Intervention Selection and Application - Assignment - Operations Management
Prior to beginning work on this assignment, review Chapters 7, 8, and 9 of the course textbook, read the following articles, What We Can Learn from Evaluating OD Interventions, The Benefits of Creating A Diverse Workforce (Links to an external site.), and What Are the Advantages of a Diverse Workforce? (Links to an external site.), and watch the video, How Can You Influence Others?.
Last week, you prepared the foundation of your final project by selecting a case study and applying the appropriate action research process to the OD challenge. Based on your knowledge of intervention types, you proposed a recommended interaction for the challenge. This week, you will have the opportunity to gain a deeper understanding of individual, team, group, and organizational interventions, and what they look like during problem solving and decision-making.
Intervention is the “doing” phase of action research. This paper will solidify your intervention selection. You will explain the actions used during your selected intervention and comprehensively apply the process to the case study. The paper must be at least two full pages in length, and must include the course textbook as a reference, as well as three additional scholarly and credible sources to support the content of the paper.
In your paper,
Select an appropriate intervention for your case study.
Evaluate why the intervention is applicable to the case study.
Interpret the actions involved when utilizing the intervention.
The Intervention Selection and Application paper
Must be at least two double-spaced pages in length (not including title and references pages) and formatted according to APA Style (Links to an external site.) as outlined in the Writing Center’s APA Formatting for Microsoft Word (Links to an external site.).
Must include a separate title page with the following:
Title of paper
Student’s name
University of Arizona Global Campus
Course name and number
Instructor’s name
Date submitted
Must utilize academic voice. See the Academic Voice (Links to an external site.) resource for additional guidance.
Must include an introduction and conclusion paragraph. Your introduction paragraph needs to end with a clear thesis statement that indicates the purpose of your paper.
For assistance on writing Introductions & Conclusions (Links to an external site.) as well as Writing a Thesis Statement (Links to an external site.), refer to the Writing Center resources.
Must use at least three scholarly, peer-reviewed, or credible sources in addition to the course text.
The Scholarly, Peer-Reviewed, and Other Credible Sources (Links to an external site.) table offers additional guidance on appropriate source types. If you have questions about whether a specific source is appropriate for this assignment, please contact your instructor. Your instructor has the final say about the appropriateness of a specific source for a particular assignment.
To assist you in completing the research required for this assignment, view this University of Arizona Global Campus Library Quick ‘n’ Dirty (Links to an external site.) tutorial, which introduces the University Library and the research process, and provides some library search tips.
Must document any information used from sources in APA Style as outlined in the Writing Center’s APA: Citing Within Your Paper (Links to an external site.).
Must include a separate references page that is formatted according to APA Style as outlined in the Writing Center. See the APA: Formatting Your References List (Links to an external site.) resource in the Writing Center for specifications.
Carefully review the Grading Rubric (Links to an external site.) for the criteria that will be used to evaluate your assignment.
Individual Interventions 7
Learning Outcomes
After reading this chapter, you should be able to:
• Describe learning and development interventions, including reflective practice; T-groups;
training, education, and development; and action learning.
• Identify when management and leadership development is indicated and discuss values clarifi-
cation and coaching interventions.
• Distinguish three types of assessments and explain why it is essential that they be adminis-
tered by certified professionals, effectively debriefed, and used ethically.
• Discuss various ways individual careers can be supported through performance management,
career plan development, assessments, and developmental relationships.
• Explain how jobs can be better developed with the use of job design, job descriptions, and
policy development.
fizkes/iStock/Getty Images Plus
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Lindsey was laid off from her job in a financial institution during an economic downturn.
Although it was difficult for her to be without an income, she had not liked her work; she was
often unfulfilled and unchallenged. The layoff gave her an opportunity to think hard about what
she wanted to do next. She had no dependents, little debt, and enough savings to cover the tran-
sition, so she had some flexibility in her next steps.
To begin exploring her options, Lindsey made an
appointment with a consultant, Jennifer, who spe-
cialized in career counseling. Prior to their first
meeting, the consultant gave her a couple of assess-
ments to identify her personality preferences and
key interests. During their first meeting, Jennifer
shared the results of the assessments and asked
Lindsey several challenging questions, such as
“Where do you want to be in 5 years?” What excites
you?” and “What is your biggest challenge?” They
also worked on a values clarification exercise to
identify Lindsey’s key values. After each counseling
session, Lindsey was given homework that
prompted her to explore what opportunities might
interest her.
After much soul searching, Lindsey decided to
return to school for an accelerated master’s degree
in instructional design; this would merge her inter-
ests in technology and education. Upon graduation,
she was hired by a consumer products company to
develop learning and development programs.
When Lindsey started her new position, she under-
went an intensive training program that included an orientation and an introduction to the
organization’s training and technology platforms. Her direct supervisor worked with her to
develop a career plan within the company. Lindsey joined a national professional organization
that had a regional chapter in her metropolitan area. She began attending meetings and devel-
oped relationships with several of her peers and seniors in her field. She struck up a conversation
with the keynote speaker, Jo, at one of the events. Jo was a vice president of learning and develop-
ment at a technology company. They continued corresponding after the meeting and developed
an informal mentoring relationship.
Jo became a mentor to Lindsey, and she was a good sounding board not only for some of the
technical problems she encountered, but also for political issues. Jo recommended books, confer-
ences, and other people from whom to seek advice about issues and opportunities. Jo also helped
Lindsey make decisions about which opportunities and positions to pursue within her company.
Lindsey received high marks during her performance evaluations and continued to evolve her
career plan. Eventually, Jo recommended Lindsey to another company, which recruited and
hired her into a managerial position.
Wavebreakmedia/Thinkstock
Lindsey attends a training session for
her new position.
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
This book has focused on accomplishing OD using the action research model. It has moved
through the three action research phases of planning, doing, and evaluating. This chapter is
devoted to profiling several interventions that might be appropriate at the individual level of
analysis. For the purposes of this chapter, it is assumed you have followed the action research
process up to the point of intervention and carefully selected an intervention in collaboration
with the client.
Interventions are generally decided during the discovery or planning that occurs in Phase 1
of the action research model. They are implemented in Phase 2, doing or action, and assessed
in Phase 3, checking or evaluating. Chapter 5 defined OD interventions as the actions taken
on the problem or issue that is the focus of the OD process. Intervention is the culmination of
the OD process—it is what OD intends to do from the start.
The interventions covered in this chapter are not comprehensive, but rather representative of
the many options available. We could include dozens, as the range and potential of OD inter-
ventions are nearly endless. Rather than get lost in a sea of interventions, we will present the
most common individual interventions with descriptions of their definition, why consultants
use them, and how to implement them.
The three intervention chapters in this book have organized interventions according to the
levels of individual, group or team, and organization. Although these interventions have been
categorized by level for ease of understanding their scope, some interventions, such as leader-
ship development interventions, may fall under more than one category. A leadership devel-
opment program similar to the one described in the Leadership Academy vignette crosses all
three of these levels, because potential leaders receive individual development that affects
their interactions with groups and the whole organization.
Another example of interventions that cross all levels would be the implementation of a per-
formance management system. Individual development and change is usually affected when
performance is appraised, and this in turn affects other people, groups, and the organization
itself. See Table 7.1 for examples of interventions according to level of analysis.
Table 7.1: Levels of OD interventions
Individual-level interventions Group-level interventions Organization-level interventions
• Learning and development
• Leadership or management
development
• Career development
• Assessment
• Job development
• Group or team process and
development
• Diversity and inclusion
• Conflict management
• Problem solving and
decision making
• Vision and mission
development
• Strategic planning
• Organization design
• Culture
• Talent management
• Large-scale interactive events
(LSIEs)
The purpose of this chapter is to profile selected interventions according to the individual
level. Individual interventions usually accomplish one or more of the following: learning and
development, leadership and management development, assessment, career development,
and job development (see Table 7.2).
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 7.1Learning and Development
Table 7.2: Categories of individual OD intervention
Category Intervention
Learning and development • Reflective practice
• Laboratory training (T-group)
• Training, education, and development
• Action learning
Leadership or management development • Values clarification and integration
• Coaching
Assessment • Values clarification and integration
• Coaching
Career development • Performance management
• Career plan development
• Assessments
• Developmental relationships
Job development • Job design
• Job descriptions
• Responsibility charting
• Policies
7.1 Learning and Development
Learning and development interventions ensure organization members have the knowl-
edge, skills, and abilities needed to do their jobs effectively and help the organization per-
form optimally. These activities affirm not only that employees are fully trained but also that
they remain engaged in ongoing learning, which helps create and sustain the organization’s
culture, enables the organization to remain competitive, and promotes employee retention.
As we have already discussed, learning and change are intricately related, and this category
of interventions helps employees implement change. Learning and development interven-
tions also help new knowledge be shared throughout the organization. Key interventions in
this area include reflective practice; laboratory training, or T-groups; training, education, and
development activities; and action learning.
Reflective Practice
When was the last time you stopped and gave thoughtful consideration to a decision, experi-
ence, or idea? Or had a deep, engaging, and thoughtful conversation with another person?
When you engage in these pauses to contemplate, you are engaging in reflective practice.
What Is Reflective Practice?
Whenever you think critically about your experiences and actions, you are engaged in reflec-
tive practice. Donald Schön introduced reflective practice in his books The Reflective Practi-
tioner (1983) and Educating the Reflective Practitioner (1987). Schön distinguished two types
of reflective practice according to when they occur. Lindsey, who lost her job in the vignette,
engaged in reflective practice with her career counselor, who asked her to think about what
she wanted in the next chapter of her life.
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 7.1Learning and Development
• Suppose Sarah facilitates a meeting. During the meeting, she might think, “I need to
be more pragmatic about keeping everyone focused and on point,” “I didn’t manage
the disagreement between team members about the best solution to the problem,”
or “Maybe if I restate the issue, we can solve this problem.” These musings about an
experience while it is happening are reflection in action. That is, Sarah assesses
an experience, her thoughts about the experience, actions she has taken, or actions
she might take, in the moment. Perhaps as a result, she adjusts her actions in the
moment.
• Once the meeting is finished and Sarah thinks about what happened and imagines
how she could have handled things better or what she will do next time, she is
engaging in what Schön (1983) called reflection on action. Sarah is using what she
learned from the experience to shape future thoughts and actions.
Why Do OD Consultants Encourage Reflective Practice?
When OD consultants ask an organization
member to change, they are putting that
person into a learning situation. A learner’s
ability to critically reflect on and in action
signals their adeptness at learning. Reflec-
tive practice is one of the hallmarks of adult
learning (Brookfield, 1987; Merriam & Bier-
ema, 2014) and helps individuals adopt
change more effectively and permanently.
In the opening vignette, Lindsey engaged
in reflective practice activities under the
guidance of her career counselor. This
helped her assess her situation, interests,
and opportunities. Unfortunately, time to
reflect is largely lacking in the contempo-
rary workplace, because organizations tend
to be focused on action at its expense. Your clients may have a difficult time slowing down to
reflect; they may feel it is a waste of time. On the contrary, reflection can help clients accept
change and be more mindful as they implement it. The more consultants can help their clients
think critically, avoid error, and learn from experience, the more effective the intervention.
How Is Reflective Practice Done?
Brookfield (1987) pointed out how critical reflection is used in strategic planning, effective
decision making, creative problem solving, situational leadership, entrepreneurial risk taking,
Consider This
Think about instances when you engaged in reflection in action and reflection on action. How
has taking a reflective pause helped you learn and engage with your colleagues?
JGalione/E+/Getty Images Plus
Reflection helps us learn from our experiences.
How would you encourage reflective practice
as an OD consultant?
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 7.1Learning and Development
research and development activities, and organizational team building. OD consultants who
foster reflective practice in their clients on these and other organizational processes will
more effectively help them understand the assumptions that underlie their own thoughts and
actions.
A key way to get clients to reflect is to help them recognize contradictions between thought
and action. For example, a manager may claim to treat all employees fairly but show favorit-
ism toward certain people. This behavior is what Argyris and Schön (1974) called espoused
theory versus theory in use. The familiar adage “Do as I say, not as I do” aptly captures these
kinds of inconsistencies, which are usually rampant in organizations. Helping clients recog-
nize these discrepancies is the first step toward helping them make their behavior more con-
sistent with their espoused values. See Assessment: The Left-Hand Column Exercise to examine
contradictions between what people say and what they do.
OD consultants might ask an individual to reflect on the impending change, a career move, or
feedback; they might also build in structured reflection time when planning for other inter-
ventions such as training. Consultants can send clients on an individual retreat with reflection
assignments. Reflection is also a key component of coaching and T-groups.
Assessment: The Left-Hand Column Exercise
Organization theorists Chris Argyris and Donald Schön (1974) developed the left-hand col-
umn (LHC) exercise as part of their work in action science (a process of action research that
generates useful information about practical problems in organizations, usually by examining
contradictions between what people say and what they actually do). Steps to creating an LHC
include the following:
1. Pick an important conversation you have recently had.
2. Use the following worksheet to document the conversation.
3. Write down the actual words you and your conversant used in the right-hand column.
4. Write down what you were actually thinking and feeling during the conversation as
the words were being said.
5. Compare both columns.
6. What differences, if any, exist between what you said and what you thought?
a. If there were discrepancies, how can you begin to productively raise some of your
left-hand column thoughts?
b. How can you prompt your conversant to be more forthright about some of their
left-hand column thoughts?
