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agenda

agenda. Techniques of OD. Housekeeping & questions News Techniques Process Consultation/Survey Feedback Reflective Learning Cycle & Fishbowl Force-Field Analysis Organizational Lifeline & Value Chain Analysis Appreciative Inquiry & Solution Focused Learning History

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agenda

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  1. agenda Techniques of OD • Housekeeping & questions • News • Techniques • Process Consultation/Survey Feedback • Reflective Learning Cycle & Fishbowl • Force-Field Analysis • Organizational Lifeline & Value Chain Analysis • Appreciative Inquiry & Solution Focused • Learning History • Next (last) class: Organizational culture change

  2. Peters&waterman characteristics Excellence characteristics of top performing companies • Bias toward action: value action, doing, implementation; make mistakes & be innovative; take risks, don’t just talk • Customer driven: respond to needs and satisfaction through excellent products and services • Promote autonomy & entrepreneurship: support innovation & change; share ideas & create synergy • Involve people: encourage participation of people at all levels; encourage diversity & conflict; progress is based on consensus, trust, belonging. • Hand on, Values driven: be clear on values & mission; know what company stands for; leaders involved at all levels • Stick to the knitting: stay with what you do best • Simple form, lean staff: few staff positions; downsize in numbers & levels • Loose-tight controls: central control around core values’ flexible around peripheral procedures and structures Peters & Waterman (1982), In Search of Excellence

  3. Peters&Waterman falloff 40 30 20 10 0 Status of the 43 “Excellent” companies 5 years later… • Allen Bradley (Rockwell) • Disney • Boeing • DEC • Emerson • Frito-Lay • IBM • Intel • Johnson & Johnson • Mars • Maytag • McDonald’s • Merck • Wal-Mart • Amdahl • Bechtel • Caterpillar • Dana • Hewlett- Packard • Kodak • Raychem • Schlumberger • Texas Instruments • Tupperware (Dart) • Wang • Bristol-Myers • Delta • Dow • Dupont • Hughes (GM) • Levi Strauss • Marriott • Proctor & Gamble • Standard Oil Amoco • 3M • Atari • Chesebrough- Ponds • Avon • Data General • Fluor • Kmart • National Semiconductor • Revlon Troubled Excellent Solid but loss Of leadership Weakened position

  4. Client/consult grid One-up position Dr/Patient Model Layers of built up solutions Fad solutions Process consultation collaborative “discovery approach” One-down position

  5. Dr/Patient Model doctor-patientmodel: a consultant or team of consultants are brought in by executives to "look them over," much as a patient might go to the doctor for an annual physical. The consultants are supposed to find out what is wrong with which part of the organization, and then, like a physician, recommend a program of treatment.

  6. Exchange model Exchange model: • Expert information and/or service is being bought by the client. For a successful outcome, this model depends on: • whether the manager has correctly diagnosed his own needs • whether he has correctly communicated these needs to the consultant • whether he has accurately assessed the capability of the consultant to provide the right kind of information or service • whether he has thought through the consequences of having the consultant gather information, and/or the consequences of implementing changes which may be recommended by the consultant."

  7. Process consultation model Process Consultation Process consultation, by contrast to both of these models, focuses on joint diagnosis, and the passing on to the client of diagnostic skills. The key assumption is that the client sees the problem for himself, shares in its diagnosis, and is actively involved in generating a remedy. Edgar Schein

  8. Reflective Learning Cycle

  9. Survey feedback Survey Feedback • Identify area of concern & associated beliefs • Involve client system in survey construction • Gather data • Analyze data to contrast with beliefs • Present to client group • Use Reflective Learning Model to • identify discrepancies • explore interpretations • consider interventions • implement

  10. Organizational LifeLine Women Officers Uniform, promotion Community Policing Wilson Death Sokolov field training model CLEFS Grant FTO Program 1982 1992 2002----? Lyons Admin Waller Admin Militich Admin Early OD efforts Mandatory Domestic arrest 12-hour shifts Equipment Vests Automatics Training Spouse support New hopes Balance Support

  11. Value Chain Analysis Pre- placement Assessment Week 1 Assessment Week 2 Assessment Week 3 Assessment Week 4 Referral intake Discharge • Outcome Criteria: • timeliness • accuracy • thoroughness • integrated • consistency • relevant to purpose • staff support • pride in product & process • Process • backward reconstruction: what must precede this? • what is done at each stage? • what is the value of that task (criteria)? • where are the bottlenecks? • what can be streamlined without decreasing value?

