improve the effectiveness of their organizations. Unlike profit-driven corporations that have the scale and motives to hit much higher spans targets, universities should consider Spans and Layers as one of many tools available to them to do more with less and best serve their academic missions.
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