SlideShare una empresa de Scribd logo
1 de 17
Why is OD Important?


Organizations are increasingly challenged by change. The world is moving faster and faster.
Competitive pressures are becoming more and more demanding. Rapid technological change
and the globalizing economy both confuse us and open new doors. In the midst of this,
employees seek more satisfaction and meaning from their work lives, and more balance in
their lives as a whole.


Whether the organizations are private, public or non-profit, they must adapt to this new world
if they are to survive and thrive. They need to become more nimble, more customer-driven,
more innovative, more effective. They need to attract and retain competent and committed
employees. This will require more flexible organizational structures, new types of leadership,
and new ways of managing. OD can help organizations navigate this difficult terrain.




What is OD?


Let’s start with a definition:
"Organization Development is a system-wide application of behavioral science knowledge to
the planned development and reinforcement of organizational strategies, structures, and
processes for improving an organization’s effectiveness." (Cummings T.G. and Worley C,
                                                 th
1997. Organization Development and Change, 6 ed., p 2. South-Western College
Publishing)


This definition has several key elements.


       The overall goal of OD is to improve an organization’s effectiveness.
       It involves the application ofbehavioral science knowledge,
       in a planned and systemwide manner, and
       it addresses an organization’s strategies, structures and/or processes.


Another good definition of OD comes from Organizational Behavior (Robbins, S.P., 1998.
Organizational Behavior. Prentice Hall.)
"A collection of planned change interventions, built on humanistic-democratic values, that
seeks to improve organizational effectiveness and employee well-being."


OD is sometimes thought of as the "soft side" of change as opposed to the hard side of
technology or business systems. It is concerned with how people react to change, and how
their needs have to be considered if change efforts are to be effective. One of the common
issues is to understand and work with the resistance to change that usually occurs in
organizations undergoing change. "Change management" is a term that is sometimes used
interchangeably with OD.


Although OD is considered a distinct field or profession by many, there is not unanimity as to
exactly what specific methods or practices comprise the field. And, like most professions, OD
is evolving. The field now known as OD began in the 1940s and 1950s with "T-group" or
sensitivity training, moved into such practices as survey research and feedback, and action
research, and in the 1980’s and 1990’s into quality of work life issues and more strategic and
large-scale change efforts.


                                                                                 Return to top




What Are the Values of OD?


Values often tell us a lot about someone or something. In the case of OD, there are certain
values usually associated with the profession. Since the beginning, OD values have generally
been described as humanistic and democratic. They have to do with how people treat each
other, and how decisions are made. A key concern is how satisfied employees are in the
workplace. Employee participation and collaboration are key concepts associated with OD.
More recently OD has also become concerned with productivity and organizational
effectiveness. There is more of an explicit focus on business issues and bottom-line results.
(This shift has been reinforced by several recent research findings that employee satisfaction
has a clear impact on customer satisfaction and therefore on revenue and profits.)


                                                                                 Return to top




What Do OD Practitioners Do?


OD practitioners are frequently called upon to address a variety of organizational issues or
problems. These might include how to:
        create an organizational vision and mission
        set goals and make decisions
        lead
        attract and retain good employees
        improve employee morale
        reduce turnover and absenteeism
        improve productivity
        resolve conflict
        divide labor
        design work
        coordinate departments and share information
        determine core competencies
        develop or change core values
        more effectively develop and implement change strategies
        change the organizational culture
        relate to the external environment
        anticipate and prepare for the future
In order to address these types of issues, the practitioner might employ a variety of
interventions or methods. According to Cummings and Worley, there are four basic categories
of OD interventions:
    1. Human Process (e.g., sensitivity training, team building and conflict resolution)
    2. Technostructural (e.g., quality circles or total quality management, and work process
        design)
    3. Human Resource Management (e.g., job design, performance appraisal, reward
        systems and multicultural training)
4. Strategic (e.g., strategic planning/management, future search conferences and
       corporate culture change)
Of course, these are not distinct or exclusive methods and they are often used in conjunction
with each other.
Following is a representative list of specific services or techniques that might be offered or
used by OD practitioners:
       Appreciative inquiry
       Career management or counseling
       Change management
       Coaching
       Collaborative solutions
       Conflict resolution
       Creative problem solving
       Future search conferences
       Goal setting
       Group (or meeting) facilitation
       High involvement work teams
       Human resource management
       Interpersonal communication
       Large-scale system change
       Large-group interventions
       Leadership development
       Managing workforce diversity
       Organizational restructuring
       Socio-technical systems design
       Strategic planning
       Team building
       Total quality management
       Vision and mission development
       Work process improvement
Organization development
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

                                This article is written like a personal reflection or essay rather
                                than an encyclopedic description of the subject. Please help
                                improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style. (March 2012)


Organization development (OD) is a deliberately planned effort to increase an organization's
relevance and viability. Vasudevan has referred to OD as, future readiness to meet change, thus a
systemic learning and development strategy intended to change the basics of beliefs, attitudes and
relevance of values, and structure of the current organization to better absorb disruptive
technologies, shrinking or exploding market opportunities and ensuing challenges and chaos. OD
is the framework for a change process designed to lead to desirable positive impact to all
stakeholders and the environment. OD can design interventions with application of several
multidisciplinary methods and research besides traditional OD approaches.

                   Contents

                      [hide]


1 Overview
 o   1.1 History
 o   1.2 Core Values
 o   1.3 Change agent
 o   1.4 Sponsoring organization
 o   1.5 Applied behavioral science
 o   1.6 Systems context
2 Improved organizational performance
 o   2.1 Organizational self-renewal
3 Understanding organizations
 o   3.1 Modern development
4 Action research
5 Important figures
6 OD interventions
7 See also
8 Further reading
9 References

[edit]Overview

The purpose of OD is to address perennial evolving needs of successful organizations - a
concerted collaboration of internal and external experts in the field to discover the process an
organization can use to become more stakeholder effective.
OD is a lifelong, built-in mechanism to improve immunity of organization's health to renew itself
inclusive principles, often with the assistance of a change agent or catalyst and the use of enabling
appropriate theories and techniques from applied behavioral sciences, anthropology, sociology,
and phenomenology. Although behavioral science has provided the basic foundation for the study
and practice of OD, new and emerging fields of study have made their presence felt. Experts in
systems thinking and organizational learning, mind maps, body mind synchronicity, structure of
intuition in decision making, and coaching (to name a few) whose perspective is not steeped in just
the behavioral sciences, but a much more multi-disciplinary and inter-disciplinary approach have
emerged as OD catalysts. These emergent expert perspectives see the organization as the holistic
interplay of a number of systems that impact the process and outputs of the entire organization.
More importantly, the term change agent or catalyst is synonymous with the notion of a leader who
is engaged in leadership - a transformative or effectiveness process - as opposed to management,
a more incremental or efficiency based change methodology.

Organization development is an ongoing, systematic process of implementing effective
organizational change. Organization development is known as both a field of applied behavioral
science focused on understanding and managing organizational change and as a field of scientific
study and inquiry. It is interdisciplinary in nature and draws on sociology, psychology, and theories
of motivation, learning, and personality. Organization development is a growing field that is
responsive to many new approaches including Positive Adult Development.

[edit]History

Kurt Lewin (1898–1947) is widely recognized as the founding father of OD, although he died
before the concept became current in the mid-1950s.[1] From Lewin came the ideas of group
dynamicsand action research which underpin the basic OD process as well as providing its
collaborative consultant/client ethos. Institutionally, Lewin founded the "Research Center for Group
Dynamics" (RCGD) at MIT, which moved to Michigan after his death. RCGD colleagues were
among those who founded the National Training Laboratories (NTL), from which the T-groups and
group-based OD emerged.

Kurt Lewin played a key role in the evolution of organization development as it is known today. As
early as World War II, Lewin experimented with a collaborative change process (involving himself
as consultant and a client group) based on a three-step process of planning, taking action, and
measuring results. This was the forerunner of action research, an important element of OD, which
will be discussed later. Lewin then participated in the beginnings of laboratory training, or T-
groups, and, after his death in 1947, his close associates helped to develop survey-research
methods at the University of Michigan. These procedures became important parts of OD as
developments in this field continued at the National Training Laboratories and in growing numbers
of universities and private consulting firms across the country. Two of the leading universities
offering doctoral level [2] degrees in OD are Benedictine University and the Fielding Graduate
University.

Douglas McGregor and Richard Beckhard while "consulting together at General Mills in the 1950's,
the two coined the term organizational development (OD) to describe an innovative bottoms-up
change effort that fit no traditional consulting categories" (Weisbord, 1987, p. 112).[3]
The failure of off-site laboratory training to live up to its early promise was one of the important
forces stimulating the development of OD. Laboratory training is learning from a person's "here
and now" experience as a member of an ongoing training group. Such groups usually meet without
a specific agenda. Their purpose is for the members to learn about themselves from their
spontaneous "here and now" responses to an ambiguous hypothetical situation. Problems
of leadership, structure, status, communication, and self-serving behavior typically arise in such a
group. The members have an opportunity to learn something about themselves and to practice
such skills as listening, observing others, and functioning as effective group members. [4]

As formerly practiced (and occasionally still practiced for special purposes), laboratory training was
conducted in "stranger groups," or groups composed of individuals from different organizations,
situations, and backgrounds. A major difficulty developed, however, in transferring knowledge
gained from these "stranger labs" to the actual situation "back home". This required a transfer
between two different cultures, the relatively safe and protected environment of the T-group (or
training group) and the give-and-take of the organizational environment with its traditional values.
This led the early pioneers in this type of learning to begin to apply it to "family groups" — that is,
groups located within an organization. From this shift in the locale of the training site and the
realization that culture was an important factor in influencing group members (along with some
other developments in the behavioral sciences) emerged the concept of organization
development.[4]

[edit]Core     Values
Underlying Organizational Development are humanistic values. Margulies and Raia (1972)
articulated the humanistic values of OD as follows:


     1. Providing opportunities for people to function as human beings rather than as resources in
         the productive process.

     2. Providing opportunities for each organization member, as well as for the organization
         itself, to develop to his full potential.

     3. Seeking to increase the effectiveness of the organization in terms of all of its goals.

     4. Attempting to create an environment in which it is possible to find exciting and challenging
         work.

     5. Providing opportunities for people in organizations to influence the way in which they
         relate to work, the organization, and the environment.