LEFT: What I really thought RIGHT: What was really said
I was hoping he wouldn’t notice we were late. YOUR BOSS: Let’s meet this week. We are
behind with the budget and we need to get
these items finalized. Jim, I’d like to come down
there next week. We’re a few weeks behind,
and I think we might all benefit from a meeting
at your office.
(continued on next page)
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 7.1Learning and Development
Laboratory Training and T-Groups
Laboratory training, or T-groups, provides opportunities for individuals to reflect on their
own behavior and how it affects the group.
What Are Laboratory Training and T-Groups?
We introduced T-groups in Chapter 1. Also known as laboratory training or training groups,
T-groups are small groups of organization members that provide in-depth feedback to
one another about perceptions and how individual behaviors affect the group. Recall that
T-groups stimulated the creation of OD and grew in popularity through the 1960s and 1970s.
They are less popular today because of the risk of being unable to maintain amicable work
relationships after significant self-disclosure and sharing. Also, their results can be difficult to
transfer back to the work context. Frank disclosure may also put employees at risk with their
Assessment: The Left-Hand Column Exercise (continued)
LEFT: What I really thought RIGHT: What was really said
I need to make it clear that I’m willing to take
responsibility for this, but some of this is out of
my control.
ME: Yes, the deadlines are of concern. As you
know, some of the estimates we need to com-
plete the budget have not come in on a timely
basis, although we are working as hard as we
can to get them. When do you want to meet?
He always seems to offer help after the crisis
has already occurred, not when I really need it.
Now, it is too late to do anything but wait.
YOUR BOSS: It seems to me that we could
have better communication and coordination
between the two of us as we establish the bud-
get. I might be able to help.
The changes he keeps making to the renovation
plans are the real reason we’re late. Getting
estimates takes time.
ME: I’m always open to better ways to build the
mousetrap.
YOUR BOSS: I hope you have some better ideas
about what we can do here.
I wish I could just level with him that he’s the
reason we are delayed. If we can just get him
to hold off a bit longer, we should be able to get
the estimates.
ME: If we can push off our meeting until next
week, I think we can have the budget by then
and also brainstorm improved processes.
Your Turn . . .
Visit your e-book to download an interactive version of this assessment.
LEFT: What I really thought RIGHT: What was really said
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 7.1Learning and Development
organizations if management were to retaliate. Refer back to Chapter 1 for a full description
of T-groups.
Why Do OD Consultants Do Laboratory Training and T-Groups?
T-groups are beneficial interventions because they provide fodder for reflective practice,
as discussed in the previous section. Specifically, they help group members reflect on their
interpersonal interactions and thereby deepen their self-awareness. Often, individuals fail to
consider where their assumptions come from or how their behaviors and comments affect
others. T-groups provide a platform for reflection and disclosure that leads to deeper levels
of consciousness.
How Are Laboratory Training and T-Groups Done?
A T-group is rather fluid, usually lacking an explicit agenda beyond enhanced awareness
and understanding. The goals of a T-group include increasing members’ self-awareness and
improving their understanding of how their individual interactions affect the group. T-groups
usually yield useful insights about oneself, others, and the group. T-groups may use the con-
versation to solve problems, share feedback, or role-play.
T-groups require eight to 15 participants. The consultant’s role is to guide the group and
encourage participants to share emotional reactions (e.g., anger, fear, warmth, or envy) to
the other participants’ actions and statements. The group should focus on sharing emotions
rather than making judgments or drawing conclusions. The T-group helps participants see
how their words and actions trigger emotional responses in the other individuals and ideally
makes participants more mindful of how they behave in group settings.
T-groups can be uncomfortable for members because significant self-disclosure and open-
ness are required. Moreover, participants’ feelings may be hurt because of the feedback’s
highly personal nature. Experienced facilitators help mitigate these risky dynamics.
Training, Education, and Development
A key individual intervention is to ensure that employees have the necessary knowledge,
skills, and attitudes to effectively do their jobs. Training, education, and development make
that possible.
What Are Training, Education, and Development?
Training, education, and development are appropriate interventions when new skills, knowl-
edge, or attitudes are needed in areas such as new technology implementation, diversity and
inclusion initiatives, machine operation, product safety, and new employee orientation. In the
opening vignette, Lindsey pursued all three of these. In this text, these three interventions
will be referred to as training. You will recall that Lindsey elected to pursue higher education
training and then received further training when she joined her new company.
Davis and Davis (1998) offered a comprehensive definition of training. Among their key
points are the following:
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 7.1Learning and Development
• Training is always a process, rather than a program to be completed.
• Training develops skills, shares information, and nurtures attitudes.
• Training helps the organization.
• Training usually contributes to workers’ overall development.
• Training helps workers qualify for a job, do the job, or advance to a new job.
• Training is essential for enhancing and transforming a job.
• Training facilitates learning.
• Learning is not only a formal activity; it is also a universal activity, and many types of
people facilitate it formally and informally.
• Training should always hold forth the promise of maximizing learning.
Why Do OD Consultants Do Training, Education, and Development?
It is easy to associate OD interventions exclusively with training programs, but not all OD
problems require a training solution. When training programs are required, it is important
that they be well designed and facilitated in ways that meet the intended goals. Training is
most effective when it is explicitly linked to organizational strategy and when it targets a
problem that can be resolved by training. Thus, training may be used to improve current
employee job performance, such as by teaching employees new skills, software, or processes
that help them do their jobs with more speed and accuracy. Or it may be a means of orienting
new employees to the policies and expectations of the company. In the opening vignette, Lind-
sey went through extensive orientation training. Training may also be used to prepare employ-
ees for advancement. For instance, leadership training may be offered to develop manage-
ment potential, or tuition reimbursement programs may be provided to help employees build
technical and administrative skills. See Tips and Wisdom: Resources on Training.
How Are Training, Education, and Development Done?
Training, education, and development are achieved through formal knowledge-building
efforts (McLean, 2006; Nadler, 1970):
• OD consultants provide or arrange for training via on-site demonstrations, classes,
courses, and programs that help employees accrue job-related knowledge. For
example, you may have attended computer class or conflict resolution training. New
technical and interpersonal skills help you do your job more effectively. Consultants
get asked to provide training most often, as it is often selected as an intervention.
Tips and Wisdom: Resources on Training
As well as promoting both professional and personal growth, training helps the organization
enhance its performance. To learn more about training, see Caffarella and Daffron’s (2013)
Planning Programs for Adult Learners: A Practical Guide, Lawson’s (2016) The Trainer’s Hand-
book, or Silberman and Biech’s (2015) Active Training: A Handbook of Techniques, Designs, Case
Examples, and Tips. You can access multiple training resources by joining the Association for
Talent Development (ATD) at the following website: https://www.td.org/.
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 7.1Learning and Development
• When you learn how to become an analytic problem solver and use reasoning, you
are receiving education. Education is not necessarily job related. Learning how to
critique classic texts, for example, may not be specific to your job in health care or
manufacturing, but it may be helpful in carrying out your job because it sharpens
your reasoning and writing skills. Consultants do less work in this area, although
they may refer clients to higher education programs or offer programs in their own
area of expertise. For example, if a consultant were an expert writer, she might help
the client’s employees develop in this area.
• When you cultivate your interests, perhaps by taking martial arts or a cooking
course, you are engaged in development. Development is sometimes considered
more personal and less job related, but like education, it enhances your ability to do
your job and makes you more well rounded. Consultants might recommend develop-
ment programs as part of an intervention, especially ones that are focused on
organization learning and employee satisfaction.
Action Learning
Action learning arose in the 1990s as a reaction to formal learning interventions (such as
training) that were viewed as ineffective because of the difficulty of transferring knowledge
back to the workplace and their lack of relevance or support to use the new learning.
What Is Action Learning?
Action learning deliberately accelerates people’s education about real work problems and/or
desired outcomes within the actual work context. It is a continuous cycle of learning by doing,
followed by reflecting on the doing. Action learning involves getting relevant people together
to work on organizational issues in a fashion that leads to learning throughout the process.
For example, suppose a new product is launched and a group of relevant stakeholders comes
together to ask questions raised by the launch, reflect on problems and solutions that arise
in the launch, share assumptions about the project, make necessary changes, reflect on how
the changes worked, and consider the learning that transpired in the launch process. Action
learning creates a structure for reflective practice among individuals or groups.
Why Do OD Consultants Facilitate Action Learning?
Consultants favor action learning because, rather than taking people to an unnatural location
to teach them unnatural acts about abstract concepts (as training often does), it involves the
real people working with the real problem in its real setting. In other words, action learning
involves getting people who have a particular problem together in the workplace to undergo
cycles of learning and action. This makes the process relevant, timely, and completed by the
people who own the problem.
Consider This
Identify the types of training, education, and development you have experienced. How have
they differed? What did you take away from each of these activities?
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 7.2Leadership and Management Development
Lawrence (1991) observed that action learning not only is learning by doing, but also involves
reflection with the explicit goal of learning from experience. According to Lawrence, there are
three essential characteristics of action learning:
1. Real work: Suppose a certain scheduling process creates problems for multiple
workers—there is too much overlap at times and not enough coverage at others.
2. Questioning process: The team gets together and begins to question how the sched-
ule is being made; the team members suggest changes.
3. Implementation: New scheduling procedures are put in place, and the group recon-
venes to evaluate how the changes are working and what was learned.
Lawrence (1991) recognized that action learning has the following outcomes: visible progress
on solving problems, individual development, and change. Unlike some process-improvement
tools, action learning is open ended, dynamic, and fluid. Although the purpose of engaging in
action learning may be clear, the results are often unexpected. Action learning helps partici-
pants understand their internal decision and action processes and makes them aware of how
these patterns affect their environment.
How Is Action Learning Done?
Action learning is accomplished by six to eight people who come together to work on a prob-
lem. This group is known as an action learning set. There are several variations on steps
taken, but generally the process is as follows:
1. Establish an action learning set.
2. Identify a project, task, or problem the set intends to work on.
3. Engage in a process of questioning, reflection, and inquiry into the problem.
4. Decide on and implement a course of action.
5. Reconvene to evaluate whether the action resulted in a satisfactory outcome and to
identify key learning.
Action learning tends to favor asking questions that prompt new thinking, learning, and solu-
tions. For more information on action learning, see Marquardt, Banks, Cauweiler, and Choon
(2018) or Revans (2017).
7.2 Leadership and Management Development
Learning and development interventions are common across all levels of the organization.
They affect not only individuals, but also teams and the organization itself. A more specialized
type of development is targeted at current and potential leaders and managers of the organi-
zation and is …
Group Interventions 8
Learning Outcomes
After reading this chapter, you should be able to:
• Identify interventions that OD consultants use to build highly functioning groups and teams.
• Identify situations in which diversity and inclusion interventions are warranted and describe
various interventions.
• Recognize when individuals or teams are in conflict and discuss different interventions for
resolving the conflict.
• Explain how problem solving and decision making are handled in organizations.
Gradyreese/E+/Getty Images Plus
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
AutoMark, an automotive parts maker, needed to radically change the sound system it had pro-
duced for years. Fast-changing technology and computer advances had made even relatively
new vehicular sound systems obsolete. Producing a new sound system posed a host of chal-
lenges: designing the component, ensuring compatibility with other components and systems in
the vehicle, and communicating across several functional areas, including design, manufactur-
ing, engineering, and the union. AutoMark’s general manager, David, was new and had inherited
a business with a long history of botching new system launches: They were chronically late, over
budget, and under quality specifications. David had recently been exposed to OD in his evening
MBA courses and was anxious to see if he could change AutoMark’s track record with the new
sound system rollout.
David contacted the company’s internal OD person, Anne, to see what could be done about the
anticipated sound system launch. After completing the action research steps to discover the
problems, they determined that the team involved had to be more cross-functional and that the
team members lacked the requisite skills to pull off a successful launch. They decided to put a
new team in charge of the launch.
The new team was composed of representa-
tives from design, manufacturing, engineer-
ing, and the union. The team’s first meeting
consisted of a charge to alter the way Auto-
Mark handled new system launches. The
team members established roles, ground
rules, and a clear purpose statement for their
work. They agreed it would be beneficial to
build the team’s skills, and so, with Anne’s
help, they planned a retreat to set themselves
up for success.
The retreat was held the following month at
an off-site location. Everyone on the team
had taken a DiSC assessment (see Chapter
7); those results were shared with the team
so individuals could begin to appreciate their
differences and communicate effectively with
each other. The team members engaged in activities to help build cohesion and understanding.
They learned new skills for managing difficult conversations and for listening during disagree-
ments. They also learned a new problem-solving model and reviewed quality standards to make
sure these issues were consistently considered in their process. Finally, they revisited their origi-
nal purpose, ground rules, and roles to see if these needed to be altered based on their work over
the past month.
The retreat was a success, and the group dove into its work. The group was highly functioning,
based on its upfront investment to establish a functional, collaborative team. During the first
few meetings, there were some moments of confusion; people were not sure of the key goal,
and at times roles and responsibilities were not clear. But the group was able to resolve each of
these issues. So far, the team was ahead of schedule on making decisions and getting approvals
on the new sound system’s design. As the launch date got closer, the team members were under
increasing stress, and some began to experience conflict. Meetings were getting bogged down by
Ammit/iStock/Thinkstock
On its retreat, AutoMark engaged in activities
that built teamwork and communication. What
kinds of activities would you recommend for
encouraging team cohesion?
