organizational development, od, intervention process (from a case study)
TRANSCRIPT
REQUIREMENT
This is an individual assignment. Learners have to analyse the given case and answer all the attached questions. This case contribute 60% of the total course work marks. Each question carries different marks and the marks are allocated as indicated at the end of each question.
Case Study
An HR Director asked us to help resolve conflict between the HR and Finance departments. While acknowledging that personality differences existed between the two Dept. Heads, the conflict also involved several team members in each department. The groups needed to interact on a variety of projects and poor communication was impacting morale and productivity. We interviewed each Director to understand their perspective about the conflict. We also interviewed a couple of key team members from each department. To gather further advance information for the meeting, we developed a short online survey for the two groups. Each person was asked to assess their group’s performance and the performance of the other group on various communication topics. They were also asked to describe how they viewed themselves, how they viewed the other group, and how they felt the other group viewed them.
The data from the mini survey was summarized and sent to members of both teams a couple of days prior to the meeting. All department members also completed an on line Myers Briggs assessment. The full day workshop began with a two-hour, Myers-Briggs communications workshop with all Department members. This helped people understand that all the preferences are needed to obtain best results and to appreciate the different preferences of their peers and leaders. We gave them information about how to communicate effectively with different types. The rest of the morning was spent reviewing the results of the survey and breaking into small, action planning teams with HR and Finance represented on each team. The groups were asked to look at the data from each group’s perspective and then develop some specific plans to improve communications. The morning session was closed out by reassembling the entire group and asking each person to share something they personally planned to do to help improve future communications.
In the afternoon, our facilitator met for a coaching session with just the two Directors. The survey data was reviewed with them and the morning workshop debriefed. The Directors were also asked to talk honestly about what their personal contributions to the conflict issues were and to brainstorm ways that they and the two groups could begin to improve their inter-group communications. The feedback on the workshop from the team members and the Directors was very positive. They felt that the honest discussions about communication issues would help them improve. We checked back with the Directors two months after the workshop and they indicated that inter-group communications had improved dramatically. They were pleased that each group’s perceptions of the other group were now more positive as were their own understanding of each other.
Source: http://www.plummerhr.com/documents/Cases.pdf
Based on the above case, answer the following questions:
a) Explain the diagnosis process in this case and how it helps in the intervention.(10 marks)
BMOD5103 – Intervention Process Nor Helmee Bin Abd Halim
b) Using relevant examples, discuss the ethical issues that you need to consider when dealing with the diagnosis and feedback process.
(10 marks)
c) Discuss with appropriate theoretical foundation, the types of intervention used in the above case. (15 marks)
d) In your opinion, what are the factors that may contribute to the conflict between the HR and Finance Departments?
(15 marks)
e) What are the factors that you need to consider when selecting the right intervention strategy?(10 marks)
[TOTAL MARKS : 60]
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1. Table of ContentsAbstract................................................................................................................31. Introduction..................................................................................................3
1.1 Organization, OD and Intervention Defined.....................................................................31.2 General Model of OD Process (ODP)...............................................................................31.3 Diagnosis Defined.............................................................................................................41.4 Diagnosing Organizational Systems.................................................................................51.5 The Diagnosis Technique used in the Case......................................................................6
1.5.1 Data Gathering...........................................................................................................61.5.2 Problem Identification and Interpretation..................................................................81.5.3 Intervention – Feedback and Solution.......................................................................9
1.6 Summary.........................................................................................................................102. The Ethical Issues in Diagnosis and Feedback Process..........................10
2.1 Personality Differences and Privacy...............................................................................102.2 Confidentiality................................................................................................................112.3 Technical ineptness.........................................................................................................112.4 Misuse of Data................................................................................................................122.5 Misrepresentation and Collusion....................................................................................132.6 Summary.........................................................................................................................13
3. Theoretical Foundation and Types of Intervention................................143.1 Approaches to Consultation............................................................................................14
3.1.1 Doctor-patient Model...............................................................................................143.2 Types of Interventions....................................................................................................16
3.2.1 Individuals...............................................................................................................163.2.2 Teams.......................................................................................................................173.2.3 Organizational..........................................................................................................18
3.3 Summary.........................................................................................................................184. What's causing the conflict?......................................................................18
4.1 Misalignment of Business Unit Goal..............................................................................194.2 Unclear Expectations......................................................................................................194.3 Personality Differences...................................................................................................204.4 Organization Culture and Subculture..............................................................................204.5 Summary.........................................................................................................................21
5. Considerations when selecting the right Intervention Strategy (pg196)215.1 Organization Readiness...................................................................................................215.2 Unmatched Strategy to the Data and Diagnosis..............................................................225.3 Deciding where to Intervene...........................................................................................225.4 Sequence of Activities....................................................................................................235.5 Conclusion......................................................................................................................24
References..........................................................................................................25
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Abstract
This paper discusses the OD process which includes diagnosis and feedback process, ethical
issues, theoretical foundation and conflict. The discussion is based on the given case where two
departments, HR and Finance are facing internal conflict which causing a delay on multiple
projects. The issue is also impacting the morale and the productivity of the team members.
