Managing OD Process
Managing OD Process
Managing OD Process
Process
OD
Learning objectives
Components of OD process
Diagnosis of the whole system
The action i.e. Nature of OD interventions
& analyzing discrepancies
Phases of OD program
Components of OD process
Diagnosis
Action
Program
Management
Diagnosis
Action
Program
Management
Consists of fact finding about the results of
the actions.
Focuses on
Did the action have desired effects?
Is the problem solved or the opportunities
achieved?
COMPONENTS OF OD PROCESS
System
Diagnosis
Actions directed at
problem/opportunity
No1
Problem/Opportunity 1
Evaluation of effects
of actions
Problem
solved/Opportunity
realized Terminate actions
Yielding
"Strengths"
1,2,3,4
Actions directed at
problem/opportunity
No 2
Problem/Opportunity 2
Evaluation of effects
of actions
Problem
solved
/
Opportunity not realized
Initiate new actions
Yielding
Opportunities
1,2,3,4
Actions directed at
problem/opportunity
No 3
Problem/Opportunity 3
Evaluation of effects
of actions
Problem
solved
/
Opportunity not realized.
Redefine problem; Initiate
new actions
Yielding
Problems
1,2,3,4
Actions directed at
problem/opportunity
No 4
Problem 4 Evaluation
Step 1
Step 2
Step 3
Step 4
Diagnosis
of
the state of the
organization
Actions to correct
problems & realize
opportunities
Evaluation
of
the
effects of Actions/
Interventions
DIAGNOSIS
Diagnosis Defined
Diagnosis is a collaborative process between
organizational members and the OD
consultant to collect pertinent information,
analyze it, and draw conclusions for action
planning and intervention.
Questionnaires
One of the most efficient ways of collecting data
Contain fixed-response questions about various features
Administered to large numbers of people simultaneously
Can be analyzed quickly
Permit quantitative comparison and evaluation
Data can easily be fed back to employees
Questionnaires
Major advantages
Responses can be quantified and summarized
Large samples and large quantities of data
Relatively inexpensive
Major potential problems
Predetermined questions - no chance to change
Over interpretation of data possible
Response biases possible
Interviews
Interviews may be highly structured
resembling questionnaires
Interviews may be highly unstructured
starting with general questions that
allow the respondent to lead the way
Interviews
Major advantages
Adaptive - allows customization
Source of `rich data
Process builds rapport with subjects
Major potential problems
Relatively expensive
Bias in interviewer responses
Coding and interpretation can be difficult
Self-report bias possible
Observations
A more direct way of collecting data
Observe organisational behaviors in their
functional settings
Observations
Major advantages
Collect data on actual behaviour, rather than reports of
behaviour
Real time, not retrospective
Adaptive
Major potential problems
Coding and interpretation difficulties
Observer bias and questionable reliability
Can be expensive
Unobtrusive measures
Data is not collected directly from respondents but from
secondary sources
Use records of absenteeism or tardiness, grievances,
quantity and quality of production or service, financial
performance and correspondence with key customers,
suppliers or governmental agencies
Helpful in diagnosing the organisation, group and
individual outputs
Unobtrusive measures
Major advantages
Non-reactive, no response bias
High face validity
Easily quantified
Major potential problems
Access and retrieval difficulties
Validity concerns
Coding and interpretation difficulties
Information sought
Methods of Diagnosis
Total
Q) What is organizations culture? Q)
Organization Are organizational goals and strategy
understood and accepted? Q) What is
organizations performance?
Examination of
organizational records
rules, regulations, policies
Questionnaire survey
oInterviews (both group &
individual)
Large
complex &
heterogeneou
s sub-systems
Questionnaire survey
Interviews
Observations
Organization records
Information sought
Small,
Simple &
relatively
homogeneous
subsystems
Intergroup
subsystems
Methods of Diagnosis
Individual interviews
Group meeting to review the
interview data
Questionnaires
Observation of staff meetings
And other day- to-day
operations
Confrontation meetings,
Organisation mirroring meetings
Interviews of each subsystem
followed by sharing the data
Meetings or observations of
interactions
Information sought
Methods of Diagnosis
Individuals
Interviews
Information from diagnostic
meetings
Data available with
HR department
Roles
(MBO) is a process of agreeing upon objectives within an organization so that management and employees agree to the
objectives and understand what they are in the organization.
Process
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Organizational Mirroring
Set of activities in which host group
receives feedback about how it is perceived
and regarded from reps across organization
Intended to improve inter-group
relationships
Process
1.
2.
3.
Host group asks key reps from interface group to meet and provide
feedback
Pre- and post interviews by consultant to magnitude of issue(s), prepare
participants and answer their questions
At the actual session:
1. Opening remarks by manager of host group to set tone
2. Guests use fishbowl discussion to maintain natural flow; hosts listen
3. Hosts fishbowl discuss, ask for clarification from guests
4. Subgroups of guests and hosts form to address most important
changes host group needs to make
5. Reconvene in large group to hear summaries of each sub group and
form master task list
6. Action planning, tasks, responsible parties, completion dates
established and agreed, concluding mirroring session
7. Follow-up meeting to assess and review progress
What to observe:
communication
power & influence
roles
conflict
norms
decision making
problem solving
leadership
goal clarity
task/maintenance
Information sought
Methods of Diagnosis
Observations in meetings
Questionnaires , Interviews and
discussion with group members
Goal setting
Questionnaires , Interviews
Observations
Decision
making,
Problem solving
& action
planning
Observations of problem-solving
meetings , Analysis of videotaped
sessions , Organizational records
Information sought
Methods of Diagnosis
Conflict
resolution &
management
Superiorsubordinate
relations
Strategic
management &
long range
planning
Questionnaires
Interviews
Diagnosis
Leadership
Helpful Mechanisms:
Do we have adequate
technologies?
Structure: How do
we divide up the
work?
Rewards: Do all
needed tasks have
incentives?
Environment
ACTION
COMPONENT
Action Component
Action plans are OD
interventions
specifically tailored to
address issues at
individual, group, intergroup, or
organizational levels as
well as issues related to
selected processes.
Actions
Interventions
Individual
Group based
Inter-group based
Example:
Team Building (Group based)
Where one is
Phases of OD program
Contracting
Entry
Diagnosis
Feedback
WARNER BURKE
Evaluation
Intervention
Planning
change
Motivating Change
Creating a Vision
Developing
Political Support
Managing the
Transition
Sustaining
Momentum
Effective
Change
Management
Organization
Parallel
Structure