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OrganizationDevelopment
MGMT628
VU
Lesson
01
The
Challenge for Organizations
We
live in a world that
hasbeen turned upside
down.Companies are pouring
money, technology, and
managementexpertise
into regions thatwere
once off limits, acquiring new
enterprises,
formingjoint
ventures,creating
new global businessesfrom the
ground up. Many major companies
are goingthrough
significant
changes, including outsourcing, downsizing,
reengineering, self-managed
workteams, flattening
organizations,and
doing routine jobswith
automation and computers.Some
experts contend that if
you
candescribe
a job precisely or write
rules for doingit, the
job will probablynot
survive.
Change
is avalanching down upon
ourheads and most people
areutterly unprepared to cope
withit.
Tomorrow'sworld
will be different
fromtodays, calling for new
organizational approaches. Organizations
willneed
to be adapting to these changesmarket
conditions and at the same time coping
with the needfor
a
renewing rather than reactive
workforce.Every day managers
areconfronting massive
andaccelerating
change.
As one writer
comments,"Call it whatever
you like reengineering,
restructuring, transformation,
flattening,
downsizing, rightsizing, a quest
forglobal competitiveness it's
real, it's radical and it's
arriving
everyday
at a company
nearyou."
Globalcompetition
and economicdownturns have
exposed a glaring weakness in American
organizations:
the
fact that many
organizationshave become overstaffed,
cumbersome,slow and
inefficient. To increase
productivity,enhance
competitiveness and contain costs,
organizations arechanging the
way they are
organizedand
managed.
Thesuccessful
twenty-first century managermust
deal with a chaoticworld of
new competitors and
constantinnovation.
In the future the onlywinning
companies will be the ones
that respond quickly
to
change.Preparing
managers to copewith today's
acceleratingrole of change is the
centraltheme/purpose
of
my lectures (concern of this
book).Modern manager must
notonly be flexible
andadaptive in a
changingenvironment
but must also be able to
diagnose problemsand implement
changeprograms.
TomPeters
suggests that "the time for
10 percent staffcuts and 20
percent quality improvement
is
past".
Organizationsare
never completely static. They are in
continuous interaction with external
forces (see
figure
below). Changing consumer
lifestylesand technological breakthroughs
all act on the organization to
cause
it to change. The degree of
change may vary from one
organization to another, but all face
the need
for
adaptation to external forces. Many of
these changes are forced
upon the organization,
whereasothers
aregenerated
internally. Becausechange is occurring so
rapidly, there is a need
for new ways to manage
it.
Figure:
01 The
OrganizationalEnvironment:
The
Growth and Relevance of OD:
Organizationsmust
adapt to increasingly complex and
uncertain technological, economic,political,
and
cultural
changes. The rapidlychanging
conditions of the past few years
have shown that the
organizations
are
in the midst of unprecedented uncertainty
andchaos, and nothing short
of a management revolution
willsave
them. Three major trendsare
shaping change in organizations:
globalization, information
technology,
and
managerialinnovation.
OrganizationDevelopment
MGMT628
VU
First:
globalization is
changing the markets and environments in
which organizations operate as the
way
they
function. New
governments,new leadership,
new markets,and new
countries areemerging
and
creating
a new global economy.
Thetoppling of the Berlin
Wallsymbolized and energized
the reunification
of
Germany: entrepreneurs appeared in
Russia, the Balkans,
andSiberia as the former
SovietUnion
evolves,
in fits and starts,
intoseparate, market-oriented states;
and China emerged as an open
marketand
as
the governance mechanism
overHong Kong to represent a
powerful shift in global economic
influence.
Second:information
technology is
redefining the traditional business model
by changing how work
is
performed,
how knowledge is used,
andhow the cost of
doingbusiness is calculated.
Theway an
organization
collects, stores,
manipulates,uses, and
transmitsinformation can
lower costs or increase
the
valueand
quality of products andservices.
Information technology, forexample, is at
the heart of emerging
e-commercestrategies
and organizations.Amazon.com,
E-Trade, areamong many
recent entrants to the
informationeconomy,
and the amount of business being
conducted on the Internet is projected to
grow at
double-digitrates
for well over ten years.
Moreover, the underlyingrate of
innovation is notexpected
to
decline.Electronic
data interchange, a state-of-the-art technology
application a few yearsago, is
now
consideredroutine
business practice.The
ability to move informationeasily
and inexpensively throughout
andamong
organizations has fueled the downsizing,
delayering, and restructuring of firms.
The Internet
and
the World Wide Web
haveenabled a new form of
workknown as telecommuting;
organization
memberscan
work from theirhomes or
cars without ever going to the
office.
Finally,information
technology
is changing how knowledge is
used.Information that is
widelyshared reduces the
concentration
of
power at the top of the organization. Organization
members now share the
samekey information
that
seniormanagers
once used to control
decision making. Ultimately,information
technology willgenerate
newbusiness
models in which communication and
information sharing is nearly
free.
Third:managerial
innovation hasresponded
to the globalization andinformation
technology trendsand
hasaccelerated
their impact on organizations.