Ineffective communications between the two departments has been identified as the primary
source of the conflict. The paper further investigate and identify the root cause of the conflict, as
well as and the activities involved in the intervention process. The paper also discuss the factors
to consider when selecting the right intervention strategy.
1. Introduction
1.1 Organization, OD and Intervention Defined.
A simple definition of an organization defined by researchers is “an organized or cohesive group
of people working together (employee) to achieve commonly agreed goals and objectives”. To
develop and improve efficiency as well as expand productivity of the said group of people,
organizational development and change (OD) is then introduced. OD focus is to make
organizations better by solving problems within the organization or as a way to analyze a process
and find a more efficient way of implementing it.
According to Richard Beckhard (1969), OD is defined as an effort (1) planned, (2)
organization-wide, and (3) managed from the top, to (4) increase organization effectiveness and
health through (5) planned interventions in the organization’s “processes,” using behavioral-
science knowledge. While Anderson (2015) defined OD as a process of increasing organizational
effectiveness and facilitating personal and organizational change through the use of
interventions driven by social and behavioral science knowledge.
1.2 General Model of OD Process (ODP)
There are many versions of an overall model of the OD in the literature, the one used by
Anderson (2015) is depicted as in Figure 1.1. Different practitioners may label the phases
differently but the one shown in Figure 1.1 is consistent with what most OD practitioners do.
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Figure 1.1 – Stages of OD Process (ODP)
The model looks like a linear process, but OD practitioners are not necessarily to follow
step-by-step. They can revisit to different stages throughout the engagement as needed. The
components of the OD model will be further discussed subsequently.
1.3 Diagnosis Defined
Diagnosis process is the most important part before OD interventions take place. The primary
objective is to provide diagnostic information to the organizational leadership and OD consultant
which to be used for decisions regarding what OD interventions are appropriate going forward.
According to Nielsen and Abildgaard (2013), diagnosis is defined as a collaborative process
between organizational members and the OD consultant to collect pertinent information, analyze
it, and draw conclusions for action planning and intervention. The process must be conducted
thoroughly and accurately in order to answer the question of “What is the current state of the
situation? What is causing the conflict between HR and Finance departments and to how mitigate
the situation?”
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Evaluation and Exit
Intervention
Feedback Diagnosis
Data Gathering
Contracting
Entry
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1.4 Diagnosing Organizational Systems
According to Cummings and Worley (2008), organizations can be diagnosed at three levels. The
highest level is the overall organization structure. The next level is the group or teams and the
lowest level is the individual, position or job. Figure 2.1 illustrates how a diagnosis occurs at
different organization systems. For each level, it shows 1) the inputs that the system has to work
with, 2) the key design components of the transformation subsystem, and 3) the system’s
outputs.
Figure 2.1 – Diagnosing Organizational Systems.
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1.5 The Diagnosis Technique used in the Case
In a typical situation, the diagnosis process involves 1) data gathering, 2) Identification of
problem areas, 3) Interpretation and 4) solution.
1.5.1 Data Gathering
The approach used by the HR Director is known as “doctor-patient-model” in OD process. The
director hired an OD consultant and asked the consultant to resolve the conflict between HR and
Finance departments. Anderson (2015) writes about the responsibilities of the OD consultant
which include gathering data, processing information, making a diagnosis and propose the right
solutions for the organization. The implementation of the solution relies on the patient or client.
Cummings & Worley (2008) argue that the quality of information gathered is the critical part of
the intervention process. The common methods used include interviews, questionnaires or
survey, focus groups, observations, and unobtrusive measures. At this stage, the consultant
performed the following steps;
1.5.1.1 Interviews
The OD consultant conducted interviews for two groups of people in the organization to
understand more about the situation. Both HR and Finance Directors were interviewed and the
second group was the key members from both departments. Interviews are the most common
method of data gathering in OD. Anderson (2015), explained the one-on-one meeting is where
the consultant gathers information about individual stories and perspectives of organizational
members and explore their history, experiences, beliefs and attitudes in details. While Seidman
(2006) argues accuracy of data gathering through interviews relies heavily on cooperation from
organizational members who will only open up to discuss serious issues if they trust the
interviewer.