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
disagreements; people argued over decisions, and some resorted to personal attacks. Two mem-
bers in particular did not like each other and usually stirred things up for the rest of the team.
David became increasingly concerned that the disagreements were sapping too much time and
energy from the team. He decided to intervene and called the two instigators into a meeting,
where he could mediate the dispute. Anne facilitated the conversation, because she was a neu-
tral party. The two team members aired their grievances and were eventually able to identify
common ground and problem solve their issues.
The team went on to complete its work after the midpoint intervention. Using a deliberate team
process helped the team turn the launch process around with an on-time, under-budget, and
superior-quality product.
This book has focused on undertaking OD using the action research model. We have moved
through the three action research phases of planning, doing, and evaluating. This chapter is
devoted to profiling several doing interventions that might be appropriate at the group or
team levels of analysis and assumes you have followed the action research process up to the
point of intervention and carefully selected an intervention in collaboration with the client
(see Table 5.1).
Interventions are generally decided during the discovery or planning that occurs in Phase 1
of the action research model. They are implemented in Phase 2, doing or action, and assessed
in Phase 3, checking or evaluating. Chapter 5 defined OD interventions as the actions taken
on the problem or issue that is the focus of the OD process. Intervention is the culmination of
the OD process—it is what OD intends to do from the start.
The interventions covered in this chapter are not comprehensive, but rather representative of
the many options available. This book could include dozens, as the range and potential of OD
interventions are nearly endless. Rather than get lost in a sea of interventions, this chapter
presents some of the most common group and team interventions (see Table 7.2).
Human interactions tend to be messy and unpredictable, and groups have fascinating dynam-
ics as they negotiate roles, differences, work practices, power relations, and tasks. OD con-
sultants commonly address the challenges that arise in groups with interventions to improve
group or team processes and development, increase diversity and inclusion, manage conflict,
and solve problems and make decisions. The interventions within each of these categories are
summarized in Table 8.1 and are profiled in this section.
Table 8.1: Categories of group or team OD intervention
Group or team process
and development
Diversity and
inclusion Conflict management
Problem solving and
decision making
• Dialogue
• Team life cycle
• Team start-up or
transition
• Team building
• Team learning
• Virtual teams
• Cultural
awareness
• Cross-cultural
development
• Conflict resolution
• Confrontation
meetings
• Third-party
intervention
• Appreciative
inquiry
• Work-Out
• Total quality
management
(TQM)
• Quality of work life
(QWL)
• Problem-solving
models
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 8.1Group or Team Process and Development
8.1 Group or Team Process and Development
Although the terms group and team are often used interchangeably, they have different defini-
tions. Suppose a group of people gets on an elevator. A team emerges in the event the elevator
gets stuck. A group usually consists of three or more people who may share common percep-
tions, motivations, goals, or organization membership. In the case of the elevator, the group
shares the common goal of traveling to a different floor. When the elevator becomes stuck, the
group is suddenly transformed into a team. These team members not only share a common
goal (getting out of the elevator) but must work together to achieve it. The difference is subtle
but important for understanding group dynamics. Table 8.2 contrasts groups and teams.
Table 8.2: Contrasting groups and teams
Groups Teams
1. Compete against each other
2. Seek personal agendas
3. Are staid and stodgy
4. Make decisions independently
5. Are motivated by fear
6. Fail to connect teamwork with success
7. Operate dependently or independently
8. Tolerate each other and the work
9. Accept complacency with no sense of urgency
10. Avoid risk
1. Compete outwardly together
2. Share a team agenda
3. Value innovation and continuous
improvement
4. Make decisions participatively
5. Are motivated by opportunity
6. Link team success to organization success
7. Work interdependently
8. Enjoy each other and the work
9. Embrace a sense of urgency
10. Thrive on challenge, take risks
Because an organization’s work is largely carried out by teams whose members have to
cooperate, create, and collaborate, helping members build these interpersonal skills and
the infrastructure in which they are supported can boost the organization’s ability to
accomplish its mission. Building capacity in group or team processes and development is
important to ensure that new groups or teams start off on the right foot. It also strengthens
established groups or teams that are embroiled in conflict, unproductive, or lacking focus.
This section features some interventions that OD consultants use to build highly function-
ing groups and teams.
Dialogue
Can you recall a conversation in which each person aggressively advocated a point and tried
to convince everyone to agree? What was the outcome? Such win–lose conversations do not
usually result in constructive outcomes or new learning for the participants, yet they are dif-
ficult to avoid. Just turn on your television or radio, listen to politicians, or attend a meeting
for numerous examples of such point–counterpoint discussion, which is often heated. This
type of communication is a discussion, the dominant form of discourse in U.S. culture, which
generally involves participants aggressively advocating their own point of view.
“The word discussion stems from the Latin discutere, which meant ‘to smash to pieces’”
(Senge, Kleiner, Roberts, Ross, & Smith, 1994, p. 353). The term is also related to the words
percussion and concussion, with the general meaning of heaving back and forth to beat the
opponent down and prove a point in a win–lose confrontation. Discussion promotes group
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 8.1Group or Team Process and Development
fragmentation and wars of advocacy between members. Linguist Deborah Tannen (1999)
referred to this conversational crisis as the “Argument Culture,” in which communication is
focused on confrontational discourse; it is a win–lose proposition for individuals caught in
this vicious conversational cycle.
Alternatively, you can probably recall really invigorating, exciting conversations in which each
participant built on the points being made and people were open to questioning their view-
points, learning from each other, and changing their minds. This type of inquiry-based dis-
course is known as dialogue. Dialogue is contrasted with discussion as its polar opposite and
is recommended by Tannen (1999) and others (Ellinor & Gerard, 2014; Isaacs, 1999; Senge
et al., 1994) as an alternative communication means that is focused on inquiry and learning,
rather than advocacy of a certain point of view. Dialogue is a mutual exploration of a concept
or viewpoint.
Dialogue is inquiry based; that is, you seek
to be open, learn, and probe into the think-
ing of the speaker. Discussion, in contrast,
focuses on advocating a point of view and
convincing the listener to agree with the
speaker. Journalist Celeste Headlee offered
a wonderful summary of research and strat-
egies for having better conversations in her
2017 book We Need to Talk: How to Have
Conversations That Matter. An important
concept she advanced was that people often
engage in narcissistic conversation, that is,
the tendency to make every conversation
about yourself. Instead of providing support
when a person says, “I am having a hard
time meeting this deadline,” a narcissistic
conversational response would shift the
attention back to yourself by saying something like, “I am crushing my deadlines right now.”
A more supportive reply would remain focused on the speaker, explore why he or she is hav-
ing difficulty meeting deadlines, and engage him or her in an inquiry-based conversation or
dialogue. You can avoid the trap of narcissistic conversation and shift to dialogue by asking
questions. Although you may shift the conversation toward yourself by sharing your experi-
ence or opinions, you eventually shift it back to the listener by asking a question such as,
“What have you tried so far to manage your deadlines?” or “What is one thing you could do
next week to make progress on your deadlines?”
Dialogue is rooted in the Greek words dia (meaning “through” or “with each other”) and
logos (meaning “the word”) (Senge et al., 1994, p. 353). Together, dia logos means “through
meaning.” It can be thought of as meaning that flows through a group of people, where new
understandings and ideas emerge. Whereas discussion is advocacy based, dialogue is inquiry
based. The goal is not to find the right answer, but rather to examine multiple perspectives
surrounding an issue that would not have been possible through individual reflection or dis-
cussion. Dialogue is the collective engagement in reflective practice, discussed in Chapter 1
of this book. Effective OD consultants hone their dialogue skills and use them across all inter-
ventions. Dialogue is an effective team process because it requires individuals to slow down
JasonDoiy/E+/Getty Images Plus
You probably engage in true dialogue more
often with friends than with coworkers. Why is
dialogue important in OD?
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 8.1Group or Team Process and Development
and listen to each other. The AutoMark team members learned this skill, and it helped them
converse about complicated issues that crossed several people’s functional territory. Being
skilled at dialogue will also help individuals and teams better apply other interventions.
Why Do OD Consultants Advocate Dialogue?
Throughout the action research process, consultants help clients adopt new behaviors, learn
new ways of listening and speaking, and cultivate new tools for bridging understanding and
dealing with disagreement. Because win–lose conversation is so prevalent in U.S. culture,
engaging in dialogue is a major change for most organization members. They need training
in how to dialogue, ideally at the beginning of the action research process, so that it can serve
the team as it navigates the challenges of implementing change.
Dialogue helps consultants achieve multiple interventions such as listening, problem solv-
ing, decision making, strategic planning, talent management, and more. Specific benefits of
dialogue include
• conversing in ways that help clients think and reflect differently,
• asking good questions that advance the conversation,
• using new knowledge created from the conversation,
• engaging in questioning that informs better decision making and action,
• sharing broader and deeper feedback than a back-and-forth discussion would yield,
• steering members away from argumentation and toward deeper inquiry that probes
and challenges ideas,
• shifting away from unconditional acceptance of dominant ideas, and
• creating an atmosphere that is tough on the issues and easy on the people.
How Do OD Consultants Help Facilitate Dialogue?
Dialogue is not easy. It requires new listening and conversing, which for most people means
changing lifelong bad habits. There are several ways to use dialogue. Some guidelines for
achieving a dialogue that is inquiry based include the following:
• Situate participants in a barrier-free circle (e.g., no tables). This configuration physi-
cally removes obstacles and creates a more vulnerable space for the dialogue.
• Ask participants to suspend assumptions and certainties. This means that everyone
willingly questions his or her own ideas and beliefs, as well as those of others.
• Listen. This is more important than talking. There are several ways an OD consultant
can promote listening:
a. Use a “talking stick.” Provide a stick, ball, or some other artifact that signals the
right to speak. Participants must have possession of the talking stick to speak.
b. Blindfold participants to remove nonverbal cues that people use to dominate
conversation.
c. Involve all participants in monitoring listening and confronting bad listening be-
haviors such as interrupting or signaling to speak before the speaker has finished.
• Focus on inquiry and reflection instead of decision and action.
• Observe equality of members and give equal air time to everyone who desires to
speak.
• Respect differences.
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 8.1Group or Team Process and Development
• Suspend role identification. This means that participants cannot invoke their roles in
the organization hierarchy to make points or dominate (“As the vice president, here
is how I see it”). Nor can participants look to people who have certain roles and ask
for guidance (“As our vice president, what do you think?”).
• Strive for learning over results. This means that the dialogue is a time to truly think
about a problem. Once new knowledge is created and the dialogue ends, insight can
be used to make decisions and act. Dialogue helps people slow down and evaluate
decisions that are poorly thought out.
• Allow speakers to talk without interrupting. This is probably the most challeng-
ing aspect of dialogue, because everyone wants to be heard and advocate his or her
viewpoint.
• Ensure confidentiality among the group. What is said in a dialogue stays in the
dialogue.
Team Life Cycle
There has been an enduring interest in group dynamics since the advent of OD. Tuckman
(1965) reviewed 55 articles dealing with stages of small group development and isolated
commonalities. From this research, he created a model of stages that groups experience in
order to become high performing. He called this the group or team life cycle. Tuckman’s
model laid the groundwork for understanding and researching groups and remains one of
the best-known models of group development (see Figure 8.1). See if you can identify these
stages in a group you belong to or apply them to the AutoMark vignette.
Figure 8.1: Tuckman’s stages of group development
Tuckman’s model, which shows how groups become high performing, remains one of the best-known
group development models.
FORMING
Group members get familiar with
each other
STORMING
Group experiences tension or
conflict in determining tasks and
norms
NORMING
Group establishes working
agreements and builds productive
work relationships
PERFORMING
Group matures into effective
working relationships and task
accomplishment
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 8.1Group or Team Process and Development
Later group development models have added a fifth stage, adjourning. In this stage, the group
disbands after it has moved through the first four stages and met its goals.
Although it is a widely used model of group development, Tuckman’s (1965) model is only
one of several that have grown out of Kurt Lewin’s field theory. Lewin suggested that a group
has its own psychological field or life space that consists of the group and all the variables in
its environment and affects the group’s behavior (Lewin, 1947). Cummings and Worley
(2009) proposed that group effectiveness could be judged based on the degree to which the
task was accomplished, the level of satisfaction experienced by the group members, and the
viability of the group itself.
Why Do OD Consultants Pay Attention to the Team Life Cycle?
