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Organization
Development MGMT
628
VU
Lesson
14
Entering
and Contracting
The
planned change process generally
starts when one or more key
managers or administrators
somehow
sense
that their organization, department, or
group could be improved or has
problems that could be
alleviated
through organization development. The organization
might be successful yet have
the room for
improvement.
It might be facing impending
environmental conditions that
necessitate a change in how
it
operates.
The organization could be experiencing particular
problems, such as poor
product quality, high
rates
of absenteeism or dysfunctional conflicts among
departments. Conversely, the problems
might appear
more
diffuse and consist simply of feelings
that the organization should be "more
innovative," "more
competitive,"
or "more effective."
Entering
and contracting are the initial
steps in the OD process. They involve
defining in a preliminary
manner
the organization's problems or opportunities
for development and establishing a
collaborative
relationship
between the OD practitioner and
members of the client system about
how to work on those
issues.
Entering and contracting set the
initial parameters for
carrying out the subsequent
phases of OD:
diagnosing
the organization, planning and implementing
changes, and evaluating and
institutionalizing
them.
They help to define what issues will be
addressed by those activities,
which will carry them out,
and
how
they will be accomplished.
Entering
and contracting can vary in complexity
and formality depending on the situation. In
those cases
where
the manager of a work group or department
serves as his or her own OD
practitioner, entering and
contracting
typically involve the manager
and group members meeting to
discuss what issues to work
on
and
how they will jointly
accomplish that. Here, entering and contracting
are relatively simple and
informal.
They
involve all relevant members
directly in the process without a
great number of formal procedures.
In
situations
where manager and
administrators are considering the
use of professional OD
practitioners,
either
from inside or from outside
the organization, entering and contracting tend to be
more complex and
formal.
OD practitioners may need to collect
preliminary information to help define
the problematic or
development
issues. They may need to
meet with representatives of the client
organization rather than with
the
total membership; they may
need to formalize their respective
roles and how the change
process will
unfold.
Let's
first discuss the activities and
content-oriented issues involved in
entering into and contracting for
an
OD
initiative. Major attention
here will be directed at complex
processes involving OD professionals
and
client
organizations. Similar entering and
contracting issues, however, need to be
addressed in even the
simplest
OD efforts where managers
serve as OD practitioners for their
own work units. Unless there
is
clarity
and agreement about what issues to
work on, who will
address them, and how
that will be
accomplished,
subsequent stages of the OD process
are likely to be confusing and
ineffective.
Entering
into an OD Relationship:
An
OD process generally starts
when a member of an organization or unit
contacts an OD practitioner
about
potential help in addressing an
organizational issue. The organization
member may be a
manager,
staff
specialist, or some other
key participant, and the practitioner
may be an OD professional from
inside
or
outside of the organization. Determining whether the
two parties should enter
into an OD relationship
typically
involves clarifying the nature of the
organization's current functioning and the
issue(s) to be
addressed,
the relevant client system for
that issue, and the
appropriateness of the particular OD
practitioner.
In helping assess these
issues, the OD practitioner may
need to collect preliminary data
about
the
organization. Similarly, the organization may need to
gather information about the
practitioner's
competence
and experience. This knowledge
will help both parties
determine whether they should
proceed
to
develop a contract for working
together.
The
activities involved in entering an OD relationship
are: clarifying the organizational issue,
determining
the
representatives of the client organization, and
selecting the appropriate OD
practitioner.
Clarifying
the Organizational
Issue:
When
seeking help from OD practitioners,
organizations typically start
with a presenting
problem--the
issue
that has caused them to
consider an OD process. It may be
specific (decreased market
share,
increased
absenteeism) or general ("we're
growing too fast," "we
need to prepare for rapid
changes"). The
presenting
problem often has an implied
or stated solution. For
example, managers may
believe that
because
members of their teams are
in conflict, team building is the
obvious answer. They may
even state
the
presenting problem in the form of a
solution: "We need some
team building."