Though interviews are frequently used in the process, there are many factors contributing
to the success of this method. Anderson (2015) mentioned that OD consultants must have
excellent interpersonal skills in conducting interviews. It can be threatening, as members may
feel defensive if they are personally involved in a problem. Interviewers must be able to control
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the situation, be an active listener as well as a good conversationalist. The interviewers may
encounter a different type of situation during the interview session. HR personnel may have a lot
of things to say and share with the interviewer, and sometimes the topic can be derailed from the
main objectives. A good conversationalist must be able to bring the interviewee back on track
else it creates more issues in the process like unable to complete the session on time which then
affects others work schedule. Contradict to the above scenario, interviewing the finance could
not be exciting as interviewing HR due to personality differences and so on. The role of the
interviewer is to ignite the conversation to make the session more interactive, hence the
importance of being a good conversationalist.
1.5.1.2 Online Survey or Questionnaire
The second approach used by the consultant is developing a short online survey for both HR and
Finance departments. Survey or questionnaire is another common method used in data gathering.
The history goes back to an empirical study by Mann (1957) where the survey used has
developed as a means by which consultants can solicit input from a large number of
organizational members at once. According to Anderson (2015), surveys address a broad number
of subjects and explore a wide range of issues, as opposed to an investigation of one or two
issues.
Consultants usually use this method as a follow up from the interviews or focus group to
understand how prevalent the issues are that have been brought up in interviews. By combining
survey with other methods, surveys can provide breadth where others provide depth. (Anderson,
2015). This method is known for its efficiency, with the use of Internet or intranet, survey can be
completed quicker and responses can be obtained within a short period of time. It remains as one
of the most popular ways in the data gathering process.
On the case, the consultant developed and conducted an online survey to be filled out by
all team members from both departments. The survey covers many areas of performance
assessment, evaluation of own group’s performance versus the performance of another group on
various communication topics. Each team member was also asked to describe how they viewed
themselves, how they viewed the other group and how they felt the other group viewed them.
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1.5.1.3 Myers Briggs assessment
Besides interviewing and survey, the consultant also conducted Myers-Briggs Type Indicator
(MBTI) personality and behavioral assessment. The MBTI or Myers-Briggs Type Indicator was
developed in the 1920s based on the psychological theories of Carl Jung, who believed that
“people are different in fundamental ways even though they all have the same multitude of
instincts (archetypes) to drive them from within” (Keirsey & Bates, 1984). MBTI is the most
widely used behavioral assessments in the world for helping the team understand themselves as
well as to appreciate the different preferences of their peers and leaders, thus build better work
relationships.
The MBTI assessment helps both HR and Finance team members to understand that each
individual has different personality types or preferences. It is important for each team member to
appreciate the different preferences of their peers and leaders. In the workshop, the consultants
use the MBTI results as an aid and guidance for people about how to communicate effectively
with different personality preferences among team members and peers.
By applying this method, the participants can confidently interact with each other
according to their personality preferences. For instance, most HR personnel can be extrovert
preferences, therefore the effective communication with HR personnel is via telephone or in-
person. Finance personnel in contrast, are introvert preferences, communicating in writing,
including email, is the preferred mode of communication with an introvert person. Personality
preferences is inborn but individuals can develop traits and habits that differ from the description
of their preferences.
1.5.2 Problem Identification and Interpretation
Based on the information gathered from the data gathering stage, the consultant summarized lack
of interpersonal skills in communication among peers and leaders, own assumptions and
perceptions about each other have been the main contributing factors to the poor productivity and
low morale of both HR and Finance departments. The conflicts also impacting the performance
of multiple projects they are collaborating.
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Being the leaders of the HR and Finance department, both directors are seen to work in
their own world, not synchronized with each other on the deliverables that both departments
have to deliver. Goals and objectives are not well communicated from top-down leaving each
team member with unclear expectations, undefined roles and responsibilities to achieve the
common goals of the departments.
1.5.3 Intervention – Feedback and Solution
In the data analysis step, the consultant summarized the information and shared with all team
members from both departments. The consultant proposed a one day workshop for the
intervention. The workshop was divided into two sessions. In the morning, the consultant
conducted Myers-Briggs communication workshop addressing individual personality preferences
and guidelines on effective communication according to preferences. Each individual is unique
in every way, with the help of MBTI concept, the consultant explained to all department
members that all preferences are needed to obtain the best results from both departments. It is
also important for every team members to appreciate the different preferences among them
including their leaders.
