Respond to two (2) Colleagues W4D2 Granth - Management
Respond to two (2) Colleagues "see attachment for detail instructions":
* 3 - 4 paragraphs per colleagues
* No plagiarism
* APA citing
* 48 hours
1
Social Media 1
Week 4 Discussion 2:
The Progressive Case Study
This week we conclude the first half of our course. The week ahead addresses cultural norms within the organization. A culture can change by individual, team, group, department, industry, and organization.
A single individual can alter the culture and attitude of an organization. The shift in CEO or leadership can alter the course of the company. The naysayer in the office or the perky person that will invest in and care about everyone impacts the workplace environment. The individual that keeps to themselves and the individual that believes something different from the majority also impact the workplace environment. All these situations can alter your organizational culture.
Please review Learning Resources to assist with responses:
Bunshaft, J. A. (2018). The quest for employee voice and the role of Appreciative Inquiry. AI Practitioner, 20(3), 46–51
.
See attachment
Laarakker, H., & van Kesteren, B. (2019). Appreciative Inquiry and the value of conflict. AI Practitioner, 21(4), 43–48.
See attachment
Peter Senge - The Fifth Discipline
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hFo8fRDeH7E&feature=related
(3:11)
Assignment:
Respond to at least (2) two of your peers' postings in one or more of the following ways:
· Share an insight about what you learned from having read your peers’ postings and discuss how and why your peer’s posting resonated with you professionally and personally.
· Offer an example from your experience or observation that validates what your peer discussed.
· Offer specific suggestions that will help your peer build upon his or her own virtual communication.
· Offer further assessment or insight that could impact your peer’s future communications.
· 3 – 4 paragraph responses per each colleague
·
No plagiarism
·
APA citing
·
24 hours
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1st Colleague – Susan Christine
Susan Christmas
Week 4 Discussion 2
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In our scenario this week, we are to act as a contractor for The Green Organization. We need to prepare a presentation to the executive leadership about the importance of regional cultures as well as workplace culture in training and in the workplace.
Adapting, Accommodating, and Assimilating in a New Organizational Culture
C. Barzantny wrote a paper summarizing the book Managing Diversity: Toward a Globally Inclusive Workplace, written by Michalle E. Mor Barak. Barak wrote the book as a way to help the reader get through challenges of managing diversity. Barzantny lists four levels of an inclusive workplace model that refers to an ideal work organization. The levels are: “(1) that is accepting and utilizing the diversity of its own workforce, and (2) is also active in the community, (3) alleviates the needs of disadvantaged groups in its wider environment, and (4) collaborates across cultural and national boundaries with a focus on global mutual interests" (Barzantny, 2007, p. 285).
How to Expedite Synthesis
Sunil Singh also wrote a summary of Barak’s book. One of the interesting sections that stood out to me was Singh mentioned the fact that elaborate systems have been put in place all around the world to ensure equality. These systems are meant to ensure equality in the workplace and in society, but they still tend to fail because there is often a lack of sensitivity within the members of the organization (Singh, 2006). I believe the key to expediting the synthesis and raising overall performance and effectiveness is to teach sensitivity and the importance of diversity. Along with the teachings, employees should be allowed to speak up and speak out and let their voices be heard without any fear of retaliation.
Best Tools to Prepare New Leader
I think the best tool to prepare new leaders is open communication about the expectations given to the organizational leader that is being transferred to an unfamiliar region. The leader should be given ample cultural materials about his new region and should also be given time to understand the new environment he will be leading.
How to Communicate the Importance of Training
The organizational leader would most likely already understand the importance of the cultural training, but it is never a bad idea to reiterate why it is vital to the success of the organization. At the end of the day, employees want to feel appreciated, regardless of their culture or region.
References
Barzantny, C. (2007) Managing Diversity. Toward a Globally Inclusive Workplace. Academy of Management Learning & Education, 6(2), 285-286.
https://doi.org/10.5465/AMLE.2007.25223469
Singh, S. K. (2006). Managing Diversity: Toward a Globally Inclusive Workplace. IIMB Management Review (Indian Institute of Management Bangalore), 18(2), 211-212.
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2nd Colleague – Stephen Jarman
Stephen Jarman
Week 4 Discussion 2 - The Progressive Case Study
Top of Form
The organization of focus for this is Molnlycke Healthcare in Maine, USA (referred to as MHC-NA). The industry that MHC NA serves in is called med-tech. There are two MHC NA operational sites in Maine that operate three business units. Two business units are vertically integrated with one producing foam substrate (WCC) that is converted and packaged into wound care products (AWC). A third business unit manufacturers specialty materials and packages them as patient positioner products (SWC). The Molnlycke organization is highly matrixed with alignment challenges across functional boundaries at the C-level for common objectives.
