Objectives
- To know and have a greater understanding/appreciation of the importance and concept of the following:
a.
characteristics of organizational development,
b.
goals of OD,
c.
basic assumptions of OD,
d. critical factors to
consider in OD,
e.
conditions that call for OD,
f.
problems confronted in OD, and
g.
necessary conditions for effective OD
2. To acquire needed
knowledge to implement/ adapt the concepts aforementioned.
3. To share related
experiences of the topic discussed.
Topic
Outline
TIME
|
TOPIC
|
10 min.
|
I.
Characteristics of OD
|
10 min.
|
II. Goals
of OD
|
15 min.
|
III. Basic
Assumptions of OD
|
15 min.
|
IV.
Critical Factors to Consider in OD
|
10 min.
|
V.
Conditions That Call For OD
|
10 min.
|
VI.
Problems Confronted in OD
|
10 min.
|
VII. Necessary Conditions for Effective
OD
|
I. Characteristics of OD
- OD is an educational strategy to bring about
planned organizational change. It
concentrates on “people variable” (values, attitudes, relations, and
organizational climate) as a point of entry rather than on goals,
structure, and technologies of the organization.
- The changes sought are coupled directly with exigencies or demands the organization is trying to cope with. The exigencies are:
b. Problems of human satisfaction and development;
c. Problems of organizational effectiveness.
- OD relies on an educational strategy which
emphasizes experienced behavior.
Widely used are data feedback, sensitivity training, confrontation
meeting, and other experience-based methods to generate publicly shared
data and experience upon which planning and action proceed.
- Change agents are mostly but not exclusively
external to the client system. The
external consultant can manage to affect the power structure at the
beginning.
- OD implies a collaborative relationship
between change agent and constituents of the client system. Mutual trust, joint determination of
goals and means, and high mutual influence are involved.
- Change agents share a social philosophy, a set
of values about the world and human organizations, and they believe that
the realization of these values will lead to a more humane, democratic and
efficient system.
- Change
agents share a set of normative goals:
- Improvement of interpersonal competence;
- A shift in values so that human factors and feelings are considered legitimate;
- Development of understanding between and within working groups to reduce tensions;
- Development of effective “team management” which is the capacity for functional groups to work more competently;
- Development of better methods of “conflict resolution” which are rational and open rather than bureaucratic which rely on suppression, compromise, and unprincipled power;
- Development of organic rather than mechanical systems. Differences lies in the following ways:
Mechanical Systems
- exclusive individual emphasis;
authority obedience relationship; delegated and divided responsibility rigidly
adhered to; strict division of labor and hierarchical supervision; centralized
decision-making; conflict resolution through suppression arbitration and/or
warfare.
Organic Systems
- relationship
between and within groups emphasized; mutual confidence and trust;
interdependence and shared responsibility; multi-group membership and
responsibility; wide sharing of responsibility and control; conflict resolution
through bargaining or problem-solving.
- There is a planned program involving the whole
system.
- Top people are aware of and committed to the
program and the management of it.
- OD is related to the organization’s mission.
- OD is a long-term effort, taking at least two
to three years for organizational change to take effect and be maintained.
- OD activities are action-oriented. The groups build in connections and
follow-up activities aimed toward action programs.
- OD focuses on changing attitudes and/or
behavior.
- OD relies on form of experience-based learning
activities.
- OD efforts work primarily with groups. Towards organization’s health and
effectiveness, groups and teams are the basic units to be changed.
- OD is an ongoing interactive process.
- OD is a form of applied behavioral sciences.
- OD is a normative, reeducative strategy of
changing.
- OD views organization from a systems approach.
- OD is a data-based approach to planned change.
- OD is experienced-based.
- OD focus on intact work teams.
II. Goals of
OD
- To increase the basic organizational
effectiveness and make the organization a more acceptable place for people
to work.
- To build trust among individuals and groups
throughout the organization.
- To create an open, problem-solving climate for
in-group and in-between group.
- To locate decision-making and problem-solving
responsibility as close to the information sources of data as possible.
- To increase sense of ownership or feeling of
belongingness of people in the organization.
- To shift from an autocratic to participative
approach in managing individuals and groups within an organization and to
bring about cooperative approach among them as opposed to competitive
approach.
- To increase sensitivity of people to processes
underlying their ability to perform in the organization. This is to examine the process in
relation to the task that by awareness of the process, the task will be
accomplished more readily.
- To develop a self-renewing, viable system that
can organize in a variety of ways depending on tasks.
- To optimize the effectiveness of both the
stable and temporary systems through an introduction of procedures for
analyzing work tasks and resource distribution and for building in
continuous “feedback” regarding the way a system or subsystem is
operating.
- To move toward high collaboration and low
competition between interdependent units.
- To create condition where conflicts are
brought out, managed and worked out before making adequate decisions.
- To reach the point where decisions are made on
the basis of information source rather than organizational role; the need
to move toward a norm of the authority of knowledge as well as the
authority of role.