After the MBTI workshop, the online survey results were discussed and the participants
were divided into smaller groups. The groups were required to develop specific action plans how
to improve communications. The consultant then regroups them back and asked each person to
share their individual plan to help improve future communications.
The second session, the consultant conducted a coaching session with both HR and
Finance Directors. They were required to discuss about their personal contributions to the
conflict issues and brainstorm ways for the two groups to improve their inter-group
communications. Two months after the workshop, the Directors indicate that inter-group
communications have improved dramatically. They have positive perceptions among each other
as well as their own understanding of each other.
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1.6 Summary
From the case, the OD consultant demonstrates how diagnostic methods are used in the diagnosis
process and prepare a suitable intervention solution for both HR and Finance departments. With
the aid of instruments like survey, MBTI and access to technology, it helped the consultant to
identify and smoothen the overall intervention process.
2. The Ethical Issues in Diagnosis and Feedback Process
According to White & Wooten (1983), ethical dilemmas or issues refer to the result of behaviors
and inappropriate actions or roles on the part of both change agents and client systems. It can
also be defined as any choice situation encountered by a change agent or client system that has
the potential to result in a breach of acceptable behavior. Ethical dilemmas occur at various
stages of OD process. White & Wooten (1983) address 31 ethical dilemmas in total, however,
specifically in diagnosis and feedback process, the issues include;
2.1 Personality Differences and Privacy
The two groups have different personality based on the nature of their work. HR department can
have a mix of people depending on their roles. For instance, payroll personnel can be secretive
and quiet, whereby talent management team is talkative and friendly. Finance department in
contrast, can be too focused with numbers, figures and facts. Due to these personality
differences, the OD consultant may get a variety of inputs during the diagnosis phase or may not
get the desired inputs at all. People who deal with sensitive information may not reveal
everything due to “invasion of privacy” policy. Whereby people from finance may provide too
brief inputs which is not usable during data analysis.
The roles of the OD consultant are very important in tackling this issue. For example, if
interview method is used, there are standard guidelines for an OD consultant to follow. Anderson
(2015) mentioned that participants should be informed in advance and they must be well
explained on the objective and purpose of conducting the interview. The interviewer must also
have the right skills in conducting interviews, otherwise low quality of inputs will be gathered.
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2.2 Confidentiality
(White & Wooten, 1983; Anderson, 2015) highlight about confidentiality issue when using the
data in the feedback meeting in a manner that violates the anonymity of the participants. In this
case, both HR and Finance Directors may want to know which quote came from which
interviewee. They would like to know specifically who provided the inputs, whether from long-
tenured employee or from a new-hirer, or it was from the HR or Finance department. The
directors may prefer to read the raw data rather than a summary prepared by the consultant, but
the situation creates an ethical dilemma for the consultant who would like to make the data
known for them to appropriately interpret and act upon the information and at the same time the
consultant also owes anonymity to the participants.
2.3 Technical ineptness
Technical ineptness is the most widely discussed by researchers as cited by White & Wooten
(1983) referring to (Benne, 1959; French & Bell, 1978; Lippitt & Lippitt, 1978; Pfeiffer & Jones,
1977; Shay, 1965; Walton & Warwick, 1973; Warwick & Kelman, 1973; Zaitman & Duncan,
1976). It occurs when OD practitioners try to implement interventions which they are not skilled
or when the client attempts a change for which it is not ready. The success factor of an OD
program is the selection of an appropriate intervention, which also depends on careful diagnosis
of the current situation. Incompetent OD consultants may not improve the situation, but merely a
waste of time, money and efforts to the organization.
Using the interview and survey steps as an example from the case, the consultants
conducting the interviews must possess great interpersonal skills. A hard and tense situation may
fall out during the consultation, especially when sharing with senior employees from both HR
and Finance departments who are already comfortable with their current way of working. He or
she may not supportive, reluctant to cooperate by telling everything is “OK” and always try to
end the conversation early. This is where the importance of technical skills is needed from the
consultants. The consultants should have the right skills to motivate the person to speak up and
share their opinion.
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From a different angle, the online survey method used should follow the current standard.
It must be simple, understandable, not too many questions and easy to navigate from one page to
another page. If the survey contains too complex or too long then the participant will lose interest
in completing the survey. The consultant must use suitable questionnaires, relevant to the
situation and the most important thing the outcome or result of the survey can be used in the
intervention process.
2.4 Misuse of Data
In the data analysis phase, the consultant faces the dilemma of whether interpreting the data in a
way that genuinely reflects the data or the consultant’s own choices on issues or concern. The
consultant may alter, delete or distorts particular points in the data. White and Wooten (1983)
highlighted the situation may happen to an internal consultant or a change agent who has a
personal stake in what data the client sees and chooses to address.