The team life cycle model serves multiple purposes. First, it helps the consultant observe
where the group or team is in its development and plan interventions accordingly. If a team
Consider This
Virtual teams have become increasingly common in a global economy where organizations
seek to bring teams together that combine needed talent and expertise to solve challenging
problems (Furst, Reeves, Rosen, & Blackburn, 2004). Think of virtual teams you have partici-
pated in and list the challenges. Furst et al. (2004) offered key interventions for the virtual
stages of team development:
Forming Storming Norming Performing
• Share lessons
from prior
virtual teams
• Coach virtual
teams with
coaches
experienced in
virtual teaming
• Develop a
shared sense of
team identity
through
deliberate
relationship
building
• Acquire senior
management
support
• Engage in
face-to-face
team building
experiences
(virtual F2F OK)
• Train members
on conflict
resolution
• Encourage a
spirit of seeking
common ground
during conflict
• Seek mediation
when consensus
is impossible
• Create templates
for specifying
action items and
tasks
• Develop
individual
accountability
measures such
as due dates and
schedules of
work
• Distinguish
task, social,
and contextual
information
and design
procedures for
each
• Assign a
team coach
with virtual
facilitation skills
• Ensure the
organization
culture
supports virtual
teamwork
• Provide needed
support and
resources
for team
performance
Source: Adapted from “Managing the Life Cycle of Virtual Teams,” by S. A. Furst, M. Reeves, B. Rosen, and R. Blackburn,
2004, The Academy of Management Executive (1993–2005), 18(2), 6–20. © Taylor & Francis.
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 8.1Group or Team Process and Development
is just getting started, it is likely to be at the forming or storming stages. Agenda-driven inter-
ventions are probably warranted, and when the group gets stuck storming, conflict resolution
can also be helpful.
Helping team members understand the life cycle helps them recognize the challenges and
conflicts that arise as normal developmental processes. This in turn helps depersonalize the
difficulties associated with collective goal pursuit and allows members to focus on moving to
the next stage.
When managers understand the team life cycle, they can help the groups and teams they
manage through more effective decision making, problem solving, and conflict resolution.
How Do OD Consultants Help Clients Learn About the Team Life Cycle?
An effective way to teach the team life cycle is through an experiential activity. A popular one
is the Tinkertoy activity:
1. Organize the team into groups of about four to six people (depending on the size of
the group).
2. Give each group a bag of Tinkertoys. They should have the same number and type of
pieces in each bag, or give each group their own container.
3. Each group is given the following instructions:
a. Build the tallest freestanding tower with the materials provided.
b. Groups have 20 minutes to plan and 40 seconds to build.
c. Pieces cannot be connected during planning (they will be removed by the
facilitator).
4. Facilitators serve as timekeepers.
5. All pieces are returned to the bag or container before building.
6. Construction must stop when the time limit is reached.
7. Once the activity ends, debrief around the stages of the team life cycle and help par-
ticipants see how they moved through the stages.
There are dozens of such activities available to help develop teams. Find some resources you
are comfortable using and become familiar with them.
Team Start-Up or Transition
Helping a team get off to a positive and productive start requires support from the beginning.
It is common for organizations to set high expectations for teams without giving them the
support or training needed to be high functioning; they then wonder why a team could not
produce. Effective team-based OD interventions set teams up for success, whether they are
new or already exist.
Why Do OD Consultants Facilitate Team Start-Up?
Giving teams a strong foundation at their formation helps them build the capacity to do what
is expected of them. At a minimum, new or transitioning teams should be given a clear goal
and the necessary resources to accomplish it. They also need training on the team life cycle
and the tools for moving through the stages. Providing the team with training and a structure
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 8.1Group or Team Process and Development
for effective meetings helps them make good use of their time together. Topics to explore to
help the team get off on the right foot might include
• the team life cycle,
• a change model (such as Lewin’s unfreezing, moving, and refreezing),
• a problem-solving model,
• meeting-effectiveness tips, and
• team-building exercises.
How Do OD Consultants Do Team Start-Up?
Some key steps to follow include the following:
1. Establish a clear goal or charge for the team.
2. Create roles (e.g., facilitator, note taker, process observer).
3. Rotate roles.
4. Identify members’ communication expectations and needs.
5. Develop ground rules.
6. Create agendas for meetings.
7. Use tools to enhance meeting facilitation, such as decision-making and consensus
procedures.
8. Evaluate team process on an ongoing basis.
Team Building
A common OD intervention is team building, that is, training and other activities that help
teams perform more efficiently and effectively. This type of activity can also be used for team
start-up. McGregor (1960) defined effective teams as those that
1. foster a relaxed and comfortable atmosphere,
2. clearly understand and accept their tasks,
3. are able to engage in dialogue and effective listening behaviors,
4. are tough on the issues and easy on each other,
5. use consensus decision making, and
6. complete their actions.
Why Do OD Consultants Do Team Building?
Team-building OD interventions are centered on helping members move through the stages
of group development (Tuckman, 1965) and on helping the team settle on task roles, goals,
Consider This
The AutoMark vignette provides a classic case of teams working on parts of a larger project
but not collaborating, with problematic results. Considering the strategies and steps for help-
ing teams start up, what has been your experience with these start-up strategies when you
joined a new team, and what were the consequences?
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 8.1Group or Team Process and Development
relationship building, group process, and activities to ensure smooth functioning. Team build-
ing is often accomplished through training and ongoing process checks as the team works on
its activities. Specifically, team building can facilitate
• improved morale and leadership
skills among team members,
• the elimination of barriers that
thwart creativity and collaboration,
• the definition of clear objectives and
goals,
• improved processes and procedures,
• improved productivity and results,
• targeting and eliminating team weak-
nesses, and
• building up team strengths.
How did these strategies play out in the Auto-
Mark vignette?
How Do OD Consultants Do Team
Building?
A successful team is only as good as its mem-
bers, so following the team start-up tips will
get the team primed to build deeper relation-
ships. Burn (2004) suggested that skilled team members use the following approaches:
• Develop norms and roles compatible with team success.
• Build a group with norms of cooperation.
• Make status assignments based on specific-status characteristics.
• Minimize status differences.
• Engage in constructive controversy.
• Use constructive confrontation when group norms are violated.
• Establish a supportive communication climate.
• Recognize the benefits of member diversity.
• Create a superordinate (shared) group identity.
• Use group goal setting.
• Rely on explicit coordination and pre-planning.
• Persuade members that their contributions are needed, noticed and valued.
• Tie valued individual outcomes to group outcomes.
• Balance task and socioemotional leadership.
• Choose discussion and decision-making procedures that prevent domination by a
few members and ensure that …
Organization-Level
Interventions
9
PeopleImages/E+/Getty Images Plus
Learning Outcomes
After reading this chapter, you should be able to:
• Discuss the role of vision, mission, and values in driving organization-level change.
• Describe key activities that facilitate strategic planning, such as environmental scanning, SWOT
analysis, SMART goals, and scenario planning.
• Of the various organization designs, identify those that best facilitate the organization’s mis-
sion and those that need to be reorganized or restructured.
• Explain how learning can be used strategically, such as by capturing organization learning and
developing a strategic learning organization.
• Explore how culture influences organizations and can be changed through interventions.
• Describe key talent management interventions, such as talent management strategy and
succession planning.
• Examine the role of large-scale interactive events for organization change.
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
A nonprofit health care organization had been struggling to keep its doors open. When the
region’s largest employer went out of business, the size and needs of the population served by
the organization rose significantly; it was becoming increasingly difficult to provide services to
clients. The executive director, Jane, was relatively new and decided the organization needed
to improve its ability to raise funds. Jane contracted with an OD consultant, Jeff, to address
the issue.
Jeff took Jane and the organization through the action research process to discover the root cause
of the problem. He began by collecting data. He reviewed the organization’s website and bro-
chures and interviewed employees, donors, and clients. After analyzing the data, he concluded
that the organization was not clearly communicating its mission and services well enough and
that it lacked a strategic plan. Jeff also suspected that the organization design was not conducive
to carrying out its work.
Jeff and Jane began to address this problem by holding a retreat. During the retreat, board mem-
bers and staff engaged in numerous exercises to express, clarify, and revise their mission, vision,
and values statements. For example, they spent time identifying the organization’s strengths,
weaknesses, opportunities, and threats over the short, mid-, and long term. They imagined vari-
ous scenarios that would create very different outcomes for the organization, such as changes
in health care coverage, escalating expenses, a new employer moving into town, future company
closures, and an electronic medical record.
Immediately following the retreat, the organization updated its website, letterhead, and bro-
chures to reflect its more concise mission, vision, and values. Jeff and Jane also worked with the
board on developing a 5-year strategic plan that included more aggressive communication to
potential donors, increased fundraising efforts, and enhanced diversity of both its board mem-
bers and its donor base.
Part of the strategic plan included reorganizing the nonprofit around its programs to more
readily respond to its distinct stakeholder groups, such as patients and insurance companies. The
reorganization was preceded by a large-scale event that brought together employees, patients,
other health care providers, board members, and other local nonprofits that worked closely with
the organization to plan for the future and how best to meet its needs. Each of these steps will be
illuminated in the following sections.
Organization-level OD interventions tend to be more comprehensive and long term than indi-
vidual and group interventions. Their goal is to help the organization set direction, determine
strategy, solicit feedback, facilitate learning, manage knowledge, change the culture, value
diversity, develop the work force, and manage day-to-day activities. Although the list of poten-
tial interventions is endless, this chapter introduces the range and variety of interventions that
are typically used in OD. These can be categorized into seven areas: mission, vision, or values
development; strategic planning; organization design; learning infrastructure; culture; talent
management; and large-scale interactive events (see Table 9.1). The first of these is the develop-
ment of mission, vision, and values statements.
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 9.1Mission, Vision, and Values Development
Table 9.1: Categories of individual OD intervention
Mission,
vision,
and values
development
Strategic
planning
Organization
design
Learning
infra-
structure Culture
Talent
management
Large-scale
interactive
events
Mission Environ-
mental
scanning
Organization
structure
Organization
learning
Culture
change
Talent
management
strategy
Interactive
Strategic
Planning
Vision SWOT
analysis
Reorganization Learning
organization
Diversity
and
inclusion
Succession
planning
Future
Search
Values SMART
goals
Scenario
planning
— — — — Conference
Model
Redesign
Open Space
Technology
9.1 Mission, Vision, and Values Development
If an organization is to communicate its core beliefs to the world, it must have a clear and
concise statement of its mission, vision, and values. Start-up, merged, or significantly reorga-
nized organizations need to develop or revise these statements, and even established organi-
zations should revisit them periodically. OD consultants often get involved in these efforts.
Mission
A mission statement explains why an organization exists. It identifies the organization’s tar-
get audience and the product or service it provides in a way that expresses the organization’s
core values. Good mission statements are easy to remember and describe.
Why Do OD Consultants Advocate Mission Statements?
Mission statements create boundaries of service, motivate staff, and help evaluate whether
the organization has met its goals. They succinctly communicate the organization’s purpose
to both the internal and the external world. They can also help focus strategic planning, prod-
uct development, and innovation.
Consider This
Take a moment to jot down the vision, mission, and values of your organization. Can you do
it from memory? If not, you are in good company, because most employees and other organi-
zation stakeholders cannot; this signals that these statements are probably in need of some
revision.
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 9.1Mission, Vision, and Values Development
How Do OD Consultants Help Organizations Create Mission Statements?
There are three parts of a good mission
statement: the audience, the product or ser-
vice, and the evaluative measures. Consider
a social media company’s mission state-
ment to evaluate these elements:
“TechConnect’s mission is to give people
the power to communicate and connect
worldwide.”
• Audience: The audience defines
whom the organization serves.
TechConnect is boundaryless to
people who have access to a device
and an Internet connection. Tech-
Connect’s audience is “people
. . . worldwide,” as noted in the
statement.
• Product or service: The product or
service identifies what the orga-
nization provides. TechConnect’s
service is social networking, with
the aim of openly connecting the
world.
• Evaluative measures: Evaluative
measures are the standards by which the organization can be judged in terms of
whether it is achieving its mission. TechConnect’s mission is to connect people
throughout the world. How well it is doing that might be measured by the number of
users, ad revenue, or site traffic.
Mission statements should be short, succinct, and easy to remember, like the ones listed ear-
lier in this section. Management guru Peter Drucker was known to have advocated mission
statements that were no longer than eight words and could easily fit on a T-shirt. In his opin-
ion, anything larger was simply too long (Wartzman, 2012). Chances are, if you cannot state
an organization’s mission, it may not be a good statement.
You can use Figure 9.1 to write your own mission statement or evaluate your organization’s
mission according to how well it articulates audience, product or service, and evaluative
measures.
Bloomberg/Getty Images
An organization’s mission is its reason for
being. It is usually based on a central product
or service. eBay’s mission statement from
2013 was, “We exist to serve, and, through
our service, we create an engaged and loyal
eBay community.” In 2020, eBay’s website
read, “Our mission is to be the world’s favorite
destination for discovering great value and
unique selection.”
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 9.1Mission, Vision, and Values Development
Figure 9.1: Mission statement assessment worksheet
Use this worksheet to write or evaluate your organization’s mission statement. Download a copy in
your e-book.
Jeff and Jane, from the opening vignette, planned a retreat with staff and the board, who used
their time away to craft a mission statement that could be communicated more succinctly. A
list of exemplary mission statements can be found at the following link: https://blog.hubspot.
com/marketing/inspiring-company-mission-statements.
Vision
A vision statement articulates an organization’s desired end state. When the organization is
able to articulate its image of a desired future—that is, where it wants to go and what it will
be like once it gets there—it has clear vision (Senge, Kleiner, Roberts, Ross, & Smith, 1994).
Although leaders are responsible for formulating vision, Senge and colleagues (1994) argued
that fostering and fulfilling the vision is everyone’s responsibility. Examples of good vision
statements include these:
Motorcycle company: “To awaken adventure through motorcycling”
Mission Statement Worksheet
The Audience (the boundary)
The Product or Service
Evaluative Measures
Now, put the three functions together in a succinct statement:
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 9.1Mission, Vision, and Values Development
Wine maker: “To be the world’s most distinguished producer of fine wines”
Chain restaurant: “To create a first-rate, accessible dining company”
Why Do OD Consultants Advocate Vision Statements?
