project l.o.f.t. report may, 2007 through october, 2007 facing the right problems at gwaea...
TRANSCRIPT
Project L.O.F.T. Report
May, 2007 through October, 2007Facing the right problems at GWAEADiscovered by the Project L.O.F.T.
Problem Formulation Team
Theme I: Fuzzy relationships with customers & consumers
Theme I: Fuzzy relationships with customers & consumers
Customers They write the checks that sustain us (Legislature,
DE, Feds). This creates a constant need to “prove” our value to
regulators. Consumers use our services and are not
usually the customer. Their sense of entitlement leads to an insatiable
demand for agency services This generates a constant need to react to their
demands
Theme I: Fuzzy relationships with customers & consumers
Understanding the needs of customers/ consumers is “fuzzy” -Administrators and staff have difficulty seeing the demands from all customers/consumers served, especially those more distant from our daily work.
The context of our work changes constantly both in funding and services demanded of the AEA, increasing conflict and “fuzziness” in our relationships and the services we provide.
“Fuzzy” relationships cause us to be more reactionary than planful.
Theme II: Insatiable Demand for Services
Theme II: Insatiable Demand for Services
Nothing curbs the demand for our services.
More demand, more workload.It’s hard to innovate when you’re working
flat-out!We’ve measured service by FTE, but
clients need solutions.
Problem Formulation , Iteration #2, 10/23/07 by Grant Wood AEA Design Team : Problem Formulators .“Set of interacting problems Grant Wood AEA faces .”
Fuzzy relationships
with and between our customers
and consumers .
Demand for services &
support
Rapidly changing contextIncreases &
creates conflict
Creates reactionary response
Creates insatiable
Theme III: Reactive Problem Solving
Theme III: Reactive Problem Solving
Today’s rapidly changing educational and global context is producing new and unique problems for our clients and for us.
But our culture values defined and known solutions to simplified problems.
Trying to over-simplify and solve complex problems one-at-a-time leads to “patching” – applying a “fix” to a problem and then moving to the next without having really solved anything.
Patches pull loose, old problems show up again and again, new problems pile up, and frustration compounds.
Problem Formulation , Iteration #2, 10/23/07 by Grant Wood AEA Design Team : Problem Formulators .“Set of interacting problems Grant Wood AEA faces .”
Fuzzy relationships
with and between our customers
and consumers .
Demand for services &
support
Rapidly changing context
Differentiated set of problems
Problems not defined
holistically
Patching as way to solve
problemsNot readily
recognized becauseincreases
Increases number& kind
Increases &creates conflict
produces
Creates reactionary response
Increases
Creates insatiable
Theme IV: Structural Tension
Theme IV: Structural Tension
The educational system is organized by disciplines which promotes disconnected and unrelated learning and problem solving.
Such discipline-oriented structures limits our ability to think in terms of integrated solutions.
Our organizational structure, while at one time effective at dealing with the problems of the day, is now stretched beyond its capacity and cannot effectively solve today’s set of tangled problems.
The need to solve sets of problems grows, yet our structure is designed to produce single-problem solutions. This creates tension between “specialist” and “generalist” orientations.
The Agency’s discipline-oriented structures promote single-focused solutions that “patch” problems rather than integrated solutions that dissolve complex sets of problems.
Picture the Problems This Way
The Design Team pictured the tangle of problems to help us…Understand our problems as a set that can’t
be solved one-by-one.Understand how past successes and
current problems interact to reinforce our problems and dilemmas.
Represent the problems we feel and experience as an Agency day-to-day.
Problem Formulation , Iteration #2, 10/23/07 by Grant Wood AEA Design Team : Problem Formulators .“Set of interacting problems Grant Wood AEA faces .”
Fuzzy relationships
with and between our customers
and consumers .
Demand for services &
support
Rapidly changing context
Differentiated set of problems
Problems not defined
holistically
Capacity
Frustration : manifests in burn out ,
apathy, trying to work harder/ faster
Patching as way to solve
problems
Culture of discipline oriented informal structure
Stretched leadsto or increases
Increasesneed
for more
Not readily recognized becauseincreases
Increasesnumber& kind
Increases &creates conflict
produces
Creates reactionary response
Reinforces
Increases
Decreases
Stretched increases
Calls for
IncreasesPromotes
Creates insatiable
Exacerbates
Interacting Set of Problems
Our tangled set of interacting problems is creating significant frustration in the system for: Individuals and teamsAdministrators and staffOur customers and consumers
Interacting Set of Problems
The Design team asked the question: “What will happen if we do nothing to
intervene with the current set of problems we’ve identified?”
The team purposefully created an exaggeration as a way to highlight the critical nature of our problems.
What follows is a very brief synopsis of their conversations:
Problem Formulation: An Undesired Future
“If we do nothing to intervene with the present system the demand for our services will continue to escalate, further over-stretching our capacity and reducing our effectiveness. Some staff will seek other professional opportunities, further eroding our capacity and the knowledge and expertise we need to survive. Our people will continue to lose energy and, eventually, hope. Discouraged and overworked people cannot be creative, further eroding our ability to meet ever changing and increasing demands. This will cause our customers and consumers to question our existence and, perhaps, call for the dismantling of our system.”
Design
Such a map and exaggeration provides us the opportunity to utilize the stakeholder specifications in the creation of a system that will dissolve this set of problems and ensure our continued success.
Problem Formulation , Iteration #2, 10/23/07 by Grant Wood AEA Design Team : Problem Formulators .“Set of interacting problems Grant Wood AEA faces .”
Fuzzy relationships
with and between our customers
and consumers .
Demand for services &
support
Rapidly changing context
Differentiated set of problems
Problems not defined
holistically
Capacity
Frustration : manifests in burn out ,
apathy, trying to work harder/ faster
Patching as way to solve
problems
Culture of discipline oriented informal structure
Stretched leadsto or increases
Increasesneed
for more
Not readily recognized becauseincreases
Increasesnumber& kind
Increases &creates conflict
produces
Creates reactionary response
Reinforces
Increases
Decreases
Stretched increases
Calls for
IncreasesPromotes
Creates insatiable
Exacerbates