New organizational forms,such as
networks, strategic
alliances,and
virtual corporations,
provideorganizations with
new ways of thinking about
how to
manufacturegoods
and deliver services.The
strategic alliance,
forexample, has emerged as
one of the
indispensable
tools in strategy implementation. No single
organization, not even
IBM,Mitsubishi, or
General
Electric, can control the
environmentaland market uncertainty it
faces.Sun
Microsystems'
network
is so complex that some products it
sellsare never touched by a
Sunemployee. In
addition,new
methods
of change, such as downsizing
andreengineering, have radically
reduced the size of
organizations
andincreased
their flexibility,and new
large-group interventions,such as the
search conferenceand
open
space,have
increased the speedwith
which organizational changecan
take place. Managers,
OD
practitioners,
and researchers argue
thatthese forces not
onlyare powerful in their
ownright but
are
interrelated.
Their interaction makes for
a highly uncertain and
chaoticenvironment for all
kinds of
organizations,including
manufacturing and service firms and
those in the public
andprivate sector.
There
is
no question that these
forcesare profoundly affecting
organizations.
Fortunately,
a growing number of organizations are
undertaking the kinds of organizational
changesneeded
to
survive and prosper in
today'senvironment. They are
making themselves more
streamlinedand nimble
andmore
responsive to external demands. They are
involving employees in key
decisions and paying
for
performance
rather than for time.
Theyare taking the
initiative in innovating and
managingchange, rather
than
simply responding to what has
alreadyhappened.
Organization
Development is playing an increasinglykey
role in helpingorganizations
changethemselves.
It
is helping organizations
assessthemselves and their
environments, and revitalize and
rebuildtheir
strategies,structures,
and processes. OD is helping organization
members go beyond surface changes
to
transform
the underlying assumptions
andvalues governing
theirbehaviors. The
different OD concepts
andmethods
increasingly arefinding
their way into government
agencies, manufacturing firms,
multinational
corporations, service
industries,educational institutions,
andnot-for-profit
organizations.
Perhaps
at no other time has OD
beenmore responsive and
practically relevant to organizations' needs
to
operateeffectively
in a highly complex andchanging
world.
What
is Organization
Development(OD)?
Whatmakes
one organization a winner,whereas another
fails to makeuse of the same
opportunities? The
key
to survival and success
liesnot in the rational,
quantitativeapproaches, but rather in a
commitment to
irrational,
difficult-to-measure things like people,
quality,customer service,
and moreimportantly,
develop
the
flexibility to meet changing conditions.
For example, in a study
thatexamined the "high
tech-high
touch"
phenomenon at Citicorp, the crucial component in
adapting to technological change was the
human
factor.
Employee involvement and commitment is the
true key to
successfulchange.
OrganizationDevelopment
MGMT628
VU
DefiningOrganization
Development(OD):
Thewords
organization
development refers
to something about
organizationsand developing them.
"An
organization
is the planned coordination of the activities of a number of
people for the achievement of
some
common explicit purpose or
goal,through division of
laborand functions, and
through a hierarchy of
authorityand
responsibility." Organizations aresocial
systems possessingcharacteristics
and OD effortsare
directedtoward
organizations or major subparts of
them.
Development
is the act, process, result, or
state of being developed which in
turn means to advance,
to
promote
the growth of, to evolve the possibilities
of, to further, to improve, or to
enhance something.
Twoelements
of this definition seemimportant:
first, development may be an act,
process, or endstate;
second,
development refers to
"bettering'something.
Combiningthese
words suggests that organization
development is the act, process, or
result of furthering,
advancing,
or promoting the growth of organization.
According to this definition,
organization
development
is anything done to "better" an organization.
But this definition is too broad
and all-inclusive.
It
can refer to almost anything done in an
organizational context that enhances the
organization hiring a
personwith
needed skills, firing an incompetent,
merging with another organization, installing a
computer,
removing
a computer, buying a new
plant,and so on. This
definitionserves neither to
identifyand specify
nor
to delimit (perhaps something done to
"worsen" an organization would be ruled
out). The term
organization
development must be given added
meaning,must refer to something
morespecific, if
productivediscourse
on the subject is desired.
Anotherway
of defining OD is to examine the
following definitions
whichhave been (suggested in
the
literature).
Definition
of Organization
Development(OD):
OD
is an effort (1) planned, (2)
organization-wide, and (3)
managedfrom the top, to
(4)increase
organization
effectiveness and health
through(5) planned interventions in the
organization's "processes,"
using
behavioral science knowledge. (RichardBeckhard)
Analysis
of the definition suggests that OD is
not just "anything done to better an
organization"; it is a
particular
kind of change
processdesigned to bring about a
particular kind of end
result.
OD
thus represents a unique
strategyfor system change, a
strategy largely based in the
theory and research
of
the behavioral sciences, and a strategy
having a substantial prescriptive character. OD is
thus a
normative
discipline, it prescribes how planned
change in organizations should be
approached andcarried
out
if organization improvement is to be obtained.
In
summary, OD is a process of planned
system change that attempts
to make organizations (viewed
as
social-technicalsystems)
better able to attain their short- and
long-term objectives.This is
achieved by
teaching
the organization members to manage their
organization processes and culture
moreeffectively.
Facts,concepts,
and theory from the behavioral
sciences are utilized to fashion
both the process and
the
content
of the interventions. A basic belief of
OD theorists and practitioners is
thatfor effective,
lasting
change
to take place, the
systemmembers must grow in the
competence to master their
ownfates.
Finally,
it is important to note that OD
has two broad goals: organization
development and individual
development.
Although it is not
statedexplicitly in the above
definitions,improving the quality of
lifefor
individuals
in organizations is a primary goal of organization
development. Enhancing individual
development
is a key value of OD practitioners and a
key outcome of most OD
programs.
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