The operations organization hierarchy at MHC-NA can be considered lean, given that the chain-of-command has only four levels from individual front-line employees to NA manufacturing directors. Operations support teams within MHC-NA as matrixed hierarchies include Quality Assurance, Human Resources, Procurement, Finance, Research and Development, Environmental/Health/Safety, and Manufacturing Excellence. Outside of these, MHC-NA functional groups exist teams for commercial sales, distribution, and Information Technology.
The MHC-NA operational line and support organization leadership teams have suffered a high level of manager turnover in the past two years that includes three manufacturing directors, three factory managers, two Quality Assurance directors, one Information Technology manager (to not be replaced), two Procurement managers, two Finance managers, and three Manufacturing Excellence managers (the author is the third). Additionally, Human Resources has rationalized its organization and has removed two site support specialists.
My role as Operational Excellence Manager provides a unique perspective to diagnose, design, and deploy a Human Dynamic intervention. Flexibility and adaption are very important to the success of the training and the organization as a whole, building towards high-performance behaviors, as well as local culture in training and in the workplace. Senior leadership has requested practical examples of how to best adapt and assimilate new organizational leaders who are transferred or onboarded at MHC Maine in consideration of the following:
· A training plan for assimilating to our high-performance behaviors and local culture.
· How can this plan be best enacted to expedite synthesis and raise overall performance and effectiveness in the organization as well as in the region?
· What tools might best prepare the new leader?
· How can the importance of this training be best communicated to the learner?
The framework of New Leadership Assimilation
The following are practical examples to consider as a baseline for selection, onboarding, and assimilating new organization leaders at MHC-NA. These may be embellished, added to, or altogether eliminated.
1. Direct Report Screening: Prior to a final hiring decision being made, the new leader candidate would be interviewed by their direct reports, followed by HR taking inputs from these individuals to check for alignment as a good fit within the team, to better test the candidate’s knowledge base, and anything such as behaviors that would flag the candidate as a concern (Johnson, 2017).
2. Setting the stage for what is to come: An internal, well-seasoned coach is assigned to bring the newly hired leader through the onboarding process for the first six months. The coach would begin by interviewing the new hires' direct reports and other stakeholders (both internal and external) for their thoughts about the upcoming key challenges involved in the role, goals and performance expectations as they understand it, any relevant history or dynamics that they are expected to be encountered. Prior to meeting with the newly hired leader, the coach will summarize these as a report to be given and discussed during their initial one-to-one conversation. The coach and newly hired leader will schedule weekly touch-point sessions to review progress and to update the new leader’s onboarding journal. NOTE: An onboarding journal is to be provided by the HR partner on the first day to include basic contact and policy and procedure reference information, spaces for updates, references to other company information such as high-performance behaviors, etc. To ensure the newly hired leader’s distractions are kept to a minimum, the coach is to enquire into how is settling into the area progressing for living and transportation arrangements, other issues such as school, language, healthcare, fitting into the community. NOTE: the HR partner is to be contacted if there are any areas lacking with the relocation contractor’s work for the new hire leader (Johnson).
3. One-to-Ones with Peers and Coach: Within the first two weeks inside the organization, the newly hired leader will schedule with the assistance of the HR partner focus sessions with each of the other organizational leaders. The HR partner will pre-empt these one-to-ones by sending the leaders the new hire’s bio and a short summary of goals and objectives for the new leader and their team. In these one-to-one meetings, each person is to write down bullet points relating to an overall and specific strategy for the organization and each other’s team, and anything noted relating to business or cultural norms that should be considered. A summarization session is to be scheduled by the HR partner for each of the leaders to bring out their notes and share them across the whole team, including the director of operations (Johnson).
4. Peer Review: After being onboarded for six months, the HR partner will coordinate and document a 360-degree peer review with the intent to highlight any areas that are in need of course correction for meeting goals, expectations, and generally being a good cultural fit. Following up on this session over the next six months, the new hire will use the inputs from the peer review to ensure success. The working topics are to be disclosed and updated with their assigned coach and assigned manager on a semi-monthly basis at a minimum (Johnson).
5. Intentional Knowledge Transfer Plan: The learning coordinator will assign and ensure that the new hire leader, in spite of ongoing demands and distractions that will compete for their attention, stays on task for their mandatory and department-specific training schedule. The Environmental/Health/Safety manager will assign the newly hired leader to be paired with department-assigned individuals to become familiar with all aspects of our programs and to become familiar with hazards, as well as mitigation and reporting procedures. The IT manager will ensure that time is set aside with a resource able to onboard the newly hired leader for all of their connectivity and system access needs (Johnson).
In closing, the five practical examples provide senior leadership at MHC-NA a how-to roadmap on best-practices for how to adapt and to onboard new organizational leaders through a training plan for assimilating them to our high-performance behaviors and local culture, to expedite the new leader’s synthesis, effectiveness, and performance in the organization, and a number of tools that facilitate communicating the importance of this new hire onboarding, assimilating, and training plan.