Noting that “not all visions are equal” (p. 299), Senge and colleagues (1994) identified several
attributes that make a vision powerful. Powerful visions “tap into an organization’s deeper
sense of purpose and articulate specific goals that represent making that purpose real, [and]
have unique power to engender aspirations and commitment” (Senge et al., 1994, p. 299).
Creating a shared vision requires stakeholders to reflect on the organization’s purpose and
future. Senge and colleagues (1994) equated building shared vision with building shared
meaning that yields a collective sense of what is important.
How Do OD Consultants Help Organizations Development Vision Statements?
The consultant helps the client determine how it hopes its products or services might change
the world. The vision statement should capture the organization’s dream; it is a picture of the
organization’s ultimate success.
There are multiple methods for creating vision statements. These include simple word smith-
ery and generative activities in which multiple participants identify key vision ideas that are
collated and ranked. Other companies may use exercises involving pictures and visual aids to
create images of the desired future. Table 9.2 compares the characteristics of vision and mis-
sion statements.
A list of exemplary vision statements can be found at https://fitsmallbusiness.com/
vision-statement-examples/.
Table 9.2: Comparing mission and vision statements
Mission statements:
Why the organization exists
Vision statements:
The organization’s desired end state
Succinct one-sentence statement explaining why
the organization exists. It should
1. be simple and clear,
2. avoid jargon,
3. be easily memorized,
4. be distinctive, and
5. not be confused with a vision statement.
Succinct one-sentence statement describing the
organization’s long-term desired end state. It should
1. be simple and clear,
2. avoid jargon,
3. be easily memorized, and
4. not be confused with a mission statement.
Examples of mission and vision statements
Automobile Company Mission
Go the distance: We go the distance to exceed
the expectations of our customers in quality and
performance.
Automobile Company Vision
To be the world’s leading provider of automotive
products and services
Children’s Hospital Mission
Committed to making them all better: We make chil-
dren better today, and healthier in the future.
Children’s Hospital Vision
To transform the landscape of pediatric health care
and improve the health of all children
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 9.2Strategic Planning
Values
An organization’s values are principles that govern how the organization expects to function
in pursuit of its vision. OD consultants are often hired to help the organization clarify and
articulate its values, along with its mission and vision.
Why Do OD Consultants Help Clients Develop Values Statements?
A values statement brings the mission and vision statements to life by describing what the
organization believes in and how it will behave. These statements signal the organization’s
beliefs and culture. Values statements can serve as a moral compass for the organization by
defining leadership expectations, establishing standards, and guiding decisions.
How Do OD Consultants Help Clients Develop Values Statements?
Values are usually derived in conjunction with mission and vision statements. They are gen-
erally based on consensus and ideally involve input from top management and stakeholders
across the organization.
OD interventions often center on helping organizations articulate their mission, vision, and
values in a collective process that is developmental. This process may involve other visioning
interventions introduced later in this chapter, such as a Future Search Conference, SWOT
analysis, or environmental scanning. Creating the mission, vision, and values statements is
often an integral part of strategic planning.
9.2 Strategic Planning
Strategic planning is “a disciplined effort to produce fundamental decisions and actions
that shape and guide what an organization (or other entity) is, what it does, and why it
does it” (Bryson, 2004, p. 6). Strategic planning seeks to accomplish several goals, includ-
ing establishing or revisiting long-term vision, values, and mission statements that span
several years. Strategic planning scans the environment to assess the competitors, prod-
ucts, and services that characterize the industry context. The plan generates strategies to be
implemented over a 5-year period that delineate specific activities, champions to advocate
for the plan, and deadlines for accomplishing tasks. For example, Jeff and Jane led the non-
profit health organization’s staff and board through a strategic planning process that helped
accomplish these goals.
Consider This
What are the values of an organization of which you are a part? How are the values com-
municated or visible? For example, Patagonia communicates its value of “saving the planet”
in how it manufactures, markets, and affects the environment: https://www.patagonia.com/
company-info.html.
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 9.2Strategic Planning
The strategic planning process has several steps, including
• engaging in comprehensive, effective information gathering;
• clarifying the organization’s mission, vision, and values;
• identifying issues to be addressed in pursuit of the mission;
• developing and exploring strategic alternatives;
• emphasizing the future impact of present decisions; and
• creating specific, measurable actions and timelines, usually in 5-year increments.
Strategic planning helps organizations communicate their mission and goals to employees
and other stakeholders. The process is often collective and seeks input from across the orga-
nization and its constituents. It represents multiple agendas, interests, and values. It also cre-
ates a deliberative assessment of the past, present, and future and establishes accountability
measures. An organization typically makes a public commitment to its strategic plan and uses
the plan to guide its decisions and actions. Figure 9.2 outlines a simple approach to strategic
planning.
Figure 9.2: Strategic planning steps
Strategic planning is a three-step process to determine where you are, where you want to be, and how
to get there.
An effective strategic plan will communicate the organization’s mission, vision, and values
to the organization’s constituents. The plan will also help the organization prioritize and
allocate resources and provide a basis for measuring progress and change. Consultants
who facilitate a strategic planning process must educate themselves on the necessary steps,
Determine
where you are
Decide where
you want to be
Plan how to
get there
• Mission and
vision
• Programs and
services
• People and
skills
• Organization
structure
• Communications
• Budget support
• Mission and
vision
• Programs and
services
• People and
skills
• Organization
structure
• Communications
• Budget support
• Strategic plan
• Restructuring and
reengineering
• Hiring and
training
• IT and HR plans
• Communications
• Budget allocations
• Metrics
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 9.2Strategic Planning
usually by undergoing continuing education or graduate study. They should also use products
such as OnStrategy (https://onstrategyhq.com/) to track progress and make the plan and
accomplishments visible on the organization website. Additionally, they can access strategic
planning tools and resources through the Council of Nonprofits: https://www.councilofnon
profits.org/tools-resources/dashboards-nonprofits.
Several interventions support the strategic planning process. These include environmental
scanning, SWOT analysis, creating SMART goals, and scenario planning. Each will be profiled
in the following sections.
Environmental Scanning
When the organization scrutinizes external and internal factors that provide critical informa-
tion about its future, the organization is engaged in environmental scanning. Environmental
scanning involves both external and internal scans:
• External scans examine industry and government reports, journals, conferences, and
any other sources that can be used to evaluate the industry. This information might
include competitors, market conditions, government regulations, demographics,
technology, economic development, global trends, or anything else that might affect
the organization’s livelihood.
• Internal scans draw on stakeholder interviews, annual reports, planning documents,
analysis reports, customer surveys, employee surveys, marketing reports, board
meeting minutes, human resource databases, and other sources that provide rel-
evant information.
Why Do OD Consultants Recommend Environmental Scanning?
Environmental scanning systematically scrutinizes the organizational context (economic,
competitive, social, political, and so forth) and collects data to develop a picture of current
and future conditions that could positively or negatively affect the organization. Environmen-
tal scanning is important for organizations to maintain or improve their competitive position.
The data generated by an environmental scan is used to develop or change strategies and
plans. Environmental scanning can be done on any scale. Individuals may engage in it on a
personal level when they try to understand the job market or select the best product to buy.
Organizations use it regularly to anticipate the future and be more internally and externally
strategic.
How Do OD Consultants Facilitate Environmental Scanning?
Environmental scanning involves the following steps:
1. Collect data about the context in which the organization operates, including
a. economic,
b. government,
c. legal,
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 9.2Strategic Planning
d. demographic,
e. social,
f. political, and
g. environmental.
2. Use data sources such as
a. publications,
b. focus groups,
c. industry leaders,
d. internal leaders,
e. media, and
f. civic associations.
3. Critically examine competitors to discover trends, opportunities, and threats that
have implications for the organization.
4. Conduct an internal scan to examine the organization’s strengths and weaknesses.
This should include reviewing short- and long-term goals.
5. Assess where the organization is now and where it should be in 10 years. Conduct a
gap analysis as discussed in Chapter 4.
6. Collect relevant data from the community in which the organization operates. Out-
comes might be joint projects or strategies. Relevant stakeholders might include
a. nonprofit organizations,
b. governmental or social agencies,
c. higher education institutions, and
d. religious organizations.
7. Analyze the data and use it to develop or modify strategy.
Have you ever participated in environmental scanning? See the activity at the end of the chap-
ter to practice.
SWOT Analysis
During a SWOT analysis, employees and other stakeholders come together to identify an
organization’s strengths and weaknesses and to examine environmental opportunities and
threats. It is often done as part of strategic planning and is very effective if performed correctly.
Why Do OD Consultants Do SWOT Analysis?
The act of simply carrying out an analysis using the SWOT framework can be enough to reveal
what needs to change and to stimulate new ideas. SWOT analyses are often undertaken fol-
lowing environmental scanning to establish strategies to maximize opportunities and mini-
mize threats.
How Do OD Consultants Do SWOT Analysis?
To carry out a SWOT analysis, reflect on the questions listed in Table 9.3.
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 9.2Strategic Planning
Table 9.3: SWOT analysis
Strengths Weaknesses
• What are our advantages?
• What do we do well?
• What are our
• Unique capabilities?
• Natural advantages?
• Superior resources?
• What could we improve?
• What are we doing badly?
• What should we avoid?
• What are our
• Key vulnerabilities?
• Disadvantages?
• Resource and capability shortfalls?
Opportunities Threats (Challenges)
• Where are the good chances facing us?
• What are the interesting trends?
• What are the
• Changes in the social, economic, and
political environment?
• Changes in technology?
• Changes in government policy?
• Changes in markets?
• Weaknesses of our competitors?
• Unmet customer needs?
• Staff and supplier capabilities?
• Size, location, and strategic positioning?
• Changes in social patterns, population
profiles, lifestyle changes, etc.?
• Local events that have potential?
• What obstacles do we face?
• What is our competition doing?
• Are the required specifications of our work,
products, or services changing?
• Is changing technology threatening our
position?
• Do we have bad debt or cash flow problems?
• Are we at risk of
• Resistance to change?
• Lack of interest or motivation?
• Lack of commitment?
• Lack of flexibility or focus?
• Mismatch of skills and resources with the
strategic direction?
• High risks or impossible odds?
Facilitating a SWOT analysis for a client involves following these steps:
1. Ask participants to individually brainstorm on each of the SWOT categories
(strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats). Have them write down their
ideas on Post-it notes.
2. Invite participants to place their Post-it notes on flip charts stationed around the
room. Each flip chart should be devoted to one SWOT category. Individuals will work
around the room in carousel fashion, adding one issue to each flip chart until all
ideas are exhausted.
3. Tally the issues. Seek consensus on prioritization of the key issues in each SWOT
category.
4. Review and discuss the issues.
5. Invite the group to raise questions and answers.
6. Help the group plan action around key issue(s).
7. Summarize the process and outcomes.
Keep in mind that groups have a tendency to get stuck in the process of identifying issues
and have difficulty moving toward commitment to action. Plan for transition out of the SWOT
analysis to bridge the gap between idea generation and meaningful action.
Returning to the vignette, the nonprofit organization underwent a SWOT analysis as part of
its planning to adjust priorities and goals. The process helped clarify the nonprofit’s chal-
lenges around fundraising in particular.
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 9.2Strategic Planning
SMART Goals
Strategic plans should incorporate SMART goals. SMART goals are
• Specific
• Measurable
• Attainable
• Realistic or Relevant
• Time bound
The SMART mnemonic was introduced by George Doran, Arthur Miller, and James Cunning-
ham in 1981 (Doran, Miller, & Cunningham, 1981). Since that time, it has served as the stan-
dard tool for creating effective goals.
How Do OD Consultants Help Clients Set SMART Goals?
Table 9.4 offers descriptions and examples of SMART goals.
Table 9.4: Setting SMART goals
Description Personal example Organization example
Specific A specific goal can be clearly visual-
ized. Specifics help us focus and
clearly define actions. Specifics are
the what, why, how, and who of the
SMART model.
WHAT are you going to do? Use
action words such as increase, orga-
nize, collaborate, lead, develop, plan,
establish, and build.
WHY is the goal important at this
time? What do you ultimately want to
accomplish?
HOW are you going to do it?
WHO is going to do it?
Instead of setting a
goal to lose weight,
set a specific goal,
such as losing 2
inches off your
waistline, losing 5
pounds in 5 weeks,
or walking 5 miles
at an aerobically
challenging pace.
Instead of setting a goal
to retain employees, set
a specific goal, such as
improving retention by
10\% over the next 90
days and implementing
an onboarding program
to provide orientation to
new employees.
Measurable An old management adage is “If
you cannot measure it, it does not
matter.” Furthermore, you cannot
manage it. A goal provides a measur-
ing stick. If the goal is accomplished,
success has been achieved. An
organization may also build several
short-term or small measurements
into the goal to measure incremental
progress along the way.
A goal that is dif-
ficult to measure
would be “Lose
weight.” A better
goal with measur-
able steps would be
“Lose 1 pound per
week for 5 weeks”
or “Exercise for 30
minutes every day.”