  12. Process map examples Process Map Examples

  13. Processing mapping questions Processing Mapping Questions • What steps were followed in chronological order to complete the task? • How long did each step take? • When were decisions made; what criteria used? • What steps required outside help and resources? • Were any steps unnecessary or redundant? • Were tasks in the right order for best use of time & resources? • Where were delays and bottlenecks; how could these be reduced?

  14. Fishbowl The Fishbowl Technique • What to observe: • communication • power & influence • roles • conflict • norms • decision making • problem solving • leadership • goal clarity • task/maintenance • Debriefing • share observations • explore interpretations • consider application

  15. FFA Overview Force-Field Analysis (Lewin)

  16. FFA example

  17. FFA example

  18. Traditional problem solving Traditional problem solving: • what’s wrong? • how did it happen? • how can we fix it? • fix it! • did we fix it?

  19. Problem centered The problem with a problem-centered approach • problems statements are not necessarily related to the solution • focusing on the problem can reinforce it • complex problems require a shift in frame • trying to remove problem elements may elicit resistance • absence of a problem does not mean high level functioning • many solved problems simply maintain the status quo

  20. SFchange Solution focused change • emphasizes second-order change • utilizes ongoing change • makes distinctions that make a difference • provides goal well-formedness (clear favorable outcome)

  21. SF_questions Solution Focused Change • Exception Question Sequence: • 1. When don't you have that problem? • 2. What's different about those times? What occurs instead? • 3. How can that be made to occur more often? Who needs to do what? • 4. How will you begin to notice that the problem is being solved? What will be different? • Miracle Question Sequence: • 1. If a miracle occurred tonight, and when you woke up tomorrow the problem was solved, • what would be the first just noticeable indication that things were different? • 2. What will have to be different for that to begin happening? • 3. When does that already happen, even if only a little? Who will have to do what to make • that happen more? • 4. What will be an indication to you and others that the problem is really solved? • Coping Question Sequence: • 1. Why aren't things worse than they are? • 2. What are people doing to prevent things from getting worse? • 3. How are those things helpful? What else would be helpful? • 4. What needs to happen for those things to continue? • Pessimistic Question Sequence: • 1. What do you think will happen if things don't get better? • 2. What will happen after that? What next? Then what? • 3. If the problem solvers start to become more optimistic (or at least dissatisfied with their • negative premonitions), shift to the constructive question sequences above.

  22. Apprec. approach Appreciative Inquiry • Discovering what works • Understanding how it works • Amplifying and transferring what works

  23. 4-D model apprec Inquiry The - D Model of Appreciative Inquiry Discovery-- Appreciating what energizes; what is most valued? High points of career? Core factors and vitality of the organization? Dream-- Imagining what might be; interview, discuss, obtain stories to enhance the collective sense of what might be possible Design-- Determining what will be; create propositions related to the purpose; establish commitments to plans Delivery-- Creating what will be; group, team, and community collaboration to make it happen

  24. Learning History

  25. LearningHist Columns Learning History: series of short stories recounting particular episodes. Segments below focus on dilemmas, questions, & anecdotes within these stories. Full Column Prologue: derived from significant and noticeable results of the events for the organization & participants Right Column: The personal stories from different groups of stakeholders (identified by role) Left Column: commentary, insights, comments, reflections & perspectives brought forward to consider the implications of the story

  26. Extra Slides

  27. SFQuestions2 Solution focused questions

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