In
many cases, however, the presenting
problem is only a symptom of an
underlying problem. For
example,
conflict
among members of a team may
result from several deeper
causes, including ineffective
reward
systems,
personality differences, inappropriate
structure, and poor
leadership. The issue facing
the
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organization
or department must be clarified early in
the OD process so that subsequent
diagnostic and
intervention
activities are focused
correctly.
Gaining
a clearer perspective on the organizational
issue may require collecting preliminary
data. OD
practitioners
often examine company
records and interview a few
key members to gain an
introductory
understanding
of the organization, its context, and the
nature of the presenting problem. Those
data are
gathered
in a relatively short period of time, typically
over a few hours to one or
two days. They
are
intended
to provide enough rudimentary knowledge of the organizational
issue to enable the two
parties to
make
informed choices about proceeding
with the contracting process.
The
diagnostic phase of OD involves a far
more extensive assessment of the
problematic or development
issue
that occurs during the entering
and contracting stage. The
diagnosis also might
discover other issues
that
need to be addressed, or it might
lead to redefining the initial
issue that was identified
during the
entering
and contracting stage. This is a prime
example of the emergent nature of the OD
process, where
things
may change as new
information is gathered and
new events occur.
Determining
the OD Team Members:
A
second activity in entering an OD relationship is to
define who are the team
members involved in
addressing
the organizational issue. Generally such organization
members are involved who
can directly
impact
the change issue, whether it is solving a particular
problem or improving an already
successful
organization
or department. Unless these members
are identified and included in the
entering and
contracting
process, they may withhold
their support for and
commitment to the OD process. In trying
to
improve
the productivity of a unionized manufacturing
plant, for example, it will
be necessary to include
union
official as well as managers
and staff personnel. It is not
unusual for an OD project to
fail because
the
team members were
inappropriately defined.
Determining
the team members can vary in
complexity depending on the situation. In those
cases where
the
organizational issue can be addressed in
a specific organization unit, members of
that unit must be
included
in the entering and contracting process.
For example, if a manager
asked for help improving
the
decision-making
process of his or her team,
the manager and team members
would be the part of the OD
process.
Unless they are actively involved in
choosing an OD practitioner and
defining the subsequent
change
process, there is little
likelihood that OD will
improve team decision
making.
Determining
the team members is more complex when the
organizational issue cannot readily be
addressed
in
a single unit. Here, it may be
necessary to include members from
multiple units, from
different
hierarchical
levels, and even from
outside of the organization. For example,
the manager of a production
department
may seek help in resolving
conflict between his or her
unit and other departments
in the
organization.
The requirement of team members
would extend beyond the boundaries of the
production
department
because that department alone cannot
resolve the issue. The team
might include members
from
all
departments involved in the conflict as
well as the executive to whom
all of the departments report.
If
that
interdepartmental conflict also involved
key suppliers and customers
from outside of the firm,
the
team
might include members of those
groups.
In
such complex situations, OD practitioners
need to gather additional
information about the organization
to
determine the relevant team members,
generally as part of the preliminary
data collection that
typically
occurs
when clarifying the issue to be
addressed. When examining company
records or interviewing
personnel,
practitioners can seek to identify the
key members and organizational units
that need to be
involved.
For example, they can ask
organization members such question as who
can directly impact
the
organizational
issue. Who has a vested
interest in it? Who has the
power to approve or reject the OD
effort?
Answers to those questions
can help determine who is
the relevant team for the entering
and
contracting
stage, although the members
may change during the later
stages of the OD process as new
data
are
gathered and changes occur.
If so, participants may have to
return to and modify this
initial stage of the
OD
effort.
Selecting
an OD Practitioner:
The
last activity involved in entering an OD
relationship is selecting an OD practitioner
who has the
expertise
and experience to work with
members on the organizational issue.
Unfortunately, little
systematic
advice
is available on how to choose a
competent OD professional, whether from
inside or outside of the
organization.
Perhaps
the best criteria for selecting,
evaluating, and developing OD
practitioners are those suggested
by
the
late Gordon Lippitt, a pioneering
practitioner in the field. Lippitt listed
areas that managers
should
consider
before selecting a practitioner,
including the ability of the consultant to
form sound interpersonal
relationships,
the degree of focus on the problem, the
skills of the practitioner relative to the problem,
the
extent
that the consultant clearly informs the
client as to his or her role
and contribution, and whether
the
practitioner
belongs to a professional association.