Both directors in this case demonstrate lack of leadership skills in terms of
communicating the goals and objective to their subordinates which contribute to the conflict.
Some of the team members may have highlighted the issue during the interview as well as in the
survey form. The consultant analyzing the data, may have interpreted the input wrongly or can
be over exaggerated, which is not relevant to the issue. It may introduce a different type of issue
like, breaching code of ethical conduct.
In a different scenario, the handwritten notes of the consultant from the interviews and
the feedback from the survey must be stored and kept in a safe place. The information could be
leaked or stolen, and irresponsibility person can manipulate the data for personal gain or any
other reasons. It is important to have a second pair of eyes to recheck and analyze and
information and ensure the findings are similar to what has been translated by the first
consultant. It is the same for data storage, Anderson (2015) suggested to destroy the data
immediately after the data has been analyzed.
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2.5 Misrepresentation and Collusion
In a typical scenario, misrepresentation and collusion are well-known issues in OD practice.
According to White & Wooten (1983), this situation happens when the consultant and the client
are required to decide between the options of representing all available information and
including or excluding various parties involve in the intervention process. Misrepresentation
occurs when the consultant misrepresents his or her skill base, education, experience,
certification, or specialized training, or in the opposite where the client misrepresents the
organization’s interest, need, or goal. Generally, misrepresentation is an ethical issue which
impacts the diagnosis process, especially at the data gathering stage.
Using the interview session in this case, if the consultant is not trained and not a skilled
interviewer, the data collected may not accurate as the consultant fails to ask the right questions.
The consultant may stray away, which in the end misses the objective of the interview. It is the
same for the interviewee when they fail to provide a clear background of the current situation to
the consultant. As a result, the consultant may diagnose the situation wrongly and eventually
propose an inaccurate intervention strategy.
Another example is when the consultant chooses to collude with the client by avoiding or
minimizing difficult feedback. When the consultant discovers through the data gathering process
about incompetent manager, the consultant may be reluctant to address it for fear of the
manager’s emotional response. By committing this, the consultant is not properly addressing and
highlighting his actual findings, which will impacting the intervention process.
2.6 Summary
In summary, ethical issues and dilemmas are caused largely by the nature of the relationship
between the change agent or consultant and the client. Various values held by the consultant and
the client influenced their actions. Previous studies proposed some guidelines to improve
consultant’s actions. Schein (1987, 1997, 1999) suggests few relevant principles like “everything
you do is an intervention”, “always stay in touch with the current reality”, “share the dilemma”
and “always stay in touch with the current reality”. As one of the goals of OD is to model
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openness, so both client and consultants should embrace openness to ensure success of OD
program.
3. Theoretical Foundation and Types of Intervention
As the basic theoretical foundation of OD has been covered earlier in chapter 1, the next
component to look at is the relevant theory used in the case and the organization development
intervention (ODI) process.
3.1 Approaches to Consultation
There are two common approaches or models used OD consultants. Schein (1969, 1999)
describes two approaches; 1) expert model and 2) doctor-patient model. Anderson (2015) added
another approach on top of the existing popular model, 3) mechanic model.
Expert Model – The model of consulting described by Schein (1999) as the “purchase of
expertise” or “selling and telling”. The client in this case will hire expert consultants to solve a
problem or implement a solution which has been chosen by them. For example, technology
consultants will be hired to solve technology problem. The problem has been identified by the
client for instance, “abuse of internet access by the employees” and the client will hire expert
technology consultant to propose intervention to the problem. An expert consultant is hired when
an organization does not have internal expertise to look at the issue.
Mechanic Model – Kahnweiler (2002) describes the third popular model. Simple analogy to this
model is when someone visits an auto mechanic and describes the technical difficulty he
experiences with his car to the mechanic. The mechanic acknowledges it and tells the customer
to come back after a few hours to collect his car back. In between, the mechanic uses his
expertise to fix the issue as described by his customer. The mechanic accountable for the solution
and the customer only needs to verify the solution. In OD space, the client hires a consultant to
fix an issue and then wait for the consultant to come back with a solution. The consultant is on
the losing side if the given solution is not working as he has the total accountability over it.
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3.1.1 Doctor-patient Model
The approach used in the case is based on “doctor-patient” model. The model can be illustrated
as someone is visiting a general practitioner. He will describe the pain to the doctor and the
doctor will assess by asking a series of questions. From the answers given by the patient and
through doctor’s observation, he announces the result and the solution. The patient and the
doctor feel relieved and satisfied when the problem is solved. This model is very popular and
commonly used in OD process. In OD situation, the consultant is responsible to gather data,
process information, makes a diagnosis and choosing the right intervention for his client.