     6. Treating each human being as a person with a complex set of needs, all of which are
         important in his work and in his life.[5]
[edit]Change        agent
A change agent in the sense used here is not a technical expert skilled in such functional areas as
accounting, production, or finance. The change agent is a behavioral scientist who knows how to
get people in an organization involved in solving their own problems. A change agent's main
strength is a comprehensive knowledge of human behavior, supported by a number of intervention
techniques (to be discussed later). The change agent can be either external or internal to the
organization. An internal change agent is usually a staff person who has expertise in the
behavioral sciences and in the intervention technology of OD. Beckhard reports several cases in
which line people have been trained in OD and have returned to their organizations to engage in
successful change assignments.[6] In the natural evolution of change mechanisms in organizations,
this would seem to approach the ideal arrangement. Qualified change agents can be found on
some university faculties, or they may be private consultants associated with such organizations
as the National Training Laboratories Institute for Applied Behavioral Science (Washington, D.C.)
University Associates (San Diego, California), the Human Systems Intervention graduate program
in the Department of Applied Human Sciences (Concordia University, Montreal, Canada), Navitus
(Pvt) Ltd (Pakistan), and similar organizations.

The change agent may be a staff or line member of the organization who is schooled in OD theory
and technique. In such a case, the "contractual relationship" is an in-house agreement that should
probably be explicit with respect to all of the conditions involved except the fee.

[edit]Sponsoring           organization
The initiative for OD programs comes from an organization that has a problem. This means that
top management or someone authorized by top management is aware that a problem exists and
has decided to seek help in solving it. There is a direct analogy here to the practice of
psychotherapy: The client or patient must actively seek help in finding a solution to his problems.
This indicates a willingness on the part of the client organization to accept help and assures the
organization that management is actively concerned.[7]

[edit]Applied       behavioral science
One of the outstanding characteristics of OD that distinguishes it from most other improvement
programs is that it is based on a "helping relationship." Some believe that the change agent is not
a physician to the organization's ills; that s/he does not examine the "patient," make a diagnosis,
and write a prescription. Nor does she try to teach organizational members a new inventory of
knowledge which they then transfer to the job situation. Using theory and methods drawn from
such behavioral sciences as industrial/organizational psychology, industrial
sociology,communication, cultural anthropology, administrative theory, organizational
behavior, economics, and political science, the change agent's main function is to help the
organization define and solve its own problems. The basic method used is known as action
research. This approach, which is described in detail later, consists of a preliminary diagnosis,
collecting data, feedback of the data to the client, data exploration by the client group, action
planning based on the data, and taking action.[8]

[edit]Systems        context
OD deals with a total system — the organization as a whole, including its relevant environment —
or with a subsystem or systems — departments or work groups — in the context of the total
system. Parts of systems, for example, individuals, cliques, structures, norms, values, and
products are not considered in isolation; the principle of interdependency, that is, that change in
one part of a system affects the other parts, is fully recognized. Thus, OD interventions focus on
the total culture and cultural processes of organizations. The focus is also on groups, since the
relevant behavior of individuals in organizations and groups is generally a product of group
influences rather than personality.[7]

[edit]Improved           organizational performance
The objective of OD is to improve the organization's capacity to handle its internal and external
functioning and relationships. This would include such things as improved interpersonal and group
processes, more effective communication, enhanced ability to cope with organizational problems
of all kinds, more effective decision processes, more appropriate leadership style, improved skill in
dealing with destructive conflict, and higher levels of trust and cooperation among organizational
members. These objectives stem from a value system based on an optimistic view of the nature of
man — that man in a supportive environment is capable of achieving higher levels of development
and accomplishment. Essential to organization development and effectiveness is the scientific
method — inquiry, a rigorous search for causes, experimental testing of hypotheses, and review of
results.

[edit]Organizational              self-renewal
The ultimate aim of OD practitioners is to "work themselves out of a job" by leaving the client
organization with a set of tools, behaviors, attitudes, and an action plan with which to monitor its
own state of health and to take corrective steps toward its own renewal and development. This is
consistent with the systems concept of feedback as a regulatory and corrective mechanism.[7]

[edit]Understanding                organizations
Weisbord presents a six-box model for understanding organization:


     1. Purposes: The organization members are clear about the organization’s mission and
           purpose and goal agreements, whether people support the organization’ purpose.

     2. Structure: How is the organization’s work divided up? The question is whether there is an
           adequate fit between the purpose and the internal structure.

     3. Relationship: Between individuals, between units or departments that perform different
           tasks, and between the people and requirements of their jobs.

     4. Rewards: The consultant should diagnose the similarities between what the organization
           formally rewarded or punished members for.

     5. Leadership: Is to watch for blips among the other boxes and maintain balance among
           them.

     6. Helpful mechanism: Is a helpful organization that must attend to in order to survive which
           as planning, control, budgeting, and other information systems that help organization
           member accomplish.[9]
[edit]Modern         development
In recent years, serious questioning has emerged about the relevance of OD to managing change
in modern organizations. The need for "reinventing" the field has become a topic that even some
of its "founding fathers" are discussing critically.[10]
With this call for reinvention and change, scholars have begun to examine organizational
development from an emotion-based standpoint. For example, deKlerk (2007) [11] writes about how
emotional trauma can negatively affect performance. Due to downsizing, outsourcing, mergers,
restructuring, continual changes, invasions of privacy, harassment, and abuses of power, many
employees experience the emotions of aggression, anxiety, apprehension, cynicism, and fear,
which can lead to performance decreases. deKlerk (2007) suggests that in order to heal the
trauma and increase performance, O.D. practitioners must acknowledge the existence of the
trauma, provide a safe place for employees to discuss their feelings, symbolize the trauma and put
it into perspective, and then allow for and deal with the emotional responses. One method of
achieving this is by having employees draw pictures of what they feel about the situation, and then
having them explain their drawings with each other. Drawing pictures is beneficial because it
allows employees to express emotions they normally would not be able to put into words. Also,
drawings often prompt active participation in the activity, as everyone is required to draw a picture
and then discuss its meaning.

The use of new technologies combined with globalization has also shifted the field of organization
development. Roland Sullivan (2005) defined Organization Development with participants at the
1st Organization Development Conference for Asia in Dubai-2005 as "Organization Development
is a transformative leap to a desired vision where strategies and systems align, in the light of local
culture with an innovative and authentic leadership style using the support of high tech tools.

[edit]Action      research
Wendell L French and Cecil Bell defined organization development (OD) at one point as
"organization improvement through action research".[8] If one idea can be said to summarize OD's
underlying philosophy, it would be action research as it was 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".[12]
Figure 1: Systems Model of Action-Research Process


Lewin's description of the process of change involves three steps:[12]

"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.

Figure 1 summarizes the steps and processes involved in planned change through action
research. 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.

The second stage of action research is the action, or transformation, phase. This stage includes
actions relating to learning processes (perhaps in the form of role analysis) and to planning and
executing behavioral changes in the client organization. As shown in Figure 1, feedback at this
stage would move via Feedback Loop A and would have the effect of altering previous planning to
bring the learning activities of the client system into better alignment with change objectives.
Included in this stage is action-planning activity carried out jointly by the consultant and members
of the client system. Following the workshop or learning sessions, these action steps are carried
out on the job as part of the transformation stage.[4]

The third stage of action research is the output, or results, phase. This stage includes actual
changes in behavior (if any) resulting from corrective action steps taken following the second
stage. Data are again gathered from the client system so that progress can be determined and
necessary adjustments in learning activities can be made. Minor adjustments of this nature can be
made in learning activities via Feedback Loop B (see Figure 1). Major adjustments and
reevaluations would return the OD project to the first, or planning, stage for basic changes in the
program. The action-research model shown in Figure 1 closely follows Lewin's repetitive cycle of
planning, action, and measuring results. It also illustrates other aspects of Lewin's general model
of change. As indicated in the diagram, the planning stage is a period of unfreezing, or problem
awareness.[12] The action stage is a period of changing, that is, trying out new forms of behavior in
an effort to understand and cope with the system's problems. (There is inevitable overlap between
the stages, since the boundaries are not clear-cut and cannot be in a continuous process). The
results stage is a period of refreezing, in which new behaviors are tried out on the job and, if
successful and reinforcing, become a part of the system's repertoire of problem-solving behavior.

Action research is problem centered, client centered, and action oriented. It involves the client
system in a diagnostic, active-learning, problem-finding, and problem-solving process. Data are
not simply returned in the form of a written report but instead are fed back in open joint sessions,
and the client and the change agent collaborate in identifying and ranking specific problems, in
devising methods for finding their real causes, and in developing plans for coping with them
realistically and practically. Scientific method in the form of data gathering, forming hypotheses,
testing hypotheses, and measuring results, although not pursued as rigorously as in the laboratory,
is nevertheless an integral part of the process. Action research also sets in motion a long-range,
cyclical, self-correcting mechanism for maintaining and enhancing the effectiveness of the client's
system by leaving the system with practical and useful tools for self-analysis and self-renewal.[4]

[edit]Important        figures

   Chris Argyris

   Richard Beckhard

   Robert R. Blake

   Louis L. Carter

   David Cooperrider

   W. Edwards Deming

   Fred Emery

   Charles Handy

   Elliott Jaques

   Kurt Lewin

   Rensis Likert

   Jane Mouton

   Derek S. Pugh

   Edgar Schein

   Donald Schon

   Peter Senge

   Herbert Shepard

   Eric Trist

   Margaret J. Wheatley

   [Pulin Garg]

   Ichak Adizes
[edit]OD     interventions
"Interventions" are principal learning processes in the "action" stage (see Figure 1)
of organization development. Interventions are structured activities used individually or in
combination by the members of a client system to improve their social or task performance. They
may be introduced by a change agent as part of an improvement program, or they may be used by
the client following a program to check on the state of the organization's health, or to effect
necessary changes in its own behavior. "Structured activities" mean such diverse procedures as
experiential exercises, questionnaires, attitude surveys, interviews, relevant group discussions,
and even lunchtime meetings between the change agent and a member of the client organization.
Every action that influences an organization's improvement program in a change agent-client
system relationship can be said to be an intervention.[13]
There are many possible intervention strategies from which to choose. Several assumptions about
the nature and functioning of organizations are made in the choice of a particular
strategy.Beckhard lists six such assumptions:


     1. The basic building blocks of an organization are groups (teams). Therefore, the basic
         units of change are groups, not individuals.