References from other
clients are highly
important. A
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client
may not like the
consultant's work, but it is critical to
know the reasons for both
pleasure and
displeasure.
One important consideration is whether the consultant
approaches the organization with
openness
and an insistence on diagnosis or whether
the practitioner appears to have a
fixed program that is
applicable
to almost any organization.
Certainly,
OD consulting is as much a person
specialization as it is a task
specialization. The OD
professional
needs not only a repertoire of
technical skills but also
the personality and interpersonal
competence
to use himself or herself as an instrument of
change. Regardless of technical
training, the
consultant
must be able to maintain a boundary
position, coordinating among
various units and
departments
and mixing disciplines,
theories, technology, and research
findings in an organic rather than
a
mechanical
way. The practitioner is
potentially the most important OD
technology available.
Thus,
in selecting an OD practitioner, perhaps
the most important issue is the
fundamental question, how
effective
has the person been in the
past, with what kinds of organizations,
using what kinds of techniques?
In
other words, references must
be checked. Interpersonal relationships
are tremendously important,
but
even
con artists have excellent
interpersonal relationships and
skills.
The
burden of choosing an effective OD
practitioner should not rest
entirely with the client
organization.
Consultants
also bear a heavy responsibility
for seeking an appropriate match
between their skills
and
knowledge
and what the organization or department needs.
Few managers are
sophisticated enough to
detect
or to understand subtle differences in
expertise among OD professionals,
and they often do not
understand
the difference between intervention
specialties. Thus, practitioners should
help educate
potential
clients, being explicit about their
strengths and weaknesses and
about their range of
competence.
If
OD professionals realize that a
good match does not
exist, they should inform managers
and help them
find
more suitable help.
Developing
a Contract:
The
activities of entering an OD relationship are a
necessary prelude to developing an OD contract.
They
define
the major focus for contracting,
including the relevant parties. Contracting is a
natural extension of
the
entering process and clarifies
how the OD process will
proceed. It typically establishes the
expectations
of
the parties, the time and resources
that will be expended, and
the ground rules under which the
parties
will
operate.
The
goal of contracting is to make a good
decision about how to carry
out the OD process. It can
be
relatively
informal and involve only a
verbal agreement between the client
and OD practitioner. A
team
leader
with OD skills, for example,
may voice his or her
concerns to members about how the
team is
functioning.
After
some discussion, they might
agree to devote one hour of
future meeting time to diagnosing the
team
with
the help of the leader. Here, entering
and contracting are done together
informally. In other
cases,
contracting
can be more protracted and
result in a formal document.
That typically occurs
when
organizations
employ outside OD practitioners. Government
agencies, for example,
generally have
procurement
regulations that apply to contracting
with outside
consultants.
Regardless
of the level of formality, all OD
processes require some form of
explicit contracting that
result
in
either a verbal or a written agreement.
Such contracting clarifies the client's
and the practitioner's
expectations
about how the OD process will
take place. Unless there is
mutual understanding and
agreement
about the process, there is considerable
risk that someone's expectations
will be unfilled.
That
can
lead to reduced commitment and support,
to misplaced action, or to premature
termination of the
process.
The
contracting step in OD generally
addresses three key areas:
what each party expects to gain
from the
OD
process, the time and resources
that will be devoted to it,
and the ground rules for
working together.
Mutual
Expectations:
This
part of the contracting process focuses
on the expectations of the client and the OD
practitioner. The
client
states the services and
outcomes to be provided by the OD
practitioner and describes what
the
organization
expects from the process and
the consultant. Clients usually
can describe the
desired
outcomes,
such as decreased turnover or higher
job satisfaction. Encouraging them to
state their wants in
the
form of outcomes, working
relationships, and personal
accomplishments can facilitate the
development
of
a good contract.
The
OD practitioner also should state what he
or she expects to gain from
the OD process. This can
include
opportunities to try new
interventions, report the results to
other potential clients, and
receive
appropriate
compensation or recognition.