From the case, the intervention process started when the HR director engaged OD
consultants to help resolving the conflict between HR and Finance departments. The HR director
explaining the difficulty of both teams interacting with each other to deliver the multiple projects
they work together. The conflict has been going on for a while which resulting delays in project
delivery as well as impacting the employees morale and team’s productivity. The HR director is
open for suggestion and ready for any change in order to improve the situation.
Based on the commonly used intervention process, the consultants started with diagnosis
process. They conducted interviews with both directors then followed with key persons from
both teams. They also set up an online survey for all team members to participate and provide
their own opinions on the issue. The consultants also conducted an MBTI assessment for each
individual from both teams.
At the problem identification and interpretation stage, the consultant highlighted about
poor communication as the main reason to the conflict. The consultant then explained the
possible factors that contribute to the conflict in the feedback stage. One of the main factors is
the personality differences among the team members of both departments. Apart from that,
unclear expectation from the leaders, cultural issue and misalignment of business unit goals.
At the solution stage, the consultant recommended a full day workshop to discuss on the
feedback given by the team members, to explain the expectations of each other, roles and
responsibilities as well as guidance on how to communicate effectively based on different type of
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personality preferences. The workshop also includes a private session with the two directors
discussing on their course of action on how to improve the inter-group communications.
3.2 Types of Interventions
There are three types of intervention techniques; 1) individual 2) groups and teams and 3)
organizational or multiple organization. Anderson (2015) writes about the differences of these
three types of intervention techniques. The case illustrates how individual and team interventions
is applied in OD process.
3.2.1 Individuals
The consultant conducted one-on-one interviews, survey and MBTI personality assessments.
One-on-one interview – The consultant conducted one-on-one interview with HR and Finance
Directors and some key persons like team manager or team leader from each department. The
consultant set an objective of the interview is to get personal insights of the current situation of
these persons.
Online survey – Although the design of the survey is not personalized but the participants have
to complete the survey individually. Each of them has to complete and submit the survey
individually based on their inputs and opinions related to the conflict. The consultant gathered
each person feedback, consolidate and summarized it as a group opinion.
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Individual Team
Organization
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MBTI - The other technique used is the MBTI personality assessment. The assessment is part of
the critical components of the diagnostic phase as the results will be analyzed and used in the
intervention program. The results identify each individual preferences and the team as part of
individual development, they will be taught on how to communicate effectively with different
type of preferences. Each individual is required to complete the assessment and the result of the
individual assessment is discussed in the workshop. Each person must know their preference as
well as their peers and leaders preferences.
Individual Action Plan – In the workshop, the consultant emphasizes active participation of each
individual to share their own action plan to help improve future communication.
Coaching – In the second session, the consultant conducted a coaching session with the two
directors. Basically, the directors were coached to be more open and look at the bigger picture
which is the project goals rather than selfish and work in silos. In the diagnosis stage, the leaders
have been found working within their circle only and less communication is seen between the
two leaders from both departments.
3.2.2 Teams
The overall focus is on HR and Finance departments. It involves from “top-down” including
every team member in both departments.
Feedback – Although the feedback is completed individually, the summary was put as a
collective inputs from all of them. The feedback represents each team perception of each other.
Workshop – The workshop is designed for teams. The team’s feedback is presented openly and
they are required to address the deficiencies among them and come out with an action plan to
improve future communication.
Communication approach between different preferences – Based on MBTI preferences, the
team is taught how to use different type of communication style when communicating with
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different type of people. They should be able to use some common sense as well as able to use
appropriate of “choice of words” in their interpersonal and inter-groups communication.
3.2.3 Organizational
Although organizational approach is not part of the case, the outcomes of the intervention
program for both teams can be set as an example for the entire organization. For example,
engineering department and sales department obviously have different characteristics and
therefore the same intervention program may apply to a larger team of the organization.
3.3 Summary
Based on the above justifications, the steps and the tasks involved in OD process are aligned
with a definition by previous researcher like Argyris (1970) who defined intervention as “to
intervene is to enter into an ongoing system of relationships, to come between or among persons,
groups, or objects for the purpose of helping them”. The more recent study defined intervention
as a deliberately planned, behavioral, theory-based actions that aim to increase an organization’s
effectiveness or efficiency (Nielsen & Abildgaard, 2013).
After the workshop, the consultant conducted a short survey to gather feedback about the
workshop. The participants including the directors provided positive response to the consultant.