- To supplement the authority associated with
role or status with the authority of knowledge and competence.
- To develop a reward system which recognizes
both the achievement of the organization’s goals (profit or service) and
development of people.
- To increase sense of “ownership” of
organization objectives throughout the workforce.
- To help managers administer according to
relevant objectives rather than according to “past practices” or objectives
which do not make sense to one’s area of responsibility.
- To increase self-control and self-direction in
people within the organization.
- To produce an effective and healthy
organization.
III. Basic
Assumptions of OD
- People have drives towards personal growth and
development which could be actualized in a supportive and challenging
environment.
- Most people desire to contribute to the
attainment of organizational goals than most organizational environment
will permit.
- All group members must assist each other for
effective leadership so that not just the formal leader is performing the
leadership functions.
- Organizations tend to be characterized by overlapping independent work groups.
- What happens in the broader organization affects the small work group and vice-versa.
- What happens to one subsystem affects and is influenced by other parts of the system.
- The culture in most organizations tends to suppress the expression of feeling which people have about each other and about where they and their organization are heading.
- Suppressed feelings adversely affect problem-solving process, personal growth, and job satisfaction.
- The level of interpersonal trust, support, and cooperation is lower than is either necessary or desirable.
- Win-lose strategies are not optimal in the long-run to the solution of the most organizational problems.
- Synergistic solutions can be achieved with much higher frequency.
- Viewing feelings as data important to the organization tends to open up many avenues for improved goal-setting, communication, problem-solving, intergroup collaboration, and morale.
- Improved performance through OD effects should be sustained by appropriate changes in the appraisal, compensation, training, staffing, and task-specialization subsystems of the total personnel system.
- Values of OD
a.
People are human beings with individual set of
needs, not just resources in the productive process.
b.
Each organization member and the organization
itself must reach their full potential development.
c.
OD seeks to increase organizational effectiveness
in terms of all its goals.
d.
It attempts to create an environment where work is
exciting and challenging.
e.
It provides opportunities to influence the way
people relate to work, organization, and environment.
- Directions of OD
a.
To promote the view of man as basically good;
b.
To affirm man as a human being in process;
c.
To encourage acceptance and utilization of
individual differences for the benefit of the organization;
d.
To promote the view of man as a whole person not just
a position in the organization;
e.
To encourage expression and effective use of feelings;
f.
To work towards use of authentic behavior than
markmanship and game-playing;
g.
To develop trust among organizational members;
h.
To present appropriate confrontations as healthy
than avoiding facing people involved;
i. To lead organizational members to view job status
in relation to its contribution to the organization and not as a means to
maintain power and personal prestige;
j.
To encourage risk-taking;
k.
To emphasize collaboration instead of competition;
l. To motivate organizational members to regard
process work as essential to effective task accomplishment.
- The underlying assumptions and values about
people in groups and leadership are:
a. One of the most psychologically relevant groups is
the work group including peers and superiors.
b. Most people wish to be accepted and to interact
cooperatively with at least one small reference group.
c. Most attitudinal and motivational problems in
organizational are transactional.
- The OD assumptions about value of the
organizations are:
a. Members of the system must place value in the
collaborative effort and in the constructive end-products of the system, either
current or potential.
b. Value is placed on the welfare of all system
members particularly by the people having the most power over others.
IV. Critical Factors to Consider
in OD
- Environmental Factors
- Organizational Climate
- Characteristics of the Management
- Characteristics of Job to be Accomplished.
- Inter-unit relationship.
- Organizational practices
V. Conditions that Call for OD
- The need to change cultural norms.
- The need to change managerial strategy.
- The need to make organizational climate more
consistent with both individual needs and the changing needs of the environment.
- The need to change structure and roles.
- The need to improve intergroup collaboration.
- The need for better planning.
- The need to open up the communication system.
- The need to cope with problems and merger.
- The need for adaptation to a new environment.
VI. Problems Confronted in OD
- Integration.
- Social Influence.
- Collaboration.
- Adaptation.
- Identity.
- Revitalization
VII. Necessary Conditions for
Effective OD
- A significant pressure for change in
organization’s external environment;
- “Hurting” people are willing to take a
searching look at the organization (diagnosis).
- Strong leadership is provided for the change
effort.
- Active involvement and collaboration in
problem-identification and improvement-planning from several levels of
organization.
- Willingness to take risks and to invent and
experiment with new solutions to problems on a small scale first.
- Visibility of concrete short-term and
intermediate results.
- Presence of a realistic long-term perspective
for the change effort.
"Do not worry if others do not understand
you. Instead worry if you do not understand others."
-Confucius, Chinese Philosopher
551-479 BC
Doing the “right things” – is knowing “what” to do
Ø Effectiveness
Doing “things right” – is knowing ”how” to do it
Ø Efficiency
Source:
Organizational Development in the Philippine Setting by Andres
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