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Chapter 16

Chapter 16. The Challenge and the Future for Organizations . Learning Objectives (part 1 of 2). Understand basic issues in using OD as approach to planned change. Recognize ways of maintaining, internalizing, and stabilizing change program. Learning Objectives (part 2 of 2).

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Chapter 16

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  1. Chapter 16 The Challenge and the Future for Organizations An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  2. Learning Objectives (part 1 of 2) • Understand basic issues in using OD as approach to planned change. • Recognize ways of maintaining, internalizing, and stabilizing change program. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  3. Learning Objectives (part 2 of 2) • Identify some of the future trends and problems facing the OD practitioner. • Understand process of terminating practitioner-client relationship. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  4. Company of the Future (part 1 of 2) Company of the future will attract and retain talented employees by developing different kind of workplace. Powerful mission is magnet and motivator. Culture that values learning is key. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  5. Company of the Future (part 2 of 2) Core reality is old saying that a company’s people are its most important asset. Collaboration essence of the organization. Create flexibility, resiliency, speed, and creativity. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  6. The Future Organization A constantly changing organization. An organization that is flexible and able to quickly change. Higher educational levels mean increase in motivational needs. Change is never ending. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  7. Monitor and Stabilize Action Programs Feedback. Stabilize the change. Evaluate the OD program results. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  8. Feedback of Information Information returned to participants. Commitment reinforced by feedback. Program effectiveness measured by degree problems corrected. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  9. Stabilization of Change Acceptance and adoption of change. Guard against “fade out.” Reinforcement necessary. Continue assessment of change during later periods. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  10. Evaluation of OD Programs(part 1 of 2) Evaluations important for 3 groups: • Key decision makers. • OD participants. • OD specialists. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  11. Evaluation of OD Programs(part 2 of 2) Three factors determine evaluation process: • Training of OD specialist. • Cooperation of organization members. • Willingness of decision makers to pay for evaluation. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  12. Termination of Practitioner-Client Relationship Termination of relationship final stage of OD. Relationship ends when practitioner or client believes little more can be accomplished. Disengagement will likely call for gradual reduction of practitioner’s help. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  13. Developing Self-Renewal Capacity Self-renewal means building innovation into organization’s values. Self-renewing organization constantly able to innovate. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  14. Termination and Disengagement from Client System Client and practitioner agree on reduced involvement. Involvement does not drop to zero, but may continue at low level. The door always open for further work. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  15. Conditions Supporting OD’s Success Organization under pressure to improve. Change begins at top of organization. Top management actively participates. New ideas developed at several levels. Innovation and experimentation used to develop solutions. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  16. OD in Practice: War of Warehouse Stores (part 1 of 3) Costco and Sam’s Club warehouse stores both started in 1983. Some Analysts say Costco pays workers too much compared to competition such as Sam’s Club. But some analysts look at productivity figures and not just hourly wages. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  17. OD in Practice (part 2 of 3) Costco CEO Sinegal says, “ Paying your employees well is not only the right thing to do but it makes for good business.” Business Week magazine ran the numbers on the two warehouse stores and found underlying results of 2 strategies. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  18. OD in Practice (part 3 of 3) An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  19. Emerging Issues and Values OD is a growing, developing, and changing field of study. OD still in transition, which makes it difficult to define what is an OD intervention. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  20. Is OD Fad or Discipline? OD has over 40 years of background history. OD appears to be primary method for helping organizations adjust to change. Managers may use interventions as quick fixes. OD required even more as rate of change increases. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  21. Dilemmas for OD Practitioners Some question OD because ill-defined. Lack of evidence for some OD interventions. No accreditation program of OD practitioners. OD overemphasizes human interventions. Difficult for OD to deal with distrust, power, and conflict. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  22. Organization transformation (OT). Shared vision. Innovation. Trust. Empowerment. Learning organization. Reengineering. Core competencies. Organizational architecture. Future Trends in OD An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  23. Macrosystem Trends in OD Impact of culture change. Total resource utilization. Centralization vs. decentralization. Conflict resolution. Interorganization collaboration. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  24. Interpersonal Trends in OD Merging line and staff functions. Resource linking. Integrating quality and productivity. Diversity. Networking. Rewarding. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  25. Individual Trends in OD Intrinsic worth. Change in individuals. Effects of thinking. Health and fitness. Interdependence. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  26. The Future of OD OD will deal with changing workforce, global competence, and transformation. OD is expanding and vital technology. Need for more studies on OD interventions. OD needs to deal effectively with external systems and power-coercive problems. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  27. Our Changing World: No Job Is Safe - Never Will Be (part 1 of 4) What you will be doing in future will constantly change. The career you are preparing for now will likely not be career you pursue for much of your life. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  28. Our Changing World (part 2 of 4) Career suggestions include: • Avoid jobs that can be broken down into repeatable steps. • Search for jobs that require flexibility, problem-solving, creativity, and lifetime of learning. • Work that relies on complex communication skills will probably not be outsourced. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  29. Our Changing World (part 3 of 4) Additional career suggestions: • Jobs that require frequent interactions with other people will flourish. • Employees with good people skills and employees with multicultural teams will have advantage. • Get a college education and then keep going to college. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  30. Our Changing World (part 4 of 4) Warren Bennis, OD practitioner, says: “No job is safe. Never will be. The half-life of any particular skill is, at most, five years. And that’s on the long side. What will keep you alive? Be curious, be willing to learn, have a moral compass and know what gives your life meaning.” An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  31. Key Words and Concepts • Feedback - required to determine whether to modify, continue, or discontinue activities. • Individual trends - future trend of OD that focuses on personal level. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  32. Interpersonal trends - future trend of OD that focuses on team and group dynamics. • Macrosystem trends - future trend of OD that focuses on organizational system. • Reconfigurable - an organization that is flexible and able to change. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

  33. Self-renewal - building innovation and commitment to change into organization’s values. • Stabilizing the changes - preventing deterioration of the change efforts and reverting to previous behaviors. An Experiential Approach to Organization Development 7th edition

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