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Time
and Resources:
To
accomplish change, the organization and
the OD practitioner must commit time and
resources to the
effort.
Each must be clear about how
much energy and how
many resources will be
dedicated to the
change
process. Failure to make explicit the
necessary requirements of a change
process can quickly ruin
an
OD
effort. For example, a client
may clearly state that the
assignment involves diagnosing the
causes of
poor
productivity in a work group. However,
the client may expect the practitioner to
complete the
assignment
without talking to the workers.
Typically, clients want to know
how much time will be
necessary
to complete the assignment, which
needs to be involved, how
much it will cost, and so
on.
Resources
can be divided into two
parts. Essential requirements
are things that are
absolutely necessary if
the
change process is to be successful.
From the practitioner's perspective, they
can include access to
key
people
or information, enough time to do the job,
and commitment from certain
people. The
organization's
essential requirements might include a
speedy diagnosis or assurances
that the project will
be
conducted
at the lowest price. Being
clear about the constraints on
carrying out the assignment
will
facilitate
the contracting process and improve the
chances for success.
Desirable requirements are
those
things
that would be nice to have
but are not absolutely
necessary, such as access to
special resources and
written
rather than verbal reports.
Ground
Rules:
The
final part of the contracting process
involves specifying how the client
and the OD practitioner
will
work
together. The parameters established
may include such issues as
confidentiality, if and how the
OD
practitioner
will become involved in
personal or interpersonal issues, how to
terminate the relationship, and
whether
the practitioner is supposed to make
expert recommendations or help the
manager make
decisions.
For
internal consultants, organizational
politics make it especially
important to clarify issues of
how to
handle
sensitive information and
how to deliver bad news."
Such process issues are as
important as the
needed
substantive changes. Failure to address
the concerns may mean that
the client or the practitioner
has
inappropriate assumptions about
how the process will
unfold.
Application
1: Contracting at Charity Medical
Center
Charity
Medical Center (CMC), a five
hundred-bed acute-care hospital, was part
of the Jefferson Hospital
Corporation
(JHC). JHC, which operated several
long-term and acute-care facilities
and was sponsored by
a
large
religious organization, had recently been
formed and was trying to
establish accounting and
finance,
materials
management, and human
resources systems to manage
and coordinate the different facilities.
Of
particular
concern to CMC, however, was a
market share that had
been declining steadily for
six months.
Senior
management recognized that
other hospitals in the area
were newer, had better facilities,
were more
"user
friendly," and had captured
the interest of referring physicians. In
the context of JHC's
changes,
CMC
invited several consultants,
including an external OD practitioner
named John Murray, to
make
presentations
on how a total quality
management process might be implemented
in the hospital.
John
conducted an initial interview
with CMC's vice president of
patient-care services, Joan
Grace. Joan
noted
that the hospital's primary advantage
was its designation as a level-one
trauma center. CMC
offered
people
needing emergency care for
major trauma their best
chance for survival. "Unfortunately,"
Joan said,
"the
reputation of the hospital is that once
we save a patient's life, we tend to
forget they are
here."
Perceptions
of patient-care quality were
low and influenced by the age
and decor of the physical
plant.
CMC
had been one of the original
facilities in the metropolitan area.
Finally, Joan suggested that
the
hospital
had lost a substantial amount of money
last year and considerable
pressure was coming from
JHC
to
turn things around.
John
thanked Joan for her time
and asked for additional
materials that might help
him better understand
the
hospital. Joan provided a corporate
mission statement, a recent
strategic planning document,
an
organization
chart, and an analysis of
recent performance. John also
sought permission to interview
other
members
of the hospital and the corporate office to
get as much information as
possible for his
presentation
to the hospital's senior management. He
interviewed the hospital president, observed
one of
the
nursing units, and spoke with the
human resources vice
president from the corporate
office.
The
interviews and documents provided
important information. First, the
documents revealed that
CMC
was
not one hospital but two. A
small, 150-bed hospital located in the
suburbs also reported to the
president
of CMC, and several members
of the hospital's staff held managerial positions at
both hospitals.
Second,
last year's strategic plan included a
budget for initiating a patient-care
quality improvement
process.