“The organization will
improve retention by
10\% over the next 90
days.”
(continued on next page)
© 2020 Zovio, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 9.2Strategic Planning
Table 9.4: Setting SMART goals (continued)
Description Personal example Organization example
Attainable Goals should be attainable and pos-
sible to reach. The goal should create
some challenge in that it is neither
too easy nor too difficult to reach and
will require push to attain. The goal
should be within the employee’s or
organization’s ability and resources
to achieve and should align with the
work unit goals.
Aiming to lose 10
pounds in 1 week
is not attainable (or
healthy). A more
attainable goal is to
lose 1 to 2 pounds
per week for a
sustained period of
time.
Aiming to improve reten-
tion by 10\% is realistic,
and after the 90-day
period, the organiza-
tion can adjust its goal
and approaches (e.g.,
onboarding) to see if that
affects retention.
Realistic or
relevant
Realistic does not mean “effortless.”
A realistic SMART goal is within
the employee’s or team’s capabil-
ity. Although the goal may challenge
employees to develop new skills and
knowledge, it will not throw them
into the panic zone or break their
motivation to continue because it
seems possible to reach.
This part of the SMART goal frame-
work is called …
BUS370.W4A1.04.2021
Description:
Total Possible Score: 6.00
Selects an Intervention for the Case Study
Total: 1.00
Distinguished - Selects an appropriate intervention for the case study.
Proficient - N/A
Basic - Selects a limited intervention for the case study.
Below Expectations - Attempts to select an intervention for the case study; however, significant details are missing or inappropriate.
Non-Performance - The intervention for the case study is either nonexistent or lacks the components described in the assignment instructions.
Evaluates Why the Intervention Is Applicable to the Case Study
Total: 2.00
Distinguished - Comprehensively evaluates why the intervention is applicable to the case study.
Proficient - Evaluates why the intervention is applicable to the case study. Minor details are missing.
Basic - Partially evaluates why the intervention is applicable to the case study. Relevant details are missing.
Below Expectations - Attempts to evaluate why the intervention is applicable to the case study; however, significant details are missing.
Non-Performance - The evaluation of why the intervention is applicable to the case study is either nonexistent or lacks the components described in the assignment instructions.
Interprets the Actions Involved When Utilizing the Intervention
Total: 1.00
Distinguished - Clearly and accurately interprets the actions involved when utilizing the intervention.
Proficient - Interprets the actions involved when utilizing the intervention. Minor details are slightly unclear or inaccurate.
Basic - Vaguely interprets the actions involved when utilizing the intervention. Relevant details are unclear and/or inaccurate.
Below Expectations - Attempts to interpret the actions involved when utilizing the intervention; however, significant details are unclear and inaccurate.
Non-Performance - The interpretation of the actions involved when utilizing the intervention is either nonexistent or lacks the components described in the assignment instructions.
Written Communication: Control of Syntax and Mechanics
Total: 0.50
Distinguished - Displays meticulous comprehension and organization of syntax and mechanics, such as spelling and grammar. Written work contains no errors and is very easy to understand.
Proficient - Displays comprehension and organization of syntax and mechanics, such as spelling and grammar. Written work contains only a few minor errors and is mostly easy to understand.
Basic - Displays basic comprehension of syntax and mechanics, such as spelling and grammar. Written work contains a few errors which may slightly distract the reader.
Below Expectations - Fails to display basic comprehension of syntax or mechanics, such as spelling and grammar. Written work contains major errors which distract the reader.
Non-Performance - The assignment is either nonexistent or lacks the components described in the instructions.
Written Communication: APA Formatting
Total: 0.50
Distinguished - Accurately uses APA formatting consistently throughout the paper, title page, and reference page.
Proficient - Exhibits APA formatting throughout the paper. However, layout contains a few minor errors.
Basic - Exhibits limited knowledge of APA formatting throughout the paper. However, layout does not meet all APA requirements.
Below Expectations - Fails to exhibit basic knowledge of APA formatting. There are frequent errors, making the layout difficult to distinguish as APA.
Non-Performance - The assignment is either nonexistent or lacks the components described in the instructions.
Intro, Thesis, & Conclusion
Total: 0.25
Distinguished - The paper is logically organized with a well-written introduction, thesis statement, and conclusion.
Proficient - The paper is logically organized with an introduction, thesis statement, and conclusion. One of these requires improvement.
Basic - The paper is organized with an introduction, thesis statement, and conclusion. The introduction, thesis statement, and/or conclusion require improvement.
Below Expectations - The paper is loosely organized with an introduction, thesis statement, and conclusion. The introduction, thesis statement, and/or conclusion require much improvement.
Non-Performance - The introduction, thesis statement, and conclusion are either nonexistent or lack the components described in the assignment instructions.
Written Communication: Page Requirement
Total: 0.25
Distinguished - The length of the paper is equivalent to the required number of correctly formatted pages.
Proficient - The length of the paper is nearly equivalent to the required number of correctly formatted pages.
Basic - The length of the paper is equivalent to at least three quarters of the required number of correctly formatted pages.
Below Expectations - The length of the paper is equivalent to at least one half of the required number of correctly formatted pages.
Non-Performance - The assignment is either nonexistent or lacks the components described in the instructions.
Written Communication: Resource Requirement
Total: 0.50
Distinguished - Uses more than the required number of scholarly sources, providing compelling evidence to support ideas. All sources on the reference page are used and cited correctly within the body of the assignment.
Proficient - Uses the required number of scholarly sources to support ideas. All sources on the reference page are used and cited correctly within the body of the assignment.
Basic - Uses less than the required number of sources to support ideas. Some sources may not be scholarly. Most sources on the reference page are used within the body of the assignment. Citations may not be formatted correctly.
Below Expectations - Uses an inadequate number of sources that provide little or no support for ideas. Sources used may not be scholarly. Most sources on the reference page are not used within the body of the assignment. Citations are not formatted correctly.
Non-Performance - The assignment is either nonexistent or lacks the components described in the instructions.
Powered by
By Steve H. Cady and
Joo-Hyung Kim
Unlike other capital investments, the
value of learning appreciates, rather than
depreciates.—Christopher Lee
The evaluation of OD interventions has
never been more promising than in this
era with the advancements of such tools
as data analytics; yet it remains challeng-
ing for organizations to utilize a proper
evaluation strategy. In this article, we begin
by exploring the paradox of competing
demands and then introduce a pragmatic
model for selecting the optimal evaluation
strategy by considering both the scope
and rigor of analysis and leveraging the
levels of evaluation from the field of train-
ing and development. We conclude with
reflections on evaluation from the perspec-
tive of Gestalt OD Theory and collective
consciousness.
In today’s world of artificial intel-
ligence, quantum computing, and data
analytics, we are on the cusp of demon-
strating the central importance of OD inter-
ventions to the health and vitality of the
systems we lead, consult, study, educate,
and serve (Shah, Irani, & Sharif, 2017; Boje
& Henderson, 2014). These advancements
have enabled us to examine more readily
how OD interventions positively impact the
organization across multiple contexts and
levels of analysis. For example, we are now
capable of directly linking change processes
to organizational performance (Pettigrew,
Woodman, & Cameron, 2016). Further, this
possibility does not stop with proving the
importance of OD interventions. Evalua-
tion tools enable us to learn from and tease
out the nuances, and more specifically
learn from interventions in order to
improve them for future applications.
These conditions above have set the
stage for an evolutionary leap in the field
of OD (Kleiner, 2015; Laloux, 2014; Lawler
& Worley, 2011). On a national level, the
US department of labor predicts that
behavioral science fields such as OD will
be serving the fastest growing occupa-
tions (Career Trends, 2016). Likewise, the
federal government has been supportive
of the utility of behavioral sciences, as can
be seen from the following statement:
“Where federal policies have been designed
to reflect behavioral science insights, they
have substantially improved outcomes for
the individuals, families, communities, and
businesses those policies serve” (Presiden-
tial Executive Order, 2016, p.1).
While we are on the cusp of a new era,
there are still challenges to be resolved. A
successful evaluation of OD interventions
is one of the difficulties many organiza-
tional practitioners and leaders confront.
The Paradox of Competing Demands
Assessing the efficacy of OD interventions
can be elusive, because it is dependent on
the required accuracy of analysis ( Terborg,
Howard, & Maxwell, 1980; Butler, Scott, &
Edwards, 2003). The greater the required
accuracy, the more rigorous and therefore
more costly the design. It is this tension
that describes the paradox of competing
demands (Cady & Milz, 2015; Cady, Auger,
& Foxon, 2010), which partly arises from
What We Can Learn from
Evaluating OD Interventions
The Paradox of Competing Demands
“In today’s world of artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and data analytics, we are on the
cusp of demonstrating the central importance of OD interventions to the health and vitality of
the systems we lead, consult, study, educate, and serve.”
50 OD PRACTITIONER Vol. 49 No. 1 2017
the reality that you “can’t have your cake
and eat it too.” The competing demands
present a polarity of the purpose (i.e. prove
and improve), and the cost (i.e. time and
money).
Purpose: Prove and Improve
Proving Questions
❑ How many people are expected to
be impacted by the intervention?
❑ Who is accountable for ensuring the
intervention is implemented?
❑ Who else has the legal and govern-
mental oversight?
❑ What were the political implications
for the OD group and champions of
the intervention?
The first dimension of prove and improve
relates to the intended purpose of the inter-
vention. OD professionals find themselves
defending interventions, proving that the
interventions had the intended impact
and added value to the bottom line. The
need for proof is about accountability for
results, while making the business case to
the skeptics. Because OD is considered to
be based on the softer behavioral sciences,
the role of evaluation can be undervalued
and oversimplified. For example, it is easier
to measure one’s blood pressure (hard
science) than one’s attitude (soft science).
Or, it is easier to measure cost savings from
“right sizing” an organization, than it is
to measure cost savings from a training
initiative.
All the while, a core value of OD is to
evaluate for the sake of learning, improv-
ing the intervention and leveraging its
strengths. In other words, the second aim
is to evaluate in order to improve the inter-
vention and the organization for the future.
This future focus is based on the desire
to understand how interventions worked,
identify the relatively important elements
of the intervention, advance theories, and
create more robust interventions.
Improving Questions
❑ How can the results inform us about
future applications?
❑ Will the intervention be used in the
future and, if so, how much?
❑ What are the uses for and scal-
ability of the intervention for
other settings?
❑ What is the expected impact on
the wellbeing and culture of the
organization?
In some cases, an accurate evaluation is
necessary to determine whether the inter-
vention should be continued or scaled for
other settings (Kirkpatrick, 1998; Nielsen
& Abildgaard, 2013). However, perform-
ing rigorous high quality evaluations of
all interventions is not always practical,
though it might appear ideal. It is a particu-
larly relevant challenge when considering
the competing paradox of time and money
(Cady et al, 2010).
Cost: Time and Money
Conducting evaluations can be costly
in terms of both time and money for all
stakeholders involved. If either is too high,
it is likely that the key decision makers will
decide against conducting an evaluation
altogether.
Time Questions
❑ What are the required details for
the design, data collection, and
reporting?
❑ What are the demands by leader-
ship on the evaluation?
❑ Who needs to be included in and
informed of the evaluation?
❑ How many competing interventions
are currently being implemented?
In terms of time, leaders will need to pull
people away from their typical tasks for
evaluations, such as being interviewed,
filling out surveys, and providing perfor-
mance data. This opportunity cost is not
always seen as a good use of time. Too
often, surveys are filled out and go into
the proverbial “black box,” never to be
mentioned again. This lack of closing the
loop is one of the biggest hindrances to
getting reasonable response rates. Further,
it erodes the trust of those impacted by
the intervention, not to mention the loss
of quality information, undermining the
future applications of the intervention.
Money may be another major determi-
nant of an evaluation strategy, especially
when outcomes are difficult to measure. It
is possible that the evaluation can be the
largest item in the budget for an inter-
vention. Therefore, if the financial cost
associated with an evaluation is beyond
expectation, it may lead the organization
to decide against conducting any evalua-
tion. Evaluation competencies are another
consideration. As you move to higher levels
of evaluation, the required sophistication
often surpasses the expertise of those
responsible for the intervention (Cady &
Milz, 2015; Cady et al, 2010), requiring
additional inputs such as training and out
sourced professionals.
It is possible that the evaluation can be the largest item in
the budget for an intervention. Therefore, if the financial
cost associated with an evaluation is beyond expectation, it
may lead the organization to decide against conducting any
evaluation. Evaluation competencies are another consideration.
As you move to higher levels of evaluation, the required
sophistication often surpasses the expertise of those
responsible for the intervention, requiring additional inputs
such as training and outsourced professionals.
51What We Can Learn from Evaluating OD Interventions: The Paradox of Competing Demands
Money Questions
❑ What are the intervention-related
fees and staffing costs?
❑ How much are the opportunity
costs from doing or not doing
the evaluation?
❑ What are the technology, soft-
ware, materials, and logistical
requirements?
❑ How much of the intervention’s
budget has been allocated for
the evaluation?
You Can’t Have Your Cake, and Eat It Too
The competing demand comes from the
desire to prove the effect of an interven-
tion and improve it while minimizing the
associated costs. Although a focus on the
proving and improving of an intervention
may result in better outcomes, it will cost
more in terms of time and money (see
Figure 1). In this case, how do you find the
optimal point that balances the polarity of
the benefits and costs?
