Client Relation
Client Relation
Client Selection
Entry
Contracting
Formation of ideal model
Diagnosis
Design alternative
Goal selection
Planning
Intervention
Monitor/Evaluate
Stabilize
The OD Practitioner
Competencies of an OD Practitioner
Intrapersonal skills
o Self-Awareness
Interpersonal skills
o Ability to work with others and groups
o Authenticity (Block ch. 3)
General consultation skills
o Ability to get skills and knowledge used
Organization development theory
o Knowledge of change processes
Position
o Internal vs. External
Marginality
o Ability to straddle boundaries
Emotional demands
o Emotional intelligence: How we work with clients.
Use of knowledge and experience
o Attend to all phases of the business
o Focus on how we are working with clients
Misrepresentation of skills
o Professional/technical ineptness
Misuse of data
o To punish, layoffs
o Breaching confidentiality
Collusion & Coercion
o Nonparticipation is acceptable
Promising Unrealistic Outcomes
Values and Goals Conflict
Problem Statement
Stakeholders for intervention/Point of Contact
o Inclusions/Exclusions of people; triangular/rectangular contract
Practitioner Role
Ground Rules/Confidentiality
Psychological contract/Trust/Clear Mutual Expectations
o Anticipated Outcomes/Deliverables/Schedule
o Publishing cases/results
Time and Resources
o Compensation/fees
o Access to client, managers, members, information
Contract modifications/Mutual Consent
Trust
Consultant’s Role
Diagnosis/Discovery
Feedback
Intervention
Pitfalls
Terminating Relationship
Conceptualized by Kurt Lewin and later elaborated and expanded on by other behavioral
scientists.
Concerned with social change and, more particularly, with effective, permanent social change,
Lewin believed that the motivation to change was strongly related to action: If people are active
in decisions affecting them, they are more likely to adopt new ways. "Rational social
management", he said, "proceeds in a spiral of steps, each of which is composed of a circle of
planning, action, and fact-finding about the result of action".
Kurt Lewin’s Action Research Model
process of change involves three steps Unfreezing: Faced with a dilemma or disconfirmation,
the individual or group becomes aware of a need to change.
Changing: The situation is diagnosed and new models of behavior are explored and tested.
Refreezing: Application of new behavior is evaluated, and if reinforcing, adopted
Action research is depicted as a cyclical process of change. The cycle begins with a series of
planning actions initiated by the client and the change agent working together. The principal
elements of this stage include a preliminary diagnosis, data gathering, feedback of results,
and joint action planning.
In the language of systems theory, this is the input phase, in which the client system
becomes aware of problems as yet unidentified, realizes it may need outside help to effect
changes, and shares with the consultant the process of problem diagnosis.
ORGANIZATIONAL DEVELOPMENT SESSION 8 2
Power in Action
• Influence
– Cooperation
– Society
• Leadership
– Technological, medical, political, financial, spiritual, organizational standard of living
– Warfare, confiscation, repression misery
• Positive • Negative
– Leading – Coercing
– Influencing – Forcing
– Selling – Hurting
– Persuading – Crushing
• Departmental
• Place on committees
• Number of employees
• Budget allocation
• Location of offices
• Individual
• Ability to intercede
• Approval for spending
• Items on the agenda
• Access to top brass
• Low trust
• Democratic decision making
• High performance pressures
• Scarcity of resources
• Role ambiguity
• Self-serving senior managers
• Unclear evaluation systems
• Zero-sum allocations
• withholding information
• restricting output
• attempting to “build empires”
• publicizing their successes
• hiding their failures
• distorting performance figures
• engaging in similar activities at odds with organization’s goals, efficiency and effectiveness
OD in Political Environments
5. Mind you own business (help others solve their major problems)
• Help upon request
• Help the manager meet her/his goals
6. Mind your own business—be a process, not content, expert
7. Mind your own business and don’t invite political trouble
• OD practitioner’s role is that of facilitator, catalyst, problem-solver, educator
• Role is not power-broker or power activist
Organizational Development SESSION 10 1
Session 10 - Future of OD
In this session you will learn:
• Traditional Trends
– Wealth is becoming more concentrated
– Economy is more globalized
– Ideologies are shifting from consumption to coexistence and ecological sustainability
• Pragmatic Trends
– Workforce is becoming older, more diverse, more educated
– Shift toward contingent employment & change in psychological contract
– No careers
• Scholarly Trends
– Emphasis on values of understanding, prediction, and control
– Search for variables that explain change and effectiveness
• Organization Development Will…
– Have more conflict in the short term
– Be more integrated in the long term
The Future of OD