Budget
responsibility for the project was
assigned to Joan Grace's
department. Third, the mission
statement
was
a standard expression of values
and was heavily influenced by the religious group's
beliefs. Fourth, the
performance
reports confirmed both poor financial
results and decreasing
market share.
John's
interviews and observations pointed
out several additional
pieces of information. First, the
corporate
organization,
JHC, truly was in a state of
flux. There were clear goals
and objectives for each of
the
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hospitals,
but patient, physician, and
employee satisfaction measures,
human resources policies,
financial
practices,
and material logistics were
still being established. Second, the
management and nursing staff
heads
at CMC were extremely
busy--usually attending meetings for
most of the day. In fact,
Joan's
secretary
kept a notebook dedicated to tracking
who was meeting where
and when. Third, a
large
consulting
firm had just been
awarded a contract to do "job redesign"
work in two departments of
the
hospital.
And fourth, most of the nursing units
operated under traditional and
somewhat outdated nursing
management
principles.
In
developing his presentation, John thought
about several issues. For
example, the relevant client
would
be
difficult to identify. Joan
Grace was clearly
responsible for the project
and its success, but the
president,
referring
physicians, the suburban hospital, and
the corporate office were important
stakeholders in a TQM
process
and needed a voice if it was to
succeed. In addition, the presenting
problem was a decline in
market
share.
The job redesign contract
awarded to the other consulting firm
seemed disconnected from the
TQM
effort,
and both efforts seemed
disconnected from the market
share problem. John wondered how
the
hospital
viewed the relationships among total
quality management, job
design, and market share. He
also
questioned
whether he was the appropriate consultant for
CMC. The firm doing the
job redesign used a
packaged
approach to change that
conflicted with John's
OD-based philosophy.
Using
the information gathered and
his reflections on the project, John gave
his presentation to senior
management
about implementing a total quality
management process at CMC.
His presentation included a
history
of the quality movement and how it
had been applied to other
health-care organizations.
Several
examples
of the gains made in patient
satisfaction, clinical outcomes (such as
decreased infection rates),
and
physician
satisfaction were incorporated. He noted
that implementing a quality process
was a major
organizational
change, requiring a thorough
diagnosis of the hospital, a considerable commitment
of
resources,
and a high level of involvement by
senior management. Without
such involvement, it was
not
reasonable
to expect the kinds of results he had
described, John also suggested
that total quality
management
was capable of addressing
certain problems but was
not designed to address
directly such
broader
performance issues as market
share.
Finally,
John described his track
record at implementing quality
improvement process in
health-care
organizations.
He shared several references
with the group members and
encouraged them to talk
with
former
clients regarding his style
and impact. John also noted
that he had been referred to
CMC by the
religious
organization that sponsored the hospital
system and that it was
aware of his work in
another
medical
facility.
John
Murray's presentation to the senior
management team at CMC,
based on the information outlined
in
Application
4.1, was well received,
and patient-care vice
president Joan Grace asked
John to meet with her
to
discuss how the change
process might go forward. At the
meeting, John thanked Joan for
the
opportunity
to work with CMC and
suggested that the next year
or two represented a challenging time
for
the
hospital's management. He identified
several knotty issues that
needed to be discussed before
work
could
begin. Most important the
hospital's rush to implement a total
quality management process
was
admirable,
but he was worried that it
lacked an appropriate base of knowledge.
Although performance
and
market
share were the big issues
facing the hospital, the relationship between
those problems and a
quality
program
was not clear. In addition,
even if a TQM process made
sense, managers and nursing
heads were
frustrated
by their inability to influence change
because of their busy
meeting schedules. A
quality
improvement
process might solve some of
those problems but certainly
not all of them.
Joan
acknowledged that both
performance and frustration
with change were problems
that needed to be
addressed.
She explained that the hospital wanted
help to improve the quality of
patient care and to
increase
patient, employee, and physician
satisfaction with the hospital.
Improvements in those areas
were
expected
to produce important gains in hospital
performance. Joan asked John if he could
generate a
proposal
that addressed those issues
as well as managerial frustration
with the inability to make
necessary
changes.