It promptly indicates the teams are ready for change and the honest discussion and the
knowledge they gained from the workshop will be applied in order to improve the situation. The
consultants also checked back with them after two months, and the directors indicated the inter-
group communication had improved dramatically. They were also pleased that each groups’
perception of the other group were now more positive as were their own understanding of each
other.
4. What's causing the conflict?
HR and Finance people come from different worlds. Finance people deal with the actual, things
more specific, measurable and tangible or live under the old sayings “cash is king”. While HR is
more art than science, more “right brain” than “left brain” and often live by the motto, “people
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are our greatest asset”. The differences between these two departments have made it difficult to
find a common ground, thus the conflict. HR and Finance, in turn, should build a strong
relationship for business to be competitive advantage in the market (The Economist, 2012).
4.1 Misalignment of Business Unit Goal
Each business unit in an organization, including HR and Finance has their own goal. Typically,
one of HR business goals is to provide as much as possible training opportunity to all employees.
The training and development project obviously requires a lot of financial investment. Finance
department in turn, will have “cost-savings” as one of their business goals. Practically, business
unit goals should be aligned with the main corporate goal. When both HR and Finance personnel
do not have a clear objective of the goal, it leads to a conflict. Whenever HR requested a training
budget, Finance will turn them down.
Remediation strategy, for instance, HR to submit training budget quarterly instead of
yearly, and Finance to communicate the allocation limits so that HR as well as other departments
to work their training needs based on the allocated budget. As cited in The Economist (2012),
“Conflicts between Finance and HR often arise as one (Finance) needs rational or quantifiable
elements to measure return on investment [ROI] decisions (which are often short term), while the
other (HR) focuses more on longer-term programs with few quantifiable short-term benefits, thus
creating potential tensions”.
4.2 Unclear Expectations
Unclear expectations happens when business goal is poorly communicated from top-down. For
instance, when the goal is to offer many training opportunities, the training & development
personnel assigned to the project should come away with a strong justification of why he or she
took the training provider, to find out whether the class syllabus is current and desirable for the
job, the cost is competitive and hence onward. People will act based on assumptions if they don’t
receive a clear delineation of what is needed from them. The above scenario could happen in the
presented case with unclear expectations, HR personnel submitted incomplete justifications
which in return being rejected by the Finance without giving a solid understanding of why it's
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being rejected. The two personnel keep arguing, sending emails back-and-forth and causes a
conflict.
4.3 Personality Differences
Different people have different personality preferences, but the nature of work influenced the
personality of people more (The Economist, 2012). Every personality preference has its strengths
and weaknesses. In this context, understanding individual personality preferences will help
improving the working relationship and conflict in the organization. As previous studies
suggested, the MBTI is useful in improving conflict resolution (Coe, 1992; Hoffman, 2002 and
McCaulley, 2000).
From the case, we can see even the two directors are not talking to each other which also
followed by the followers. Their perception about each other is purely based on individual
characteristics as seen with naked eyes without really understand how to deal or approach them
based on their personality preferences. Understanding individual preferences will improve the
working relationship and helps to remove conflict in the workplace. As discussed earlier,
personality preferences is inborn but individuals can develop traits and habits that differ from the
description of their preferences. This can be achieved by going through the MBTI assessment
and learn how to communicate based on that preference as recommended by the consultants.
4.4 Organization Culture and Subculture
The management team leadership style often associated with organization culture. Great leaders
lead by example. From the case, we can assume the directors do not have a good working
relationship with each other. Both are too focused at their own world and presumably the leaders
are working in silos. This situation created a negative subculture within the organization where
both departments keep things within their own department and demonstrate less interaction with
each other. The team members are strongly bonded to each other, but not beyond their
department.
The case illustrates a great example of a negative subculture where HR and Finance
departments do not employ openness culture with each other and then leads to negative
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perception of each other. It started by the leaders and the unhealthy culture, then replicated by
their followers at the lower level. Beheshtifar & Zare (2013) mentioned that interpersonal
deficiencies are one of the factors influencing negative subculture in an organization. Negative
subculture will not bring any benefits to the organization but will destroy the organization if
intervention is not done immediately.
4.5 Summary
The above discussed justifications are the possible factors contributing to the conflict between
HR and Finance. From a different perspective, other factors may include resource scarcity,
power and conflict, role ambiguity, and so forth. Each individual in the team is responsible for
their behaviors and actions. In the event of unclear situation, ask questions and clarify with the
immediate supervisor. The leaders must demonstrate excellent leadership style as the saying
goes, great leaders lead by example.
5. Considerations when selecting the right Intervention Strategy (pg196)
According to Anderson (2015), in the early stage of OD process, many change agents or
consultants are concerned about their capability in suggesting appropriate intervention. However,
once they are into it, new challenge pops up – too many options to be selected. As mentioned by
(Dyer, 1981), “no matter how solid the diagnosis, it is not always evident which intervention is
the best”. There are many factors that need to be assessed and take into consideration.