     2. An always relevant change goal is the reduction of inappropriate competition between
         parts of the organization and the development of a more collaborative condition.

     3. Decision making in a healthy organization is located where the information sources are,
         rather than in a particular role or level of hierarchy.

     4. Organizations, subunits of organizations, and individuals continuously manage their affairs
         against goals. Controls are interim measurements, not the basis of managerial strategy.

     5. One goal of a healthy organization is to develop generally open communication, mutual
         trust, and confidence between and across levels.

     6. People support what they help create. People affected by a change must be allowed
         active participation and a sense of ownership in the planning and conduct of the
         change.[6]

Interventions range from those designed to improve the effectiveness of individuals through those
designed to deal with teams and groups, intergroup relations, and the total organization. There are
interventions that focus on task issues (what people do), and those that focus on process issues
(how people go about doing it). Finally, interventions may be roughly classified according to which
change mechanism they tend to emphasize: for example, feedback, awareness of changing
cultural norms, interaction and communication, conflict, and education through either new
knowledge or skill practice.[14]

One of the most difficult tasks confronting the change agent is to help create in the client system a
safe climate for learning and change. In a favorable climate, human learning builds on itself and
continues indefinitely during man's lifetime. Out of new behavior, new dilemmas and problems
emerge as the spiral continues upward to new levels. In an unfavorable climate, in contrast,
learning is far less certain, and in an atmosphere of psychological threat, it often stops altogether.
Unfreezing old ways can be inhibited in organizations because the climate makes employees feel
that it is inappropriate to reveal true feelings, even though such revelations could be constructive.
In an inhibited atmosphere, therefore, necessary feedback is not available. Also, trying out new
ways may be viewed as risky because it violates established norms. Such an organization may
also be constrained because of the law of systems: If one part changes, other parts will become
involved. Hence, it is easier to maintain the status quo. Hierarchical authority, specialization, span
of control, and other characteristics of formal systems also discourage experimentation. [13]

The change agent must address himself to all of these hazards and obstacles. Some of the things
which will help him are:


     1. A real need in the client system to change

     2. Genuine support from management
3. Setting a personal example: listening, supporting behavior

    4. A sound background in the behavioral sciences

    5. A working knowledge of systems theory

    6. A belief in man as a rational, self-educating being fully capable of learning better ways to
         do things.[13]

A few examples of interventions include team building, coaching, Large Group Interventions,
mentoring, performance appraisal, downsizing, TQM, and leadership development.




Kurt Lewin – Lessons from the OD Master




                                    Kurt Lewin was born in what is now Poland on
September 9, 1890. He and his family moved to Berlin when he was fifteen. Lewin
obtained his doctorate degree in Psychology from the University of Berlin in 1916
and later become a professor. He left Germany in 1930 as Jews were being ousted,
first taking a six month assignment at Stanford University followed by a two-year
assignment at Cornell School of Home Economics, and eventually settling at the
University of Iowa.
Early in his career Lewin took on the study of Taylor and Scientific Management.
He agreed with many of Taylor’s principles but objected the notion that work had
no meaning for workers other than money. Lewin believed that work brought
meaning to one’s life. In fact, he felt that work could be a path for self-realization.
Group dynamics and Lewin are intricately connected in the evolution of OD. He
understood that we become interdependent as we join a group either by natural
association, choice or directive. Lewin’s contributions in group dynamics started
the famed T-Group sessions. From this experience we learned about the power of
group interaction and feedback. Lewin borrowed the term feedback from
electrical engineering and applied it to describe the adjustment of a process by
informed data about its results. Feedback was meant to unfreeze the person’s
former belief systems.
Lewin believed that the work of the organizational consultant should not to be
static and that analysis should not be performed from the periphery but rather by
being a clinician performing an intervention. He sustained that “you cannot
understand a system until you try to change it.”
Several years would elapse before Emery would introduce the concept of Open
Systems and more years would pass before Senge and others would introduce
Systems Thinking into the OD field. However, Lewin had already theorized the
notion that human behavior is the systemic function of the person in the
environment. His equation B = f (p,e) communicates that new behavior (B) is the
result of change as actions are performed by the person (p) in a given environment
(e) that is not static.
Lewin’s Force Field Analysis is a model that has evolved into a very useful
technique that can be effectively applied when change agents need to understand
the forces that are driving and restraining a given change. Lewin understood that
any actions toward change would be met by opposing reactions. The model he
proposed had a graphical representation called the Force Field Analysis diagram.
The diagram contained the definition of the problem and the representation of the
driving and restraining forces.
As indicated, Lewin’s model on Change Process deals with the same behavior,
person and environment variables. However it proposes a set of actions to be taken
to enable change. The first action is unfreezing, which is meant to create a
motivation and readiness for change. In the behavior model, unfreezing deals
primarily with the person (p). The second is changing through cognitive
restructuring. This is the actual change to the environment (e). In this step, the
subjects (p) are made aware of the changes to the environment (e) and new
relationships with this environment are formed through training, mentoring, role
changes, new information, etc. The final action is refreezing, which is the
integration of the new behaviors resulting from the change. In this model we can
see how new behaviors can be formed as a result of the changes in both the person
and the environment.




                                                  Action Research is a core model in
the OD arsenal. Lewin only wrote 20 pages on Action Research which gave way to
volumes of reviews and books on the subject. He did not intend for his Action
Research to be a consulting recipe. Lewin developed the model to illustrate how
an external person to the organization should proceed in order to have the greatest
effect in solving a problem or effecting change. He believed, as previously stated,
that one cannot understand a system until a change is attempted. Action Research
is exactly that, taking action as research is conducted.
Lewin made defining contributions in a number of areas that impacted the
evolution of OD. He was a humanist, starting with his reformation ideas in
Germany to his thoughts that people could find self-realization in jobs. His
contributions range from group dynamics to action research. He was instrumental
in deepening the understanding of social behavior through group controlled
experimentation. Lewin’s legacy excites dialogue, practice and new learning today
as much as it did over 60 years ago. He was a master theorist. His best known
quotation is “there is nothing so practical as a good theory.”
-- Jorge Taborga
Robert Tannenbaum
           Professor of Anderson School of Management, Emeritus
                                Los Angeles
                                 1915–2003


Bob Tannenbaum, whose humanist vision profoundly affected the field of
organizational development for more than 50 years, died March 15, 2003 –
but you don’t have to believe that if you don’t want to. If you choose not to,
you’ll have plenty of company. Why erase from your mind the presence of a
man who constantly affirms you! Bob gave so much to so many and always
from the heart. Others also wrote theories extolling the importance of
recognizing feelings, valuing human spirit, and raising consciousness to
realize one’s inner potential. But unique was Tannenbaum whose ideas were
made more profound by his personal being. People who came in contact with
him instantly recognized histeachings whether or not they read what he wrote
or focused on his words. And his presence had a ripple effect well beyond
those who experienced him first hand.

Eventually becoming a psychologist without portfolio, Bob began his
university work with an A.A. degree from Santa Ana Junior College (1935). He
then moved on to the University of Chicago where he received an A.B. degree
in business administration (1937) and a M.B.A. in accounting (1938).
Concurrently, he took his first teaching job as instructor in accounting at
Oklahoma A & M College (1937-39). He returned to Chicago in 1939 to begin
Ph.D. studies in industrial relations. In 1942 he enlisted in the Navy serving as
an officer in the Pacific teaching radar. In 1946 Bob returned to Chicago to
finish his doctorate (1948). Upon completion he was recruited by Neil Jacoby,
a former University of Chicago professor who was dean of UCLA’s College of
Business Administration, later called the Graduate School of Management,
now The Anderson School, where he built, taught and served with distinction
until 1977 when he took early retirement.

Bob’s first UCLA position was acting assistant professor and assistant research
economist while his last, self-named, was professor of human systems
development. Bootstrapping from deep-seated beliefs about the importance of
personal consciousness and the capacities of people to grow themselves
psychologically, with derivative payouts in interpersonal sensitivity,
Tannenbaum’s work was a forerunner contributor to considerations of human
capital as a corporate asset. From the 1950s through the 1970s, he was
instrumental in establishing UCLA’s Graduate School of Management as a key
center of thought and practice in the fields of organization development and
leadership training. During this period he helped found the Western Training
Lab, which promulgated a derivative of T-groups that became known as
Sensitivity Training, and played an important role in the evolution of the NTL
Institute of Applied Behavioral Science, which spearheaded the drive to utilize
group dynamics as an important pedagogy for promoting increased awareness
of self and impact on others as essential to team play in the corporate
environment.

Bob Tannenbaum’s intellectual work described organizational systems not as
machines with interchangeable human parts, but as living communities that
can be designed to enable people to grow and learn while achieving business
goals. His writings, as well as his teaching and consulting, reflected the value
he placed on people, and his belief that, to a great extent, leadership
effectiveness derives from awareness of one’s own basic assumptions about
human nature and the testing out and revision of those assumptions.

No matter how you cut it, Bob’s seminal contributions always began with the
ones he made interpersonally, with students, colleagues, and clients, and his
everyday interactions with almost everyone he encountered. However, they
also include his written words. His 1961 book, with Irving Weschler and Fred
Massarik, Leadership and Organization, was significant in making the
academic and practical argument for the use of group dynamics in developing
leaders and teaching them how to operate effectively. His articles (with
Warren Schmidt) “How to Choose a Leadership Pattern” (1958) and
“Management of Differences” (1960) both set Harvard Business
Review records for reprint requests and were reprinted in publications
worldwide.

Bob’s charismatic impact created a demand that produced a second, post-
UCLA, career – consulting and counseling executives and change agents on
the use of self in facilitating organizational effectiveness. He was an active
contributor to Pepperdine University’s Master’s Program in Organizational
Development; he led workshops for the NTL Institute, counseled with top
executives and their spouses at his home office in Carmel, and continued
professional writing. Among his jewels is an oral autobiography produced by
David Russell (1987) as part of the Oral History Program for the Humanistic
Psychology Archive at the University of California, Santa Barbara and an
edited book of readings (with Newton Margulies and Fred Massarik) written
by people associated with the Behavioral Science, then Human Systems, now
Human Resources and Organizational Behavior group he founded at UCLA,
titled Human Systems Development.

During his life Bob received many honors that he valued greatly but about
which he seldom talked. They include an honorary doctorate from the
Saybrook Institute, Fellow of the NTL Institute, Diplomate from the American
Board of Professional Psychology, Distinguished Member of the OD Network
and first recipient of the American Society for Training and Development’s
(ASTD) Lifetime Achievement Award where his arm-chair talks were spiritual
legend.

