Diagnosing
Diagnosing
Diagnosing
4-4
Elements of an Effective Contract
• Mutual expectations are clear
• Outcomes and deliverables
• Publishing cases and results
• Involvement of stakeholders
• Time and Resources
• Access to client, managers, members
• Access to information
• Ground Rules
• Confidentiality
4-5
Interpersonal Issues of Entry
• Client Issues
• Exposed and Vulnerable
• Inadequate
• Fear of losing control
• OD Practitioner Issues
• Empathy
• Worthiness and Competency
• Dependency
• Overidentification
4-6
Diagnosis Defined
5-7
Open Systems Model
Environment
Feedback
5-8
Properties of Systems
5-9
Diagnosing
Organizational Systems
• The key to effective diagnosis is…
• Know what to look for at each organizational
level
• Recognize how the levels affect each other
5-10
Organization-Level
Diagnostic Model
Inputs Design Components Outputs
Technology
General
Organization
Effectiveness
Environment Strategy Structure
Industry
Structure
HR Measurement
Systems Systems
5-11
Key Alignment Questions
5-12
Organization-Level Inputs
• General Environment
• External forces that can directly or indirectly
affect the attainment of organizational
objectives
• Social, technological, ecological, economic, and
political factors
• Industry Structure
• External forces (task environment) that can
directly affect the organization
• Customers, suppliers, substitute products, new
entrants, and rivalry among competitors 5-13
Organization Design Components
• Strategy
• the way an organization uses its resources (human, economic, or
technical) to gain and sustain a competitive advantage
• Structure
• how attention and resources are focused on task accomplishment
• Technology
• the way an organization converts inputs into products and
services
5-15
Organization Design Components
• Organization Culture
• The basic assumptions, values, and norms shared by organization members
• Represents both an “outcome” of organization design and a “foundation” or
“constraint” to change
5-16
Outputs
• Organization Performance
• e.g., profits, profitability, stock price
• Productivity
• e.g., cost/employee, cost/unit, error rates, quality
• Stakeholder Satisfaction
• e.g., market share, employee satisfaction, regulation compliance
5-17
Alignment
• Diagnosis involves understanding each of the parts in the
model and then assessing how the elements of the
strategic orientation align with each other and with the
inputs.
5-18
Group-Level Diagnostic Model
Group Performance
Composition Norms
6-19
Group-Level Design Components
• Goal Clarity
• extent to which group understands its objectives
• Task Structure
• the way the group’s work is designed
• Team Functioning
• the quality of group dynamics among members
• Group Composition
• the characteristics of group members
• Performance Norms
• the unwritten rules that govern behavior 6-20
Group-Level Outputs
6-21
Individual-Level Diagnostic Model
6-22
Individual-Level Design Components
• Skill Variety
• The range of activities and abilities required for task
completion
• Task Identity
• The ability to see a “whole” piece of work
• Task Significance
• The impact of work on others
• Autonomy
• The amount of freedom and discretion
• Feedback about Results
• Knowledge of task performance outcomes
6-23
The Diagnostic Relationship
Core Activities
7-25
Sampling
7-26
Questionnaires
• Major Advantages
• Responses can be quantified and summarized
• Large samples and large quantities of data
• Relatively inexpensive
• Major Potential Problems
• Little opportunity for empathy with subjects
• Predetermined questions -- no change to change
• Overinterpretation of data possible
• Response biases possible
7-27
Interviews
• Major Advantages
• Adaptive -- allows customization
• Source of “rich” data
• Empathic
• Process builds rapport with subjects
• Major Potential Problems
• Relatively expensive
• Bias in interviewer responses
• Coding and interpretation can be difficult
• Self-report bias possible
7-28
Observations
• Major Advantages
• Collects data on actual behavior, rather than reports of behavior
• Real time, not retrospective
• Adaptive
• Major Potential Problems
• Coding and interpretation difficulties
• Sampling inconsistencies
• Observer bias and questionable reliability
• Can be expensive
7-29
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
7-30
Analysis Techniques
• Qualitative Tools
• Content Analysis
• Force-field Analysis
• Quantitative Tools
• Descriptive Statistics
• Measures of Association (e.g., correlation)
• Difference Tests
7-31
Force-Field Analysis of Work Group Performance
Forces for Change Forces for Status Quo
Desired Performance
Better raw materials Fear of change
8-35
Survey Feedback Process
8-36
Limitations of Survey Feedback
• Ambiguity of Purpose
• Distrust
• Unacceptable Topics
• Organizational Disturbances
8-37