You can choose a costly evaluation
that bears important implications for the
organization or community. If there is a
long-term implementation plan for the
intervention, the intended impact is likely
vital to the future; further, demonstrat-
ing results in an objective fashion may be
necessary for continued funding. However,
there are also cases where a costly evalua-
tion is not plausible or desirable.
There may be no time or budget allo-
cated to the evaluation because evaluations
are often reactionary and not given enough
planning. For example, the whole evalu-
ation process might begin with a leader
simply saying, “Did that program work . . .
can you confirm that it was worth our time
and money . . . are we better off . . . we are
not done, right . . . oh, by the way, can you
provide an update focused on these ques-
tions at our meeting next week?” Moreover,
some believe that funds would be better
spent on additional interventions or even
argue that evaluations are just a bureau-
cratic mechanism for show. The perception
is that the outcomes of the process are so
obvious that it is not necessary to conduct
an evaluation (Cady & Milz, 2015; Cady et
al, 2010). In this case, you can choose a
less rigorous approach that will not only
give you some general guidance for the
intervention but also help persuade the
skeptics about the need for an evaluation.
Selecting an Evaluation Strategy
Evaluations can take place at a single level
or across multiple levels, and this is often
determined by the tradeoff of the compet-
ing demands. This multi-level nature of
evaluations has been originally adopted
in the field of training and development,
based on two prominent models: Kirk-
patrick’s Levels of Evaluation (1998) and
Phillips’ Return on Investment (1996).
As shown in Table 1, there are five levels
Table 1: Levels of Evaluation with Low and High Rigor Options
Level Focus High Rigor Example Low Rigor Example
I Attitude: How satisfied
are people?
A validated survey with established reliability
measures and limited open-ended questions
for qualitative analysis.
Three questions on a flip chart with a couple
of them scaled and a third open-ended
question.
II Knowledge: What do
people know?
Administer a test that addresses key concepts,
information, and policies related to the
initiative.
Ask questions in an open forum about the key
aspects of the initiative and make notes of
what you hear.
III Behavior: What are
people doing?
Conduct behavioral observations of people;
identify the frequencies of specific desired
behaviors related to the initiative.
Administer a short questionnaire asking
people to self-report their actions (verbal
assessment also acceptable).
IV Impact: What has been
achieved?
Compare specific key performance indicators
before, during, and after the initiative has
been implemented.
Gather reports from a short survey, emails,
and meetings with examples of what has been
achieved.
V Return: How much money
has been generated
versus spent?
Conduct a formal ROI analysis with key
personnel reporting on verified costs (e.g.,
waste, errors, and cycle time) and the financial
gains from the intervention.
Calculate a verifiable ROI. Provide documented
examples of best practices.
Conduct a pseudo ROI analysis with key
personnel reporting on estimated costs (e.g.,
waste, errors, and cycle time) and gains from
the intervention. Calculate a SWAG (serious
wild ass guess) ROI with anecdotal evidence.
Time & Money
P
ro
ve
&
Im
p
ro
ve
Figure 1. The Paradox of Competing
Demands in Evaluating OD Interventions
OD PRACTITIONER Vol. 49 No. 1 201752
of evaluation that progress from assess-
ing attitudes at Level I up to assessing the
Return on Investment at Level V. Kirk-
patrick’s Evaluation Model was originally
introduced in a trade journal, and was
later published in his book titled Evaluat-
ing Training Programs (1975). Then, J.J.
Phillips’ (1997) built on the Kirkpatrick’s
model by adding a fifth level: the Return
on Investment (ROI) framework. These
two perspectives have been integrated and
applied to a variety of change initiatives
(Phillips, Phillips, & Ray, 2015; Russ-Eft
et al., 2008), and we recommend that OD
professionals include these approaches in
their toolkit for the evaluation and inter-
vention design process. The two frame-
works will provide you with the common
language that is often used throughout
organizations among leaders and manag-
ers alike.
In Figure 2, we propose that you begin
your evaluation design process with iden-
tifying the competing demand of purpose,
namely the desire to prove and improve the
intervention.
Then, ascertain the availability of
time and money to implement the evalua-
tion. Figure 2 provides the options you can
choose from with regard to the amount of
rigor. For example, if you find yourself in
need of both proving and improving the
intervention, then it is recommended that
you use all five levels of evaluation. If you
have unlimited time and money, you are
in a position to provide the highest level of
rigor in your assessment. However, as we
have discussed, this is typically not pos-
sible. While the tools for data analytics are
available, the staffing and related analytical
costs are still considerably high (BI-Survey.
com, 2015; Microstrategy, 2014).
Rigor influences how formal and
planned an evaluation is, thus impacting
the validity and reliability of the results. In
addition, the scope of the evaluation can
change from examining the participants’
experiences to verifying the intervention’s
impact on the organization. Next, we will
walk through some scenarios using Table 1
as a guide to help you decide the level of
evaluation. Then, Figure 2 provides further
examples on the ways to conduct less rigor-
ous evaluations when there are limitations
on time and money.
Let’s start with a scenario in which
you want to both prove and improve a
team-level mediation intervention. When
conducting an evaluation with high rigor,
the scope is the most invasive and extreme;
it involves higher costs with a formal sur-
vey to assess reactions (Level 1), a test on
the mediation model being used (Level 2),
and the monitoring of the mediation
practices utilized (Level 3). The evaluation
also requires the evidence for supporting
high-leverage improvements while also
proving the degree of impact, such as the
frequency of mediations (Level 4), and
a well- documented ROI (Level 5). These
measures attempt to answer the following
questions, for example:
» How effective was the team mediation
intervention?
» How can it be more effective?
» What difference has it made?
» What errors have been averted?
» How much cost has been saved?
» What revenues have been improved?
All five levels of evaluation are to be
conducted in a formal and valid fashion by
trained research professionals.
Now, let’s consider a situation
where you find yourself in need of prov-
ing whether the intervention worked as
intended; however, you do not want to
improve the intervention for the future.
While the evaluation aims at assessing the
changes in operations and behaviors, the
focus is on the direct impact of the inter-
vention. In the case of the team mediation
intervention, this might involve assessing
the mediation practices utilized (Level 3)
and the number of mediations conducted
or the amount of time to resolution
(Level 4). These measures would be taken
before, during, and after the intervention
implementation.
The lowest level of evaluation, before
there is no evaluation required at all, is the
scenario where you do not want to prove
whether the intervention worked, yet you
need to improve it for future applications.
In this evaluation strategy, you would con-
duct Level 1, 2, and 3 evaluations. Here you
Ti
m
e
&
M
o
n
ey
Hi
ye
s
yes
yes
no
no
no
Prove?
Improve?
All Levels
(1–5)
Middle Levels
(3–4)
Low Levels
(1–3)
No Eval
Needed
Improve?
Lo
Figure 2. Evaluation Strategy Decision Tree
When conducting an evaluation with high rigor, the scope is
the most invasive and extreme; it involves higher costs with
a formal survey to assess reactions (Level 1), a test on the
mediation model being used (Level 2), and the monitoring
of the mediation practices utilized (Level 3). The evaluation
also requires the evidence for supporting high-leverage
improvements while also proving the degree of impact, such as
the frequency of mediations (Level 4), and a well-documented
ROI (Level 5).
53What We Can Learn from Evaluating OD Interventions: The Paradox of Competing Demands
BI-Survey.com
BI-Survey.com
examine the specific intervention’s impact
on individuals’ perceptions and behaviors.
For example, you might assess reactions
to the team mediation (Level 1) and check
if the mediation model has been properly
understood (Level 2). You might use three
questions on a flip chart to assess the sat-
isfaction level, and ask them to write down
the components of the mediation to check
the learning outcomes.
Within all of these strategies, you may
need to conduct a less rigorous evaluation
providing a rough understanding of how
to improve the intervention by gathering
information with limited resources in
a shorter time period. For example, you
may walk around the organization taking
note of changes, conduct an informal poll
during a meeting, and seek personal inputs
about the perceived impact of the inter-
vention (Table 1). Leaders may be asked to
estimate the approximate cost savings and
revenue improvements, thereby estimating
a pseudo-ROI.
Summary and Reflections
The process of evaluating interventions is
about determining whether the path you
are on has been the most effective strategy
efficiently executed for the system you are
in. In turn, this will influence how you
move into the future. The fundamental
premise of a good evaluation, as consistent
with the principle of the Gestalt Theory
of OD, is self-awareness on a large-scale.
Self-awareness serves as the starting point
of the whole energizing action cycle in the
Gestalt Group Cycle (Zinker, 1980); to be
able to figure out the future path, people
and the whole systems must be aware of
themselves. Likewise, as in the notion
of collective consciousness, group aware-
ness can act as a unifying force for taking
ownership in determining how to move
forward together (Tsoukalas, 2007).
The models presented here provide a
framework for considering the competing
demands and the trade-offs to be made.
Developing an effective evaluation strategy
is subtle, and grey areas are manifold. For
example, imagine you are working on the
decision tree model (Figure 2) and it sug-
gests that an informal SWAG (serious wild
ass guess) evaluation is the best option with
Levels 4 and 5, because time and money
are limited. Is this “bad”? We say “no.” The
reason is two-fold. First, getting leaders to
slow down and think through the questions
necessary to evaluate an OD intervention is
important. For example, a venture capitalist
conducts valuations using internal rates of
return (IRR), which are based on critical
assumptions. The value of these invest-
ments often dwarfs the costs of most OD
interventions; and, it is interesting to note
that IRR calculations are made with some
SWAG. Similarly, engaging leaders in the
analysis of the intervention’s impact is
about creating conscious and more mind-
ful decisions on the ways to improve the
organization. Second, if the leaders paying
for the intervention get feedback from cred-
ible peers that the intervention resulted in
a meaningful return on the investment,
they will deem the feedback a valid data
point. While this belief is a perception, it is
helpful to know key stakeholders’ collective
reality in order to figure out the next steps
for organizational change efforts. In short,
evaluations do not happen in a perfect
world; there are always compromises that
must be made.
The bottom line is this: if you can
achieve the intended purpose of the evalua-
tion, then you have found the balance with
the paradox of competing demands. You
may find that your desired evaluation strat-
egy differs significantly from those you are
serving. As a result, go back to the drawing
board and rethink what is most important
to you, which may require renegotiating
expectations with key leaders and other
stakeholders.
In closing, the evaluation of OD
interventions supports the development of
a learning organization, and this is where
a consultant as an intervener can play an
important role in helping the organization
in service or disservice of itself. In provid-
ing the system with a better understanding
of itself through rigorous evaluations, the
system will change its thinking paradigm
and move toward a more intentional way
of self-organizing (Nevis, 2013). When the
system begins to change its thinking para-
digm, the learning has begun and “action
learning” occurs. This shift in thinking
and learning is what will lead to new orga-
nizational habits that result in long-term
sustainability.
References
BI-Survey.com (2015). How companies
benefit from big data. Retrieved from
http://bi-survey.com/big-data-benefits
Boje, D.M., & Henderson, T.L. (Eds.).
(2014), Being quantum: Ontological
storytelling in the age of antenarrative.
Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge
Scholars Publishing.
Butler, J., Scott, F., & Edwards, J. (2003).
Evaluating organizational change: The
role of ontology and epistemology.
Journal of Critical Postmodern Organiza-
tion Science, 2(2), 55–67.
Cady, S. H., Auger, J., & Foxon, M. (2010).
Situation evaluation. In W. Rothwell, J.
M. Stavros, & R. I. Sullivan (Eds.), Prac-
ticing organization development: A guide
for leading change (3rd ed., pp. 363–376).
The bottom line is this: if you can achieve the intended purpose
of the evaluation, then you have found the balance with the
paradox of competing demands. You may find that your desired
evaluation strategy differs significantly from those you are
serving. As a result, go back to the drawing board and rethink
what is most important to you, which may require renegotiating
expectations with key leaders and other stakeholders.
OD PRACTITIONER Vol. 49 No. 1 201754
BI-Survey.com
http://bi-survey.com/big-data-benefits
San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass
Publishers.
Cady, S. H., & Milz, S. A. (2015). Evaluating
organizational transformation. In W.
Rothwell, J. M. Stavros, & R. L. Sullivan
(Eds.), Practicing organization develop-
ment: Leading transformation and change
(4th ed., pp. 195–210). San Francisco,
CA: Jossey-Bass Publishers.
Career Trends (2016, July 12). Retrieved
from: http://psychology.about.com/od/
psychologycareerprofiles/p/iopsychcareers.
htm https://blog.dol.gov/2015/03/15/
the-10-fastest-growing-jobs/
Kirkpatrick, D. (1998). Evaluating training
programs: The four levels. San Francisco,
CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers.
Kleiner, A. (2015, Spring). Ellen Langer on
the Value of Mindfulness in Business,
s+b, Research on Teal-like attributes:
wholeness and control over context.
Retrieved from http://www.strategy-
business.com/article/00344?gko=10921
Phillips, J. J. (1997). Handbook of train-
ing evaluation and measurement
methods (3rd ed.). Boston, MA:
Butterworth-Heinemann.
Phillips, P. P., Phillips, J. J., & Ray, R. L.
(2015). Measuring the success of leader-
ship development: A step-by-step guide for
measuring impact and calculating ROI.
Alexandria, VA: ATD Press.