Born in Cripple Creek, Colorado to Henry and Nettie (Porges) Tannenbaum,
Professor Tannenbaum and his sister (the late Emma Elconin) were raised in
Southern California. He is survived by Edith (Lazaroff) Tannenbaum, his
loving wife of 58 years; two daughters, Judith Tannenbaum and Deborah
Ingebretsen; son-in-law Jim Ingebretsen; three grandchildren, Sara Press,
Emma and Gus Ingebretsen; and grandson-in-law, Andrew Harkness. In
addition, he is honored and loved by countless friends, colleagues and
students.

Samuel Culbert
Why OD is Important for Organizational Effectiveness

Más contenido relacionado

La actualidad más candente

Organization development
Organization developmentOrganization development
Organization developmentJasmin Harina
 
Comprehensive interventions
Comprehensive interventionsComprehensive interventions
Comprehensive interventionsgaurav jain
 
Characteristics of organization development
Characteristics of organization developmentCharacteristics of organization development
Characteristics of organization developmentrajeswaribalu
 
Issues in c c relationships
Issues in c c relationshipsIssues in c c relationships
Issues in c c relationshipsHeena Gundeep
 
Organisational Development (OD) Models
Organisational Development (OD) ModelsOrganisational Development (OD) Models
Organisational Development (OD) ModelsRahul K
 
ORGANIZATIONAL DEVLOPMENT & ITS INTERVENTIONS
ORGANIZATIONAL DEVLOPMENT & ITS INTERVENTIONSORGANIZATIONAL DEVLOPMENT & ITS INTERVENTIONS
ORGANIZATIONAL DEVLOPMENT & ITS INTERVENTIONST HARI KUMAR
 
team interventions of od
team interventions of odteam interventions of od
team interventions of odanjali5491
 
Od interventions
Od interventionsOd interventions
Od interventionsgaurav jain
 
Assumptions in Organizational Development - Organizational Change and Develo...
Assumptions in Organizational Development -  Organizational Change and Develo...Assumptions in Organizational Development -  Organizational Change and Develo...
Assumptions in Organizational Development - Organizational Change and Develo...manumelwin
 
future trends of organizational development
future trends of organizational developmentfuture trends of organizational development
future trends of organizational developmentNaina Maurya
 
Organisational development b.com vith sem (optional) Bangalore University
Organisational development b.com vith sem (optional) Bangalore UniversityOrganisational development b.com vith sem (optional) Bangalore University
Organisational development b.com vith sem (optional) Bangalore UniversityTriyogi Triyogi
 
FUTURE OF ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENT
FUTURE OF ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENTFUTURE OF ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENT
FUTURE OF ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENTMonika Deswal
 
Structural intervention
Structural intervention Structural intervention
Structural intervention Bhumika Garg
 
Change Management - Organizational Development
Change Management - Organizational DevelopmentChange Management - Organizational Development
Change Management - Organizational DevelopmentAkash Deep Sharma
 
Organizational culture vs climate
Organizational culture vs climateOrganizational culture vs climate
Organizational culture vs climateDr. Abzal Basha H S
 
Od 1 - Organisation Development
Od 1 - Organisation DevelopmentOd 1 - Organisation Development
Od 1 - Organisation DevelopmentNaresh Sukhani
 

La actualidad más candente (20)

Organization development
Organization developmentOrganization development
Organization development
 
Comprehensive interventions
Comprehensive interventionsComprehensive interventions
Comprehensive interventions
 
Characteristics of organization development
Characteristics of organization developmentCharacteristics of organization development
Characteristics of organization development
 
Od assignment
Od assignmentOd assignment
Od assignment
 
Issues in c c relationships
Issues in c c relationshipsIssues in c c relationships
Issues in c c relationships
 
Organisational Development (OD) Models
Organisational Development (OD) ModelsOrganisational Development (OD) Models
Organisational Development (OD) Models
 
ORGANIZATIONAL DEVLOPMENT & ITS INTERVENTIONS
ORGANIZATIONAL DEVLOPMENT & ITS INTERVENTIONSORGANIZATIONAL DEVLOPMENT & ITS INTERVENTIONS
ORGANIZATIONAL DEVLOPMENT & ITS INTERVENTIONS
 
team interventions of od
team interventions of odteam interventions of od
team interventions of od
 
Od interventions
Od interventionsOd interventions
Od interventions
 
Organizational Development
Organizational DevelopmentOrganizational Development
Organizational Development
 
Assumptions in Organizational Development - Organizational Change and Develo...
Assumptions in Organizational Development -  Organizational Change and Develo...Assumptions in Organizational Development -  Organizational Change and Develo...
Assumptions in Organizational Development - Organizational Change and Develo...
 
Organizational change-model
Organizational change-modelOrganizational change-model
Organizational change-model
 
future trends of organizational development
future trends of organizational developmentfuture trends of organizational development
future trends of organizational development
 
Organisational development b.com vith sem (optional) Bangalore University
Organisational development b.com vith sem (optional) Bangalore UniversityOrganisational development b.com vith sem (optional) Bangalore University
Organisational development b.com vith sem (optional) Bangalore University
 
FUTURE OF ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENT
FUTURE OF ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENTFUTURE OF ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENT
FUTURE OF ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENT
 
Structural intervention
Structural intervention Structural intervention
Structural intervention
 
Od unit 3 interventions
Od    unit 3 interventionsOd    unit 3 interventions
Od unit 3 interventions
 
Change Management - Organizational Development
Change Management - Organizational DevelopmentChange Management - Organizational Development
Change Management - Organizational Development
 
Organizational culture vs climate
Organizational culture vs climateOrganizational culture vs climate
Organizational culture vs climate
 
Od 1 - Organisation Development
Od 1 - Organisation DevelopmentOd 1 - Organisation Development
Od 1 - Organisation Development
 

Destacado

Importance of Organizational Development
Importance of Organizational DevelopmentImportance of Organizational Development
Importance of Organizational DevelopmentAmanda Jamison
 
Organizational development case study
Organizational development case studyOrganizational development case study
Organizational development case studyNajmina Md Isa
 
Sensitivity Training1
Sensitivity Training1Sensitivity Training1
Sensitivity Training1Kelsey Fox
 
Methods Of Training And Development
Methods Of Training And DevelopmentMethods Of Training And Development
Methods Of Training And DevelopmentPrabhpreet Nagpal
 
Sensitivity training
Sensitivity trainingSensitivity training
Sensitivity trainingapaswathy14
 
Organizational Climate Ppt (Times)
Organizational Climate   Ppt (Times)Organizational Climate   Ppt (Times)
Organizational Climate Ppt (Times)priyanka1986
 

Destacado (7)

Importance of Organizational Development
Importance of Organizational DevelopmentImportance of Organizational Development
Importance of Organizational Development
 
Organizational development case study
Organizational development case studyOrganizational development case study
Organizational development case study
 
Sensitivity Training1
Sensitivity Training1Sensitivity Training1
Sensitivity Training1
 
Methods Of Training And Development
Methods Of Training And DevelopmentMethods Of Training And Development
Methods Of Training And Development
 
Sensitivity training
Sensitivity trainingSensitivity training
Sensitivity training
 
Organizational Climate Ppt (Times)
Organizational Climate   Ppt (Times)Organizational Climate   Ppt (Times)
Organizational Climate Ppt (Times)
 
Action Research
Action ResearchAction Research
Action Research
 

Similar a Why OD is Important for Organizational Effectiveness

Intro to od
Intro to odIntro to od
Intro to odiipmff2
 
The Importance Of Development In Organizational...
The Importance Of Development In Organizational...The Importance Of Development In Organizational...
The Importance Of Development In Organizational...Monica Rivera
 
Organization development
Organization development Organization development
Organization development narinder kumar
 
Organizational Development Report
Organizational Development ReportOrganizational Development Report
Organizational Development ReportThedem Alarte
 
Organizational development interventions
Organizational development interventionsOrganizational development interventions
Organizational development interventionsT HARI KUMAR
 
Reflection On Organizational Development
Reflection On Organizational DevelopmentReflection On Organizational Development
Reflection On Organizational DevelopmentPamela Wright
 
Organanisation change and development by kavita
Organanisation change and development by kavitaOrgananisation change and development by kavita
Organanisation change and development by kavitaIltaf Khokhar
 
Chapter 6 - Managing Change: Innovation and Diversity
Chapter 6 - Managing Change: Innovation and DiversityChapter 6 - Managing Change: Innovation and Diversity
Chapter 6 - Managing Change: Innovation and Diversitydpd
 
Organization development
Organization developmentOrganization development
Organization developmentKrishna Kanth
 
What Are Organization Development Interventions, Why Do They Matter, And How ...
What Are Organization Development Interventions, Why Do They Matter, And How ...What Are Organization Development Interventions, Why Do They Matter, And How ...
What Are Organization Development Interventions, Why Do They Matter, And How ...Saumya876452
 
Organization development 1
Organization development 1Organization development 1
Organization development 1Shoaeb Sheikh
 
Organizationdevelopment 131122044125-phpapp02
Organizationdevelopment 131122044125-phpapp02Organizationdevelopment 131122044125-phpapp02
Organizationdevelopment 131122044125-phpapp02Saurav Kumar
 
Ch 1 organisational behaviour
Ch 1 organisational behaviourCh 1 organisational behaviour
Ch 1 organisational behaviourNirali Paraliya
 
Organisational development
Organisational developmentOrganisational development
Organisational developmentShillu Blue
 
Organizational development(octapace)
Organizational development(octapace)Organizational development(octapace)
Organizational development(octapace)Swati Gautam
 

Similar a Why OD is Important for Organizational Effectiveness (20)

Organization Development
Organization DevelopmentOrganization Development
Organization Development
 
Intro to od
Intro to odIntro to od
Intro to od
 
Intro
IntroIntro
Intro
 
Why od
Why odWhy od
Why od
 
The Importance Of Development In Organizational...
The Importance Of Development In Organizational...The Importance Of Development In Organizational...
The Importance Of Development In Organizational...
 