John
agreed to put a proposal in writing
but suggested that it would
be helpful to discuss first what
should
be
included in it. John thought that
discussing several issues
now would improve the
chances of getting
started
quickly. He outlined several
issues that the proposal would cover.
First, the hospital should
thoroughly
diagnose the reasons for
market-share decline, the current level of
patient-care quality,
and
managerial
frustration with making changes.
That diagnosis would require
access to the corporate officer's
at
JHC to discuss their relationships
with CMC. In addition,
several managers and
employees of the
hospital,
as well as some physicians
needed to be interviewed. Second, the proposed
job redesign effort
being
conducted by the other consulting firm
should be postponed. Finally, CMC
management should
meet
for two days to examine the
information generated by the diagnosis
and to make a joint
decision
about
whether a total quality management
process made sense.
Joan
looked uncomfortable. John's requirement
seemed unreasonable given that the
hospital simply wanted
to
improve patient-care quality
and stakeholder satisfaction.
For example, getting the senior
administrators
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to
commit to two days away from
the hospital would be difficult. Everyone
was busy, and finding a
time
when
they could all meet for
that long was nearly
impossible. In addition, there
was a sense of urgency
in
the
hospital to begin the process right away.
Collecting information seemed like a
waste of time. Finally,
and
perhaps most important
postponing the job redesign
effort was a sensitive
issue. The project
had
strong
political support, and the other
consultants had provided a
clear ten-step process and
timetable for
the
work
design
changes.
John
told Joan that he
appreciated her concerns and
her willingness to confront
these issues. He explained
that
his requests were necessary
if the prospect was to be successful
and that he had thought
carefully about
them.
Collecting the diagnostic information
was, in fact, the first step
in any quality management
process.
The
very basis of a TQM effort was
data-based decision making. To begin a
quality process without
valid
information
violated fundamental principles of the approach.
More important to proceed
without that
information
could very well mean that the
wrong change would be implemented.
John suggested, for
instance,
that the market share
problem could result from the
way CMC was treating the
physicians. If that
were
true, a quality program would be
inappropriate and costly. Instead, a
program to improve the
relationships
with physicians might
provide a better return on CMC's
investment.
The
two-day meeting was therefore very
important. Once appropriate data
were collected, the
senior
managers
could decide, based on fact, what
exactly should be done to address hospital
performance;
employee,
patient and physician
satisfaction; and managerial
frustration. John explained that a
quality
management
process, if necessary, required attention
to CMC's structure, measurement, and
reward
systems
as well as its culture. The two-day
meeting of the senior management
team would permit a
full
explanation
of the TQM process a description of the necessary
resources, and a discussion of
the
commitment
necessary to implement it. Following
that meeting, he could provide a
more explicit outline
of
the
change process.
Finally,
John acknowledged that the politically
sensitive nature of the job
redesign program made resolving
this
issue more difficult. He explained
his belief that any
redesign effort that did
not take into account
a
potential
TQM process likely would
have to be redone. He argued
that to proceed blindly with
a job
redesign
effort might result in money
spent for nothing.
Joan
believed that John could have
access to the consulting firm doing
job redesign but that
there was little
chance
of postponing the program for very long.
Again acknowledging the political support
for the
program,
John offered to coordinate with the other
consultants but strongly urged
Joan to postpone
initiating
the project until after the two-day
management meeting. Joan
said she understood his
concerns
but
stated that she could
not make that decision
without talking with the
senior management
team.
John
accepted that and asked if
his other requests now
made better sense. Joan replied
that a two-day
meeting
did seem important and
worth the effort. In addition,
access to the corporate officers,
employees,
managers,
and physicians was a
reasonable request and could be
arranged. Responding to John's
example
of
a physician relations program, Joan
informed him that although
CMC had such a program, it
was not
very
effective because managers had
become too busy to pay
attention to it.
At
this point, Joan had to go to another
meeting. They adjourned with the
understanding that Joan
would
speak
with the other managers and
get back to John. A week
later, Joan called and
agreed to John's
requests.
She asked him to submit a
written proposal covering the issues
discussed as soon as
possible.
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