Laloux, F. (2014). Reinventing organizations:
A guide to creating organizations inspired
by the next stage in human consciousness.
Brussels, BE: Nelson Parker.
Lawler III, E. E., & Worley, C. G. (2011).
Management reset: Organizing for sus-
tainable effectiveness. Hoboken, NJ: John
Wiley & Sons.
Microstrategy (2014). Summary results
from the BI survey 13. Retrieved from
https://www.microstrategy.com/Strategy/
media/downloads/about-us/microstrategy-
bi-survey-13.pdf
Nevis, E. (2013). Organizational consult-
ing: A Gestalt approach. Abington, UK:
Taylor & Francis.
Nielsen, K., & Abildgaard, J. S. (2013).
Organizational interventions: a
research-based framework for the
evaluation of both process and effects.
Work & Stress, 27(3), 278–297.
Pettigrew, A.M., Woodman, R.W., &
Cameron, K.S. (2016). Studying
organizational change and develop-
ment: Challenges for future research.
Academy of Management Journal, 44(4),
697–713.
Presidential Executive Order (2016,
August 1). Retrieved from: https://www.
whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2015/
09/15/executive-order-using-behavioral-
science-insights-better-serve-american
Russ-Eft, D., Bober, M. J., De La Teja, I.,
Foxon, M., & Koszalka, T. A. (2008).
Evaluator competencies: Standards for the
practice of evaluation in organizations
(Vol. 22). Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley &
Sons.
Shah, N., Irani, Z., & Sharif, A.M. (2017).
Big data in an HR context: Explor-
ing organizational change readiness,
employee attitudes and behaviors. Jour-
nal of Business Research. 70(1), 366–378.
Terborg, J.R., Howard, G.S., & Maxwell,
S.E. (1980). Evaluating planned organi-
zational change: A method for assess-
ing alpha, beta, and gamma change.
Academy of Management Review, 5(1),
109–121.
Tsoukalas, I. (2007). Exploring the micro-
foundations of group consciousness.
Culture and Psychology, 13(1), 39–81.
Zinker, J. C. (1980). The developmental
process of a Gestalt therapy group. In
B. Feder & R. Ronall (Eds.), Beyond the
Hot Seat—Gestalt Approaches to Groups
(pp. 55–77). New York, NY: Brunner/
Mazel.
Interested in learning more about the
differences OD makes? See the call
for articles on page 5.
Steve Cady, PhD, is a professor,
author, speaker, and consultant.
He is a graduate faculty mem-
ber in the Bowling Green State
University Master of Organiza-
tion Development Program. Cady
is the co author of The Change
Handbook, author of Stepping
Stones to Success and PBS DVD
titled Life Inspired. He is also the
Chief Editor and Curator for the
BKpedia Change & Innovation
Collection. He can be reached at
[email protected]
Joo-Hyung Kim is an MBA can-
didate at Bowling Green State
University. She earned her
bachelor’s degree in Business
Administration from Korea
University. Her research interests
include judgment and decision
making, emotion, and applicant
attraction. She can be reached
at [email protected]
55What We Can Learn from Evaluating OD Interventions: The Paradox of Competing Demands
http://psychology.about.com/od/psychologycareerprofiles/p/iopsychcareers.htm https://blog.dol.gov/2015/03/15/the-10-fastest-growing-jobs/
http://psychology.about.com/od/psychologycareerprofiles/p/iopsychcareers.htm https://blog.dol.gov/2015/03/15/the-10-fastest-growing-jobs/
http://psychology.about.com/od/psychologycareerprofiles/p/iopsychcareers.htm https://blog.dol.gov/2015/03/15/the-10-fastest-growing-jobs/
http://psychology.about.com/od/psychologycareerprofiles/p/iopsychcareers.htm https://blog.dol.gov/2015/03/15/the-10-fastest-growing-jobs/
http://www.strategy-business.com/article/00344?gko=10921
http://www.strategy-business.com/article/00344?gko=10921
https://www.microstrategy.com/Strategy/media/downloads/about-us/microstrategy-bi-survey-13.pdf
https://www.microstrategy.com/Strategy/media/downloads/about-us/microstrategy-bi-survey-13.pdf
https://www.microstrategy.com/Strategy/media/downloads/about-us/microstrategy-bi-survey-13.pdf
https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2015/09/15/executive-order-using-behavioral-science-insights-better-serve-american
https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2015/09/15/executive-order-using-behavioral-science-insights-better-serve-american
…
CATEGORIES
Economics
Nursing
Applied Sciences
Psychology
Science
Management
Computer Science
Human Resource Management
Accounting
Information Systems
English
Anatomy
Operations Management
Sociology
Literature
Education
Business & Finance
Marketing
Engineering
Statistics
Biology
Political Science
Reading
History
Financial markets
Philosophy
Mathematics
Law
Criminal
Architecture and Design
Government
Social Science
World history
Chemistry
Humanities
Business Finance
Writing
Programming
Telecommunications Engineering
Geography
Physics
Spanish
ach
e. Embedded Entrepreneurship
f. Three Social Entrepreneurship Models
g. Social-Founder Identity
h. Micros-enterprise Development
Outcomes
Subset 2. Indigenous Entrepreneurship Approaches (Outside of Canada)
a. Indigenous Australian Entrepreneurs Exami
Calculus
(people influence of
others) processes that you perceived occurs in this specific Institution Select one of the forms of stratification highlighted (focus on inter the intersectionalities
of these three) to reflect and analyze the potential ways these (
American history
Pharmacology
Ancient history
. Also
Numerical analysis
Environmental science
Electrical Engineering
Precalculus
Physiology
Civil Engineering
Electronic Engineering
ness Horizons
Algebra
Geology
Physical chemistry
nt
When considering both O
lassrooms
Civil
Probability
ions
Identify a specific consumer product that you or your family have used for quite some time. This might be a branded smartphone (if you have used several versions over the years)
or the court to consider in its deliberations. Locard’s exchange principle argues that during the commission of a crime
Chemical Engineering
Ecology
aragraphs (meaning 25 sentences or more). Your assignment may be more than 5 paragraphs but not less.
INSTRUCTIONS:
To access the FNU Online Library for journals and articles you can go the FNU library link here:
https://www.fnu.edu/library/
In order to
n that draws upon the theoretical reading to explain and contextualize the design choices. Be sure to directly quote or paraphrase the reading
ce to the vaccine. Your campaign must educate and inform the audience on the benefits but also create for safe and open dialogue. A key metric of your campaign will be the direct increase in numbers.
Key outcomes: The approach that you take must be clear
Mechanical Engineering
Organic chemistry
Geometry
nment
Topic
You will need to pick one topic for your project (5 pts)
Literature search
You will need to perform a literature search for your topic
Geophysics
you been involved with a company doing a redesign of business processes
Communication on Customer Relations. Discuss how two-way communication on social media channels impacts businesses both positively and negatively. Provide any personal examples from your experience
od pressure and hypertension via a community-wide intervention that targets the problem across the lifespan (i.e. includes all ages).
Develop a community-wide intervention to reduce elevated blood pressure and hypertension in the State of Alabama that in
in body of the report
Conclusions
References (8 References Minimum)
*** Words count = 2000 words.
*** In-Text Citations and References using Harvard style.
*** In Task section I’ve chose (Economic issues in overseas contracting)"
Electromagnetism
w or quality improvement; it was just all part of good nursing care. The goal for quality improvement is to monitor patient outcomes using statistics for comparison to standards of care for different diseases
e a 1 to 2 slide Microsoft PowerPoint presentation on the different models of case management. Include speaker notes... .....Describe three different models of case management.
visual representations of information. They can include numbers
SSAY
ame workbook for all 3 milestones. You do not need to download a new copy for Milestones 2 or 3. When you submit Milestone 3
pages):
Provide a description of an existing intervention in Canada
making the appropriate buying decisions in an ethical and professional manner.
Topic: Purchasing and Technology
You read about blockchain ledger technology. Now do some additional research out on the Internet and share your URL with the rest of the class
be aware of which features their competitors are opting to include so the product development teams can design similar or enhanced features to attract more of the market. The more unique
low (The Top Health Industry Trends to Watch in 2015) to assist you with this discussion.
https://youtu.be/fRym_jyuBc0
Next year the $2.8 trillion U.S. healthcare industry will finally begin to look and feel more like the rest of the business wo
evidence-based primary care curriculum. Throughout your nurse practitioner program
Vignette
Understanding Gender Fluidity
Providing Inclusive Quality Care
Affirming Clinical Encounters
Conclusion
References
Nurse Practitioner Knowledge
Mechanics
and word limit is unit as a guide only.
The assessment may be re-attempted on two further occasions (maximum three attempts in total). All assessments must be resubmitted 3 days within receiving your unsatisfactory grade. You must clearly indicate “Re-su
Trigonometry
Article writing
Other
5. June 29
After the components sending to the manufacturing house
1. In 1972 the Furman v. Georgia case resulted in a decision that would put action into motion. Furman was originally sentenced to death because of a murder he committed in Georgia but the court debated whether or not this was a violation of his 8th amend
One of the first conflicts that would need to be investigated would be whether the human service professional followed the responsibility to client ethical standard. While developing a relationship with client it is important to clarify that if danger or
Ethical behavior is a critical topic in the workplace because the impact of it can make or break a business
No matter which type of health care organization
With a direct sale
During the pandemic
Computers are being used to monitor the spread of outbreaks in different areas of the world and with this record
3. Furman v. Georgia is a U.S Supreme Court case that resolves around the Eighth Amendments ban on cruel and unsual punishment in death penalty cases. The Furman v. Georgia case was based on Furman being convicted of murder in Georgia. Furman was caught i
One major ethical conflict that may arise in my investigation is the Responsibility to Client in both Standard 3 and Standard 4 of the Ethical Standards for Human Service Professionals (2015). Making sure we do not disclose information without consent ev
4. Identify two examples of real world problems that you have observed in your personal
Summary & Evaluation: Reference & 188. Academic Search Ultimate
Ethics
We can mention at least one example of how the violation of ethical standards can be prevented. Many organizations promote ethical self-regulation by creating moral codes to help direct their business activities
*DDB is used for the first three years
For example
The inbound logistics for William Instrument refer to purchase components from various electronic firms. During the purchase process William need to consider the quality and price of the components. In this case
4. A U.S. Supreme Court case known as Furman v. Georgia (1972) is a landmark case that involved Eighth Amendment’s ban of unusual and cruel punishment in death penalty cases (Furman v. Georgia (1972)
With covid coming into place
In my opinion
with
Not necessarily all home buyers are the same! When you choose to work with we buy ugly houses Baltimore & nationwide USA
The ability to view ourselves from an unbiased perspective allows us to critically assess our personal strengths and weaknesses. This is an important step in the process of finding the right resources for our personal learning style. Ego and pride can be
· By Day 1 of this week
While you must form your answers to the questions below from our assigned reading material
CliftonLarsonAllen LLP (2013)
5 The family dynamic is awkward at first since the most outgoing and straight forward person in the family in Linda
Urien
The most important benefit of my statistical analysis would be the accuracy with which I interpret the data. The greatest obstacle
From a similar but larger point of view
4 In order to get the entire family to come back for another session I would suggest coming in on a day the restaurant is not open
When seeking to identify a patient’s health condition
After viewing the you tube videos on prayer
Your paper must be at least two pages in length (not counting the title and reference pages)
The word assimilate is negative to me. I believe everyone should learn about a country that they are going to live in. It doesnt mean that they have to believe that everything in America is better than where they came from. It means that they care enough
Data collection
Single Subject Chris is a social worker in a geriatric case management program located in a midsize Northeastern town. She has an MSW and is part of a team of case managers that likes to continuously improve on its practice. The team is currently using an
I would start off with Linda on repeating her options for the child and going over what she is feeling with each option. I would want to find out what she is afraid of. I would avoid asking her any “why” questions because I want her to be in the here an
Summarize the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psychological research (Comp 2.1) 25.0\% Summarization of the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psych
Identify the type of research used in a chosen study
Compose a 1
Optics
effect relationship becomes more difficult—as the researcher cannot enact total control of another person even in an experimental environment. Social workers serve clients in highly complex real-world environments. Clients often implement recommended inte
I think knowing more about you will allow you to be able to choose the right resources
Be 4 pages in length
soft MB-920 dumps review and documentation and high-quality listing pdf MB-920 braindumps also recommended and approved by Microsoft experts. The practical test
g
One thing you will need to do in college is learn how to find and use references. References support your ideas. College-level work must be supported by research. You are expected to do that for this paper. You will research
Elaborate on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study 20.0\% Elaboration on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study is missing. Elaboration on any potenti
3 The first thing I would do in the family’s first session is develop a genogram of the family to get an idea of all the individuals who play a major role in Linda’s life. After establishing where each member is in relation to the family
A Health in All Policies approach
Note: The requirements outlined below correspond to the grading criteria in the scoring guide. At a minimum
Chen
Read Connecting Communities and Complexity: A Case Study in Creating the Conditions for Transformational Change
Read Reflections on Cultural Humility
Read A Basic Guide to ABCD Community Organizing
Use the bolded black section and sub-section titles below to organize your paper. For each section
Losinski forwarded the article on a priority basis to Mary Scott
Losinksi wanted details on use of the ED at CGH. He asked the administrative resident