Organization development
Organization development Organization development
Organization development
 
Organizational Development Report
Organizational Development ReportOrganizational Development Report
Organizational Development Report
 
Organizational development interventions
Organizational development interventionsOrganizational development interventions
Organizational development interventions
 
Reflection On Organizational Development
Reflection On Organizational DevelopmentReflection On Organizational Development
Reflection On Organizational Development
 
Organanisation change and development by kavita
Organanisation change and development by kavitaOrgananisation change and development by kavita
Organanisation change and development by kavita
 
Chapter 6 - Managing Change: Innovation and Diversity
Chapter 6 - Managing Change: Innovation and DiversityChapter 6 - Managing Change: Innovation and Diversity
Chapter 6 - Managing Change: Innovation and Diversity
 
Organization development
Organization developmentOrganization development
Organization development
 
OEC - UNIT 1.ppt
OEC - UNIT 1.pptOEC - UNIT 1.ppt
OEC - UNIT 1.ppt
 
What Are Organization Development Interventions, Why Do They Matter, And How ...
What Are Organization Development Interventions, Why Do They Matter, And How ...What Are Organization Development Interventions, Why Do They Matter, And How ...
What Are Organization Development Interventions, Why Do They Matter, And How ...
 
Organization development 1
Organization development 1Organization development 1
Organization development 1
 
Organisation Developement and change managemnt
Organisation Developement and change managemntOrganisation Developement and change managemnt
Organisation Developement and change managemnt
 
Organizationdevelopment 131122044125-phpapp02
Organizationdevelopment 131122044125-phpapp02Organizationdevelopment 131122044125-phpapp02
Organizationdevelopment 131122044125-phpapp02
 
Ch 1 organisational behaviour
Ch 1 organisational behaviourCh 1 organisational behaviour
Ch 1 organisational behaviour
 
Organisational development
Organisational developmentOrganisational development
Organisational development
 
Organizational development(octapace)
Organizational development(octapace)Organizational development(octapace)
Organizational development(octapace)
 

Último

Tech Startup Growth Hacking 101 - Basics on Growth Marketing
Tech Startup Growth Hacking 101  - Basics on Growth MarketingTech Startup Growth Hacking 101  - Basics on Growth Marketing
Tech Startup Growth Hacking 101 - Basics on Growth MarketingShawn Pang
 
Call Girls Pune Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Pune Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Pune Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Pune Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableDipal Arora
 
Insurers' journeys to build a mastery in the IoT usage
Insurers' journeys to build a mastery in the IoT usageInsurers' journeys to build a mastery in the IoT usage
Insurers' journeys to build a mastery in the IoT usageMatteo Carbone
 
Call Girls in Gomti Nagar - 7388211116 - With room Service
Call Girls in Gomti Nagar - 7388211116  - With room ServiceCall Girls in Gomti Nagar - 7388211116  - With room Service
Call Girls in Gomti Nagar - 7388211116 - With room Servicediscovermytutordmt
 
7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...
7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...
7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...Paul Menig
 
It will be International Nurses' Day on 12 May
It will be International Nurses' Day on 12 MayIt will be International Nurses' Day on 12 May
It will be International Nurses' Day on 12 MayNZSG
 
DEPED Work From Home WORKWEEK-PLAN.docx
DEPED Work From Home  WORKWEEK-PLAN.docxDEPED Work From Home  WORKWEEK-PLAN.docx
DEPED Work From Home WORKWEEK-PLAN.docxRodelinaLaud
 
Socio-economic-Impact-of-business-consumers-suppliers-and.pptx
Socio-economic-Impact-of-business-consumers-suppliers-and.pptxSocio-economic-Impact-of-business-consumers-suppliers-and.pptx
Socio-economic-Impact-of-business-consumers-suppliers-and.pptxtrishalcan8
 
BEST ✨ Call Girls In Indirapuram Ghaziabad ✔️ 9871031762 ✔️ Escorts Service...
BEST ✨ Call Girls In  Indirapuram Ghaziabad  ✔️ 9871031762 ✔️ Escorts Service...BEST ✨ Call Girls In  Indirapuram Ghaziabad  ✔️ 9871031762 ✔️ Escorts Service...
BEST ✨ Call Girls In Indirapuram Ghaziabad ✔️ 9871031762 ✔️ Escorts Service...noida100girls
 
RE Capital's Visionary Leadership under Newman Leech
RE Capital's Visionary Leadership under Newman LeechRE Capital's Visionary Leadership under Newman Leech
RE Capital's Visionary Leadership under Newman LeechNewman George Leech
 
Call Girls Navi Mumbai Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Avail...
Call Girls Navi Mumbai Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Avail...Call Girls Navi Mumbai Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Avail...
Call Girls Navi Mumbai Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Avail...Dipal Arora
 
Pharma Works Profile of Karan Communications
Pharma Works Profile of Karan CommunicationsPharma Works Profile of Karan Communications
Pharma Works Profile of Karan Communicationskarancommunications
 
Ensure the security of your HCL environment by applying the Zero Trust princi...
Ensure the security of your HCL environment by applying the Zero Trust princi...Ensure the security of your HCL environment by applying the Zero Trust princi...
Ensure the security of your HCL environment by applying the Zero Trust princi...Roland Driesen
 
VIP Kolkata Call Girl Howrah 👉 8250192130 Available With Room
VIP Kolkata Call Girl Howrah 👉 8250192130  Available With RoomVIP Kolkata Call Girl Howrah 👉 8250192130  Available With Room
VIP Kolkata Call Girl Howrah 👉 8250192130 Available With Roomdivyansh0kumar0
 
Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023
Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023
Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023Neil Kimberley
 
Yaroslav Rozhankivskyy: Три складові і три передумови максимальної продуктивн...
Yaroslav Rozhankivskyy: Три складові і три передумови максимальної продуктивн...Yaroslav Rozhankivskyy: Три складові і три передумови максимальної продуктивн...
Yaroslav Rozhankivskyy: Три складові і три передумови максимальної продуктивн...Lviv Startup Club
 
Mysore Call Girls 8617370543 WhatsApp Number 24x7 Best Services
Mysore Call Girls 8617370543 WhatsApp Number 24x7 Best ServicesMysore Call Girls 8617370543 WhatsApp Number 24x7 Best Services
Mysore Call Girls 8617370543 WhatsApp Number 24x7 Best ServicesDipal Arora
 
Progress Report - Oracle Database Analyst Summit
Progress  Report - Oracle Database Analyst SummitProgress  Report - Oracle Database Analyst Summit
Progress Report - Oracle Database Analyst SummitHolger Mueller
 
The CMO Survey - Highlights and Insights Report - Spring 2024
The CMO Survey - Highlights and Insights Report - Spring 2024The CMO Survey - Highlights and Insights Report - Spring 2024
The CMO Survey - Highlights and Insights Report - Spring 2024christinemoorman
 

Último (20)

Tech Startup Growth Hacking 101 - Basics on Growth Marketing
Tech Startup Growth Hacking 101  - Basics on Growth MarketingTech Startup Growth Hacking 101  - Basics on Growth Marketing
Tech Startup Growth Hacking 101 - Basics on Growth Marketing
 
Call Girls Pune Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Pune Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Pune Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Pune Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
 
Insurers' journeys to build a mastery in the IoT usage
Insurers' journeys to build a mastery in the IoT usageInsurers' journeys to build a mastery in the IoT usage
Insurers' journeys to build a mastery in the IoT usage
 
Call Girls in Gomti Nagar - 7388211116 - With room Service
Call Girls in Gomti Nagar - 7388211116  - With room ServiceCall Girls in Gomti Nagar - 7388211116  - With room Service
Call Girls in Gomti Nagar - 7388211116 - With room Service
 
7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...
7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...
7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...
 
It will be International Nurses' Day on 12 May
It will be International Nurses' Day on 12 MayIt will be International Nurses' Day on 12 May
It will be International Nurses' Day on 12 May
 
DEPED Work From Home WORKWEEK-PLAN.docx
DEPED Work From Home  WORKWEEK-PLAN.docxDEPED Work From Home  WORKWEEK-PLAN.docx
DEPED Work From Home WORKWEEK-PLAN.docx
 
Socio-economic-Impact-of-business-consumers-suppliers-and.pptx
Socio-economic-Impact-of-business-consumers-suppliers-and.pptxSocio-economic-Impact-of-business-consumers-suppliers-and.pptx
Socio-economic-Impact-of-business-consumers-suppliers-and.pptx
 
Forklift Operations: Safety through Cartoons
Forklift Operations: Safety through CartoonsForklift Operations: Safety through Cartoons
Forklift Operations: Safety through Cartoons
 
BEST ✨ Call Girls In Indirapuram Ghaziabad ✔️ 9871031762 ✔️ Escorts Service...
BEST ✨ Call Girls In  Indirapuram Ghaziabad  ✔️ 9871031762 ✔️ Escorts Service...BEST ✨ Call Girls In  Indirapuram Ghaziabad  ✔️ 9871031762 ✔️ Escorts Service...
BEST ✨ Call Girls In Indirapuram Ghaziabad ✔️ 9871031762 ✔️ Escorts Service...
 
RE Capital's Visionary Leadership under Newman Leech
RE Capital's Visionary Leadership under Newman LeechRE Capital's Visionary Leadership under Newman Leech
RE Capital's Visionary Leadership under Newman Leech
 
Call Girls Navi Mumbai Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Avail...
Call Girls Navi Mumbai Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Avail...Call Girls Navi Mumbai Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Avail...
Call Girls Navi Mumbai Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Avail...
 
Pharma Works Profile of Karan Communications
Pharma Works Profile of Karan CommunicationsPharma Works Profile of Karan Communications
Pharma Works Profile of Karan Communications
 
Ensure the security of your HCL environment by applying the Zero Trust princi...
Ensure the security of your HCL environment by applying the Zero Trust princi...Ensure the security of your HCL environment by applying the Zero Trust princi...
Ensure the security of your HCL environment by applying the Zero Trust princi...
 
VIP Kolkata Call Girl Howrah 👉 8250192130 Available With Room
VIP Kolkata Call Girl Howrah 👉 8250192130  Available With RoomVIP Kolkata Call Girl Howrah 👉 8250192130  Available With Room
VIP Kolkata Call Girl Howrah 👉 8250192130 Available With Room
 
Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023
Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023
Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023
 
Yaroslav Rozhankivskyy: Три складові і три передумови максимальної продуктивн...
Yaroslav Rozhankivskyy: Три складові і три передумови максимальної продуктивн...Yaroslav Rozhankivskyy: Три складові і три передумови максимальної продуктивн...
Yaroslav Rozhankivskyy: Три складові і три передумови максимальної продуктивн...
 