5.1 Organization Readiness
Previous studies (Armenakis, Harris & Mossholder, 1993; McLachlin, 1999), refer readiness to
the involvement, willingness, energy, time, capability and motivation of the organization to
change. Any intervention proposal is unlikely to be able to be implemented if the organization is
not ready or willing to change. While other researchers (Dyer, 1981; Schein, 1999) suggested to
start with the change when the organization is willing to change in a certain direction and not
another, or has preference of one intervention over another.
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Organization’s capability and competence to change also affect the readiness for change.
Recalling the earlier example – “Abusing internet access”, if the organization does not have a
budget to invest in new technology like proxy server and content filtering server, the situation
will not improve. Employees will freely downloading unrelated contents from the net since they
are “allowed to”, technically.
5.2 Unmatched Strategy to the Data and Diagnosis
One of the biggest dangers to an effective intervention occurs when the intervention is not
matched to the diagnosis or either the wrong problem is solved or the intervention is not
designed to solve the actual or real problem. It happens when the consultant simply determines
what intervention to be implemented without careful considerations of the suitable method to the
organization’s particular problem. Massarik and Pei-Carpenter (2002) highlighted that most
consultants propose an intervention based on their specialty, without considering what is really
required to address the actual problem.
OD consultants may seek one’s another expertise by discussing the situation with
colleagues or outsiders to verify whether a chosen intervention is the most appropriate for the
situation. The ultimate goal of OD process is to satisfy the client, not the consultant.
5.3 Deciding where to Intervene
Common questions raised by the consultants and the clients are “should the problem be
addressed first at the employee level or by the senior management? Should we begin with a pilot
project in one group or organization-wide roll out? Easiest change to implement or the most
difficult? In an actual OD process, there is no systematic way to begin with. Many researchers
discussed the appropriate starting point in the past.
Previous researchers recommend to start with task interventions over personal or
relationship interventions. According to Schein (1999), the primary task is the most direct
contribution that the consultant has been asked to make. Interpersonal issues should be observed
and only targeted for intervention if the client specifically wants to do so. Then shift to group’s
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tasks and processes such as communication patterns, roles meeting, decision making and so on.
In a different situation, some organization prefers to start with a pilot program before rolling out
organization-wide. The successful pilot project can build client’s confidence and they know what
to expect when expanding the scope in the future. Depending on complexity and the situation of
the problem, the best approach is to properly assess and decide where and how to intervene.
5.4 Sequence of Activities
For a maximum benefit of intervention strategies, the consultants must use their creativity and
expertise to arrange and sequence the activities accordingly. Arranging the activities in order will
help the consultants and the client to appropriately execute intervention strategy. As a guideline,
Beer (1980) lists six considerations for different activities should be sequenced in an overall
intervention strategy;
- Maximize diagnostic data (more data about the organization)
- Maximize effectiveness (build enthusiasm)
- Maximize efficiency (conserve time, energy and money)
- Maximize speed (structured process)
- Maximize relevance (solve the primary problem first)
- Minimize psychological and organizational strain (early action)
By following this, it may help the consultant and the client see the possible interventions and
to prioritize the area that is most relevant to the problem.
The above factors are the key elements to be considered when selecting the right
intervention strategy. Organization readiness to change is the key point for a successful
intervention strategy. Maximum support from the management and the employees are crucial,
otherwise weak intervention strategy will be presented and the bad situation remains at the
current state. This notion is supported by Poulsen, Ipsen and Gish (2013), where management
support as well as participation from the employees influences the overall intervention process.
They also added that the first line management support is the most important level they are the
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one who shall implement the intervention in the daily activities. The management or the leaders
represent the organization who are actually “walk the talk” and “lead by example”.
5.5 Conclusion
Interventions are explicitly designed to accomplish individual and organizational change. As
discussed above, it consists of many phases contracting, data gathering, diagnosis and feedback,
intervention strategy and evaluation. Employees sometimes resist to change due to many factors.
Ethical issues, incompetent consultants, bad experience from previous unsuccessful change,
unclear goals and so forth. Implementing a change in an organization that is not ready is a known
factor for a failed intervention strategy. As a result, the organization suffers from wasted effort,
time, money and low motivation of the employees. The key success of an intervention is to
appoint the right and skilled consultants, maximum support from internal and external parties,
having well planned and structured intervention process. These elements are imperative in
strategizing an intervention strategy, thus ensuring a successful OD project.
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