Mysore Call Girls 8617370543 WhatsApp Number 24x7 Best Services
Mysore Call Girls 8617370543 WhatsApp Number 24x7 Best ServicesMysore Call Girls 8617370543 WhatsApp Number 24x7 Best Services
Mysore Call Girls 8617370543 WhatsApp Number 24x7 Best Services
 
Progress Report - Oracle Database Analyst Summit
Progress  Report - Oracle Database Analyst SummitProgress  Report - Oracle Database Analyst Summit
Progress Report - Oracle Database Analyst Summit
 
The CMO Survey - Highlights and Insights Report - Spring 2024
The CMO Survey - Highlights and Insights Report - Spring 2024The CMO Survey - Highlights and Insights Report - Spring 2024
The CMO Survey - Highlights and Insights Report - Spring 2024
 

Why OD is Important for Organizational Effectiveness

  • 1. Why is OD Important? Organizations are increasingly challenged by change. The world is moving faster and faster. Competitive pressures are becoming more and more demanding. Rapid technological change and the globalizing economy both confuse us and open new doors. In the midst of this, employees seek more satisfaction and meaning from their work lives, and more balance in their lives as a whole. Whether the organizations are private, public or non-profit, they must adapt to this new world if they are to survive and thrive. They need to become more nimble, more customer-driven, more innovative, more effective. They need to attract and retain competent and committed employees. This will require more flexible organizational structures, new types of leadership, and new ways of managing. OD can help organizations navigate this difficult terrain. What is OD? Let’s start with a definition: "Organization Development is a system-wide application of behavioral science knowledge to the planned development and reinforcement of organizational strategies, structures, and processes for improving an organization’s effectiveness." (Cummings T.G. and Worley C, th 1997. Organization Development and Change, 6 ed., p 2. South-Western College Publishing) This definition has several key elements. The overall goal of OD is to improve an organization’s effectiveness. It involves the application ofbehavioral science knowledge, in a planned and systemwide manner, and it addresses an organization’s strategies, structures and/or processes. Another good definition of OD comes from Organizational Behavior (Robbins, S.P., 1998. Organizational Behavior. Prentice Hall.) "A collection of planned change interventions, built on humanistic-democratic values, that seeks to improve organizational effectiveness and employee well-being." OD is sometimes thought of as the "soft side" of change as opposed to the hard side of technology or business systems. It is concerned with how people react to change, and how their needs have to be considered if change efforts are to be effective. One of the common issues is to understand and work with the resistance to change that usually occurs in organizations undergoing change. "Change management" is a term that is sometimes used interchangeably with OD. Although OD is considered a distinct field or profession by many, there is not unanimity as to exactly what specific methods or practices comprise the field. And, like most professions, OD is evolving. The field now known as OD began in the 1940s and 1950s with "T-group" or sensitivity training, moved into such practices as survey research and feedback, and action research, and in the 1980’s and 1990’s into quality of work life issues and more strategic and
  • 2. large-scale change efforts. Return to top What Are the Values of OD? Values often tell us a lot about someone or something. In the case of OD, there are certain values usually associated with the profession. Since the beginning, OD values have generally been described as humanistic and democratic. They have to do with how people treat each other, and how decisions are made. A key concern is how satisfied employees are in the workplace. Employee participation and collaboration are key concepts associated with OD. More recently OD has also become concerned with productivity and organizational effectiveness. There is more of an explicit focus on business issues and bottom-line results. (This shift has been reinforced by several recent research findings that employee satisfaction has a clear impact on customer satisfaction and therefore on revenue and profits.) Return to top What Do OD Practitioners Do? OD practitioners are frequently called upon to address a variety of organizational issues or problems. These might include how to: create an organizational vision and mission set goals and make decisions lead attract and retain good employees improve employee morale reduce turnover and absenteeism improve productivity resolve conflict divide labor design work coordinate departments and share information determine core competencies develop or change core values more effectively develop and implement change strategies change the organizational culture relate to the external environment anticipate and prepare for the future In order to address these types of issues, the practitioner might employ a variety of interventions or methods. According to Cummings and Worley, there are four basic categories of OD interventions: 1. Human Process (e.g., sensitivity training, team building and conflict resolution) 2. Technostructural (e.g., quality circles or total quality management, and work process design) 3. Human Resource Management (e.g., job design, performance appraisal, reward systems and multicultural training)
  • 3. 4. Strategic (e.g., strategic planning/management, future search conferences and corporate culture change) Of course, these are not distinct or exclusive methods and they are often used in conjunction with each other. Following is a representative list of specific services or techniques that might be offered or used by OD practitioners: Appreciative inquiry Career management or counseling Change management Coaching Collaborative solutions Conflict resolution Creative problem solving Future search conferences Goal setting Group (or meeting) facilitation High involvement work teams Human resource management Interpersonal communication Large-scale system change Large-group interventions Leadership development Managing workforce diversity Organizational restructuring Socio-technical systems design Strategic planning Team building Total quality management Vision and mission development Work process improvement
  • 4. Organization development From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia This article is written like a personal reflection or essay rather than an encyclopedic description of the subject. Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style. (March 2012) Organization development (OD) is a deliberately planned effort to increase an organization's relevance and viability. Vasudevan has referred to OD as, future readiness to meet change, thus a systemic learning and development strategy intended to change the basics of beliefs, attitudes and relevance of values, and structure of the current organization to better absorb disruptive technologies, shrinking or exploding market opportunities and ensuing challenges and chaos. OD is the framework for a change process designed to lead to desirable positive impact to all stakeholders and the environment. OD can design interventions with application of several multidisciplinary methods and research besides traditional OD approaches. Contents [hide] 1 Overview o 1.1 History o 1.2 Core Values o 1.3 Change agent o 1.4 Sponsoring organization o 1.5 Applied behavioral science o 1.6 Systems context 2 Improved organizational performance o 2.1 Organizational self-renewal 3 Understanding organizations o 3.1 Modern development 4 Action research 5 Important figures 6 OD interventions 7 See also 8 Further reading 9 References [edit]Overview The purpose of OD is to address perennial evolving needs of successful organizations - a concerted collaboration of internal and external experts in the field to discover the process an organization can use to become more stakeholder effective.
  • 5. OD is a lifelong, built-in mechanism to improve immunity of organization's health to renew itself inclusive principles, often with the assistance of a change agent or catalyst and the use of enabling appropriate theories and techniques from applied behavioral sciences, anthropology, sociology, and phenomenology. Although behavioral science has provided the basic foundation for the study and practice of OD, new and emerging fields of study have made their presence felt. Experts in systems thinking and organizational learning, mind maps, body mind synchronicity, structure of intuition in decision making, and coaching (to name a few) whose perspective is not steeped in just the behavioral sciences, but a much more multi-disciplinary and inter-disciplinary approach have emerged as OD catalysts. These emergent expert perspectives see the organization as the holistic interplay of a number of systems that impact the process and outputs of the entire organization. More importantly, the term change agent or catalyst is synonymous with the notion of a leader who is engaged in leadership - a transformative or effectiveness process - as opposed to management, a more incremental or efficiency based change methodology. Organization development is an ongoing, systematic process of implementing effective organizational change. Organization development is known as both a field of applied behavioral science focused on understanding and managing organizational change and as a field of scientific study and inquiry. It is interdisciplinary in nature and draws on sociology, psychology, and theories of motivation, learning, and personality. Organization development is a growing field that is responsive to many new approaches including Positive Adult Development. [edit]History Kurt Lewin (1898–1947) is widely recognized as the founding father of OD, although he died before the concept became current in the mid-1950s.[1] From Lewin came the ideas of group dynamicsand action research which underpin the basic OD process as well as providing its collaborative consultant/client ethos. Institutionally, Lewin founded the "Research Center for Group Dynamics" (RCGD) at MIT, which moved to Michigan after his death. RCGD colleagues were among those who founded the National Training Laboratories (NTL), from which the T-groups and group-based OD emerged. Kurt Lewin played a key role in the evolution of organization development as it is known today. As early as World War II, Lewin experimented with a collaborative change process (involving himself as consultant and a client group) based on a three-step process of planning, taking action, and measuring results. This was the forerunner of action research, an important element of OD, which will be discussed later. Lewin then participated in the beginnings of laboratory training, or T- groups, and, after his death in 1947, his close associates helped to develop survey-research methods at the University of Michigan. These procedures became important parts of OD as developments in this field continued at the National Training Laboratories and in growing numbers of universities and private consulting firms across the country. Two of the leading universities offering doctoral level [2] degrees in OD are Benedictine University and the Fielding Graduate University. Douglas McGregor and Richard Beckhard while "consulting together at General Mills in the 1950's, the two coined the term organizational development (OD) to describe an innovative bottoms-up change effort that fit no traditional consulting categories" (Weisbord, 1987, p. 112).[3]
  • 6. The failure of off-site laboratory training to live up to its early promise was one of the important forces stimulating the development of OD. Laboratory training is learning from a person's "here and now" experience as a member of an ongoing training group. Such groups usually meet without a specific agenda. Their purpose is for the members to learn about themselves from their spontaneous "here and now" responses to an ambiguous hypothetical situation. Problems of leadership, structure, status, communication, and self-serving behavior typically arise in such a group. The members have an opportunity to learn something about themselves and to practice such skills as listening, observing others, and functioning as effective group members. [4] As formerly practiced (and occasionally still practiced for special purposes), laboratory training was conducted in "stranger groups," or groups composed of individuals from different organizations, situations, and backgrounds. A major difficulty developed, however, in transferring knowledge gained from these "stranger labs" to the actual situation "back home". This required a transfer between two different cultures, the relatively safe and protected environment of the T-group (or training group) and the give-and-take of the organizational environment with its traditional values. This led the early pioneers in this type of learning to begin to apply it to "family groups" — that is, groups located within an organization. From this shift in the locale of the training site and the realization that culture was an important factor in influencing group members (along with some other developments in the behavioral sciences) emerged the concept of organization development.[4] [edit]Core Values Underlying Organizational Development are humanistic values. Margulies and Raia (1972) articulated the humanistic values of OD as follows: 1. Providing opportunities for people to function as human beings rather than as resources in the productive process. 2. Providing opportunities for each organization member, as well as for the organization itself, to develop to his full potential. 3. Seeking to increase the effectiveness of the organization in terms of all of its goals. 4. Attempting to create an environment in which it is possible to find exciting and challenging work. 5. Providing opportunities for people in organizations to influence the way in which they relate to work, the organization, and the environment. 6. Treating each human being as a person with a complex set of needs, all of which are important in his work and in his life.[5] [edit]Change agent A change agent in the sense used here is not a technical expert skilled in such functional areas as accounting, production, or finance. The change agent is a behavioral scientist who knows how to get people in an organization involved in solving their own problems. A change agent's main strength is a comprehensive knowledge of human behavior, supported by a number of intervention techniques (to be discussed later). The change agent can be either external or internal to the organization. An internal change agent is usually a staff person who has expertise in the
  • 7. behavioral sciences and in the intervention technology of OD. Beckhard reports several cases in which line people have been trained in OD and have returned to their organizations to engage in successful change assignments.[6] In the natural evolution of change mechanisms in organizations, this would seem to approach the ideal arrangement. Qualified change agents can be found on some university faculties, or they may be private consultants associated with such organizations as the National Training Laboratories Institute for Applied Behavioral Science (Washington, D.C.) University Associates (San Diego, California), the Human Systems Intervention graduate program in the Department of Applied Human Sciences (Concordia University, Montreal, Canada), Navitus (Pvt) Ltd (Pakistan), and similar organizations. The change agent may be a staff or line member of the organization who is schooled in OD theory and technique. In such a case, the "contractual relationship" is an in-house agreement that should probably be explicit with respect to all of the conditions involved except the fee. [edit]Sponsoring organization The initiative for OD programs comes from an organization that has a problem. This means that top management or someone authorized by top management is aware that a problem exists and has decided to seek help in solving it. There is a direct analogy here to the practice of psychotherapy: The client or patient must actively seek help in finding a solution to his problems. This indicates a willingness on the part of the client organization to accept help and assures the organization that management is actively concerned.[7] [edit]Applied behavioral science One of the outstanding characteristics of OD that distinguishes it from most other improvement programs is that it is based on a "helping relationship." Some believe that the change agent is not a physician to the organization's ills; that s/he does not examine the "patient," make a diagnosis, and write a prescription. Nor does she try to teach organizational members a new inventory of knowledge which they then transfer to the job situation. Using theory and methods drawn from such behavioral sciences as industrial/organizational psychology, industrial sociology,communication, cultural anthropology, administrative theory, organizational behavior, economics, and political science, the change agent's main function is to help the organization define and solve its own problems. The basic method used is known as action research. This approach, which is described in detail later, consists of a preliminary diagnosis, collecting data, feedback of the data to the client, data exploration by the client group, action planning based on the data, and taking action.[8] [edit]Systems context OD deals with a total system — the organization as a whole, including its relevant environment — or with a subsystem or systems — departments or work groups — in the context of the total system. Parts of systems, for example, individuals, cliques, structures, norms, values, and products are not considered in isolation; the principle of interdependency, that is, that change in one part of a system affects the other parts, is fully recognized. Thus, OD interventions focus on the total culture and cultural processes of organizations. The focus is also on groups, since the
  • 8. relevant behavior of individuals in organizations and groups is generally a product of group influences rather than personality.[7] [edit]Improved organizational performance The objective of OD is to improve the organization's capacity to handle its internal and external functioning and relationships. This would include such things as improved interpersonal and group processes, more effective communication, enhanced ability to cope with organizational problems of all kinds, more effective decision processes, more appropriate leadership style, improved skill in dealing with destructive conflict, and higher levels of trust and cooperation among organizational members. These objectives stem from a value system based on an optimistic view of the nature of man — that man in a supportive environment is capable of achieving higher levels of development and accomplishment. Essential to organization development and effectiveness is the scientific method — inquiry, a rigorous search for causes, experimental testing of hypotheses, and review of results. [edit]Organizational self-renewal The ultimate aim of OD practitioners is to "work themselves out of a job" by leaving the client organization with a set of tools, behaviors, attitudes, and an action plan with which to monitor its own state of health and to take corrective steps toward its own renewal and development. This is consistent with the systems concept of feedback as a regulatory and corrective mechanism.[7] [edit]Understanding organizations Weisbord presents a six-box model for understanding organization: 1. Purposes: The organization members are clear about the organization’s mission and purpose and goal agreements, whether people support the organization’ purpose. 2. Structure: How is the organization’s work divided up? The question is whether there is an adequate fit between the purpose and the internal structure. 3. Relationship: Between individuals, between units or departments that perform different tasks, and between the people and requirements of their jobs. 4. Rewards: The consultant should diagnose the similarities between what the organization formally rewarded or punished members for. 5. Leadership: Is to watch for blips among the other boxes and maintain balance among them. 6. Helpful mechanism: Is a helpful organization that must attend to in order to survive which as planning, control, budgeting, and other information systems that help organization member accomplish.[9] [edit]Modern development In recent years, serious questioning has emerged about the relevance of OD to managing change in modern organizations. The need for "reinventing" the field has become a topic that even some of its "founding fathers" are discussing critically.[10]
  • 9. With this call for reinvention and change, scholars have begun to examine organizational development from an emotion-based standpoint. For example, deKlerk (2007) [11] writes about how emotional trauma can negatively affect performance. Due to downsizing, outsourcing, mergers, restructuring, continual changes, invasions of privacy, harassment, and abuses of power, many employees experience the emotions of aggression, anxiety, apprehension, cynicism, and fear, which can lead to performance decreases. deKlerk (2007) suggests that in order to heal the trauma and increase performance, O.D. practitioners must acknowledge the existence of the trauma, provide a safe place for employees to discuss their feelings, symbolize the trauma and put it into perspective, and then allow for and deal with the emotional responses. One method of achieving this is by having employees draw pictures of what they feel about the situation, and then having them explain their drawings with each other. Drawing pictures is beneficial because it allows employees to express emotions they normally would not be able to put into words. Also, drawings often prompt active participation in the activity, as everyone is required to draw a picture and then discuss its meaning. The use of new technologies combined with globalization has also shifted the field of organization development. Roland Sullivan (2005) defined Organization Development with participants at the 1st Organization Development Conference for Asia in Dubai-2005 as "Organization Development is a transformative leap to a desired vision where strategies and systems align, in the light of local culture with an innovative and authentic leadership style using the support of high tech tools. [edit]Action research Wendell L French and Cecil Bell defined organization development (OD) at one point as "organization improvement through action research".[8] If one idea can be said to summarize OD's underlying philosophy, it would be action research as it was 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".[12]
  • 10. Figure 1: Systems Model of Action-Research Process Lewin's description of the process of change involves three steps:[12] "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. Figure 1 summarizes the steps and processes involved in planned change through action research. 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. The second stage of action research is the action, or transformation, phase. This stage includes actions relating to learning processes (perhaps in the form of role analysis) and to planning and executing behavioral changes in the client organization. As shown in Figure 1, feedback at this stage would move via Feedback Loop A and would have the effect of altering previous planning to bring the learning activities of the client system into better alignment with change objectives. Included in this stage is action-planning activity carried out jointly by the consultant and members of the client system. Following the workshop or learning sessions, these action steps are carried out on the job as part of the transformation stage.[4] The third stage of action research is the output, or results, phase. This stage includes actual changes in behavior (if any) resulting from corrective action steps taken following the second stage. Data are again gathered from the client system so that progress can be determined and necessary adjustments in learning activities can be made. Minor adjustments of this nature can be made in learning activities via Feedback Loop B (see Figure 1). Major adjustments and reevaluations would return the OD project to the first, or planning, stage for basic changes in the program. The action-research model shown in Figure 1 closely follows Lewin's repetitive cycle of planning, action, and measuring results. It also illustrates other aspects of Lewin's general model of change. As indicated in the diagram, the planning stage is a period of unfreezing, or problem awareness.[12] The action stage is a period of changing, that is, trying out new forms of behavior in an effort to understand and cope with the system's problems. (There is inevitable overlap between the stages, since the boundaries are not clear-cut and cannot be in a continuous process). The results stage is a period of refreezing, in which new behaviors are tried out on the job and, if successful and reinforcing, become a part of the system's repertoire of problem-solving behavior. Action research is problem centered, client centered, and action oriented. It involves the client system in a diagnostic, active-learning, problem-finding, and problem-solving process. Data are not simply returned in the form of a written report but instead are fed back in open joint sessions, and the client and the change agent collaborate in identifying and ranking specific problems, in
  • 11. devising methods for finding their real causes, and in developing plans for coping with them realistically and practically. Scientific method in the form of data gathering, forming hypotheses, testing hypotheses, and measuring results, although not pursued as rigorously as in the laboratory, is nevertheless an integral part of the process. Action research also sets in motion a long-range, cyclical, self-correcting mechanism for maintaining and enhancing the effectiveness of the client's system by leaving the system with practical and useful tools for self-analysis and self-renewal.[4] [edit]Important figures  Chris Argyris  Richard Beckhard  Robert R. Blake  Louis L. Carter  David Cooperrider  W. Edwards Deming  Fred Emery  Charles Handy  Elliott Jaques  Kurt Lewin  Rensis Likert  Jane Mouton  Derek S. Pugh  Edgar Schein  Donald Schon  Peter Senge  Herbert Shepard  Eric Trist  Margaret J. Wheatley  [Pulin Garg]  Ichak Adizes [edit]OD interventions "Interventions" are principal learning processes in the "action" stage (see Figure 1) of organization development. Interventions are structured activities used individually or in combination by the members of a client system to improve their social or task performance. They may be introduced by a change agent as part of an improvement program, or they may be used by the client following a program to check on the state of the organization's health, or to effect necessary changes in its own behavior. "Structured activities" mean such diverse procedures as experiential exercises, questionnaires, attitude surveys, interviews, relevant group discussions, and even lunchtime meetings between the change agent and a member of the client organization. Every action that influences an organization's improvement program in a change agent-client system relationship can be said to be an intervention.[13]
  • 12. There are many possible intervention strategies from which to choose. Several assumptions about the nature and functioning of organizations are made in the choice of a particular strategy.Beckhard lists six such assumptions: 1. The basic building blocks of an organization are groups (teams). Therefore, the basic units of change are groups, not individuals. 2. An always relevant change goal is the reduction of inappropriate competition between parts of the organization and the development of a more collaborative condition. 3. Decision making in a healthy organization is located where the information sources are, rather than in a particular role or level of hierarchy. 4. Organizations, subunits of organizations, and individuals continuously manage their affairs against goals. Controls are interim measurements, not the basis of managerial strategy. 5. One goal of a healthy organization is to develop generally open communication, mutual trust, and confidence between and across levels. 6. People support what they help create. People affected by a change must be allowed active participation and a sense of ownership in the planning and conduct of the change.[6] Interventions range from those designed to improve the effectiveness of individuals through those designed to deal with teams and groups, intergroup relations, and the total organization. There are interventions that focus on task issues (what people do), and those that focus on process issues (how people go about doing it). Finally, interventions may be roughly classified according to which change mechanism they tend to emphasize: for example, feedback, awareness of changing cultural norms, interaction and communication, conflict, and education through either new knowledge or skill practice.[14] One of the most difficult tasks confronting the change agent is to help create in the client system a safe climate for learning and change. In a favorable climate, human learning builds on itself and continues indefinitely during man's lifetime. Out of new behavior, new dilemmas and problems emerge as the spiral continues upward to new levels. In an unfavorable climate, in contrast, learning is far less certain, and in an atmosphere of psychological threat, it often stops altogether. Unfreezing old ways can be inhibited in organizations because the climate makes employees feel that it is inappropriate to reveal true feelings, even though such revelations could be constructive. In an inhibited atmosphere, therefore, necessary feedback is not available. Also, trying out new ways may be viewed as risky because it violates established norms. Such an organization may also be constrained because of the law of systems: If one part changes, other parts will become involved. Hence, it is easier to maintain the status quo. Hierarchical authority, specialization, span of control, and other characteristics of formal systems also discourage experimentation. [13] The change agent must address himself to all of these hazards and obstacles. Some of the things which will help him are: 1. A real need in the client system to change 2. Genuine support from management
  • 13. 3. Setting a personal example: listening, supporting behavior 4. A sound background in the behavioral sciences 5. A working knowledge of systems theory 6. A belief in man as a rational, self-educating being fully capable of learning better ways to do things.[13] A few examples of interventions include team building, coaching, Large Group Interventions, mentoring, performance appraisal, downsizing, TQM, and leadership development. Kurt Lewin – Lessons from the OD Master Kurt Lewin was born in what is now Poland on September 9, 1890. He and his family moved to Berlin when he was fifteen. Lewin obtained his doctorate degree in Psychology from the University of Berlin in 1916 and later become a professor. He left Germany in 1930 as Jews were being ousted, first taking a six month assignment at Stanford University followed by a two-year assignment at Cornell School of Home Economics, and eventually settling at the University of Iowa. Early in his career Lewin took on the study of Taylor and Scientific Management. He agreed with many of Taylor’s principles but objected the notion that work had no meaning for workers other than money. Lewin believed that work brought meaning to one’s life. In fact, he felt that work could be a path for self-realization. Group dynamics and Lewin are intricately connected in the evolution of OD. He understood that we become interdependent as we join a group either by natural association, choice or directive. Lewin’s contributions in group dynamics started the famed T-Group sessions. From this experience we learned about the power of group interaction and feedback. Lewin borrowed the term feedback from electrical engineering and applied it to describe the adjustment of a process by informed data about its results. Feedback was meant to unfreeze the person’s former belief systems. Lewin believed that the work of the organizational consultant should not to be static and that analysis should not be performed from the periphery but rather by being a clinician performing an intervention. He sustained that “you cannot understand a system until you try to change it.”
  • 14. Several years would elapse before Emery would introduce the concept of Open Systems and more years would pass before Senge and others would introduce Systems Thinking into the OD field. However, Lewin had already theorized the notion that human behavior is the systemic function of the person in the environment. His equation B = f (p,e) communicates that new behavior (B) is the result of change as actions are performed by the person (p) in a given environment (e) that is not static. Lewin’s Force Field Analysis is a model that has evolved into a very useful technique that can be effectively applied when change agents need to understand the forces that are driving and restraining a given change. Lewin understood that any actions toward change would be met by opposing reactions. The model he proposed had a graphical representation called the Force Field Analysis diagram. The diagram contained the definition of the problem and the representation of the driving and restraining forces. As indicated, Lewin’s model on Change Process deals with the same behavior, person and environment variables. However it proposes a set of actions to be taken to enable change. The first action is unfreezing, which is meant to create a motivation and readiness for change. In the behavior model, unfreezing deals primarily with the person (p). The second is changing through cognitive restructuring. This is the actual change to the environment (e). In this step, the subjects (p) are made aware of the changes to the environment (e) and new relationships with this environment are formed through training, mentoring, role changes, new information, etc. The final action is refreezing, which is the integration of the new behaviors resulting from the change. In this model we can see how new behaviors can be formed as a result of the changes in both the person and the environment. Action Research is a core model in the OD arsenal. Lewin only wrote 20 pages on Action Research which gave way to volumes of reviews and books on the subject. He did not intend for his Action Research to be a consulting recipe. Lewin developed the model to illustrate how an external person to the organization should proceed in order to have the greatest effect in solving a problem or effecting change. He believed, as previously stated, that one cannot understand a system until a change is attempted. Action Research is exactly that, taking action as research is conducted. Lewin made defining contributions in a number of areas that impacted the evolution of OD. He was a humanist, starting with his reformation ideas in Germany to his thoughts that people could find self-realization in jobs. His contributions range from group dynamics to action research. He was instrumental in deepening the understanding of social behavior through group controlled experimentation. Lewin’s legacy excites dialogue, practice and new learning today as much as it did over 60 years ago. He was a master theorist. His best known quotation is “there is nothing so practical as a good theory.” -- Jorge Taborga
  • 15. Robert Tannenbaum Professor of Anderson School of Management, Emeritus Los Angeles 1915–2003 Bob Tannenbaum, whose humanist vision profoundly affected the field of organizational development for more than 50 years, died March 15, 2003 – but you don’t have to believe that if you don’t want to. If you choose not to, you’ll have plenty of company. Why erase from your mind the presence of a man who constantly affirms you! Bob gave so much to so many and always from the heart. Others also wrote theories extolling the importance of recognizing feelings, valuing human spirit, and raising consciousness to realize one’s inner potential. But unique was Tannenbaum whose ideas were made more profound by his personal being. People who came in contact with him instantly recognized histeachings whether or not they read what he wrote or focused on his words. And his presence had a ripple effect well beyond those who experienced him first hand. Eventually becoming a psychologist without portfolio, Bob began his university work with an A.A. degree from Santa Ana Junior College (1935). He then moved on to the University of Chicago where he received an A.B. degree in business administration (1937) and a M.B.A. in accounting (1938). Concurrently, he took his first teaching job as instructor in accounting at Oklahoma A & M College (1937-39). He returned to Chicago in 1939 to begin Ph.D. studies in industrial relations. In 1942 he enlisted in the Navy serving as an officer in the Pacific teaching radar. In 1946 Bob returned to Chicago to finish his doctorate (1948). Upon completion he was recruited by Neil Jacoby, a former University of Chicago professor who was dean of UCLA’s College of Business Administration, later called the Graduate School of Management, now The Anderson School, where he built, taught and served with distinction until 1977 when he took early retirement. Bob’s first UCLA position was acting assistant professor and assistant research economist while his last, self-named, was professor of human systems development. Bootstrapping from deep-seated beliefs about the importance of personal consciousness and the capacities of people to grow themselves psychologically, with derivative payouts in interpersonal sensitivity, Tannenbaum’s work was a forerunner contributor to considerations of human capital as a corporate asset. From the 1950s through the 1970s, he was instrumental in establishing UCLA’s Graduate School of Management as a key center of thought and practice in the fields of organization development and leadership training. During this period he helped found the Western Training Lab, which promulgated a derivative of T-groups that became known as Sensitivity Training, and played an important role in the evolution of the NTL Institute of Applied Behavioral Science, which spearheaded the drive to utilize group dynamics as an important pedagogy for promoting increased awareness of self and impact on others as essential to team play in the corporate environment. Bob Tannenbaum’s intellectual work described organizational systems not as machines with interchangeable human parts, but as living communities that can be designed to enable people to grow and learn while achieving business goals. His writings, as well as his teaching and consulting, reflected the value he placed on people, and his belief that, to a great extent, leadership
  • 16. effectiveness derives from awareness of one’s own basic assumptions about human nature and the testing out and revision of those assumptions. No matter how you cut it, Bob’s seminal contributions always began with the ones he made interpersonally, with students, colleagues, and clients, and his everyday interactions with almost everyone he encountered. However, they also include his written words. His 1961 book, with Irving Weschler and Fred Massarik, Leadership and Organization, was significant in making the academic and practical argument for the use of group dynamics in developing leaders and teaching them how to operate effectively. His articles (with Warren Schmidt) “How to Choose a Leadership Pattern” (1958) and “Management of Differences” (1960) both set Harvard Business Review records for reprint requests and were reprinted in publications worldwide. Bob’s charismatic impact created a demand that produced a second, post- UCLA, career – consulting and counseling executives and change agents on the use of self in facilitating organizational effectiveness. He was an active contributor to Pepperdine University’s Master’s Program in Organizational Development; he led workshops for the NTL Institute, counseled with top executives and their spouses at his home office in Carmel, and continued professional writing. Among his jewels is an oral autobiography produced by David Russell (1987) as part of the Oral History Program for the Humanistic Psychology Archive at the University of California, Santa Barbara and an edited book of readings (with Newton Margulies and Fred Massarik) written by people associated with the Behavioral Science, then Human Systems, now Human Resources and Organizational Behavior group he founded at UCLA, titled Human Systems Development. During his life Bob received many honors that he valued greatly but about which he seldom talked. They include an honorary doctorate from the Saybrook Institute, Fellow of the NTL Institute, Diplomate from the American Board of Professional Psychology, Distinguished Member of the OD Network and first recipient of the American Society for Training and Development’s (ASTD) Lifetime Achievement Award where his arm-chair talks were spiritual legend. Born in Cripple Creek, Colorado to Henry and Nettie (Porges) Tannenbaum, Professor Tannenbaum and his sister (the late Emma Elconin) were raised in Southern California. He is survived by Edith (Lazaroff) Tannenbaum, his loving wife of 58 years; two daughters, Judith Tannenbaum and Deborah Ingebretsen; son-in-law Jim Ingebretsen; three grandchildren, Sara Press, Emma and Gus Ingebretsen; and grandson-in-law, Andrew Harkness. In addition, he is honored and loved by countless friends, colleagues and students. Samuel Culbert