References
Johnson, L. (2017). Rapid onboarding at capital one. Harvard Business Review. https://hbr.org/2008/02/rapid-onboarding-at-capital-on.html.
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Practitioner
November 2019 ISBN 978-1-907549-41-0
Volume 21 Number 4
I n our work, we often encounter relational tension, controversy, even conflict. It keeps us busy, even when we have an appreciative approach.
We encountered reactions from clients and colleagues like: “we don’t have
room for negative thoughts”, “we work appreciatively, and we only focus on
the positive”, “no, don’t mention negative comments, that’s not appreciative”.
The real concerns have no place. Sometimes the effect is that people drop out,
and their concerns live on under the surface.
That’s why we like to talk about tension and conflict, and we like to do that in an
appreciative way. But that can be very challenging. We asked ourselves, how do
other AI practitioners think about this subject? How do they deal with tension?
Can we identify different approaches? How does AI help in situations where there
is tension? The idea of a workshop was born.
AI and conflict: Research
Appreciative Inquiry (AI) is an approach that advocates harmonious relationships
and positive interactions. Cooperrider and Srivastva (1987) argue that an
approach to leading, managing and changing organizations focusing on
problems, deficits and dysfunctions is demoralizing and ineffective in bringing
about change. They called, instead, for a focus on opportunities. Focusing on
what is working in an appreciative way raises morale and promotes generative
AI Practitioner, August 2019, Laarakker and van Kesteren: AI and the Value of Conflict
dx.doi.org/10.12781/978-1-907549-41-0-6
Hanneke Laarakker
Hanneke Laarakker is a psychologist with a post-master’s
degree in OD. After twenty years of working as a trainer/
consultant, she discovered AI and started to work as a
consultant in appreciative OD. She is working on various AI
projects in the Netherlands. She also provides AI and OD
courses with Barbara at the Instituut voor Interventiekunde.
Contact [email protected]
Appreciative Inquiry and
the Value of Conflict
In this article the authors
discuss what different
researchers have written about
the effects of AI on situations
which involve tension, what the
downfall of AI is and what their
own experience was through a
case study. They also discuss
how they provoked tension in a
WAIC 2019 workshop, how they
dealt with this, the participants’
responses and what their
conclusions were.
Barbara van Kesteren
Barbara van Kesteren is a social psychologist with a post-
master’s degree in OD. While studying, she discovered AI and
started to work as a consultant in appreciative OD. Recently,
she has worked on various AI projects in the Netherlands.
Barbara is co-owner of Instituut voor Interventiekunde where
she teaches in OD and AI, and works for clients..
Contact [email protected]
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inquiry. AI generates spontaneous, transformational action on the part of
individuals, groups and organizations, which leads to a better future.
According to some researchers, such as Ralph Stacey, Robbert Masselink and
Gervase Bushe, by focusing on the positive, AI creates an incomplete image
that conceals the real processes going on when we are negotiating our realities
(Masselink in Stacey, 2016). There seems to be a dread of “negatives” such as
conflict and a conviction that success can only be achieved when all share the
same view, with breakdown as the consequence of not doing this (Stacey, 2016).
The critics of AI argue that positive and negative feelings are intimately
connected (Stacey, 2016). Without friction, no shine. And with exclusive attention
to the positive and trying to reach consensus, AI denies patterns of power
relations, resistance, conflicts and difference, resulting in a positive fantasy.
In that way AI focusses attention only on a small part of ordinary, daily life in
organizations (Stacey, 2016).
According to Gervase Bushe (2007), the positive can enhance generativity and
change. It is generativity that is the core of AI. Not the positive. “If someone
wants to talk about what they don’t like in their organizations telling them ‘no,
we can’t talk about that, this is an appreciative inquiry’, is likely to turn people
off” (Bushe, 2007). Especially if they have a lot of emotional charge around a
discussion, it is not wise to banish it. You can’t simply ignore it; it won’t go away
(Bushe, 2007).
In addition to that, research by Johnson, Johnson and Tjosvold (2000) shows
that it is very important to discuss controversy. In well-structured controversies,
participants are challenged with opposing views and get the chance to
incorporate others’ perspectives and reasoning into their thinking to reach a new
set of conclusions. This process significantly increases the quality of decision
making and problem solving, relationships and psychological health. Although
constructive controversy occurs naturally, it may be consciously structured in
decision making and learning situations.
A case from our own practice
We are part of an institute that educates professionals in Appreciative Inquiry
and intervention studies: how to help our clients to build bridges between what
they need, feel, think and say to what they really do, in order to make personal
and professional meaning out of their actions.
One of our groups had a hard time. They started their studies with three teachers.
But one of their teachers passed away and, shortly after that, another teacher
AI Practitioner, August 2019, Laarakker and van Kesteren: AI and the Value of Conflict
Although constructive
controversy occurs naturally,
it may be consciously
structured in decision making
and learning situations.
It is generativity that is the
core of AI. Not the positive.
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Volume 21 Number 4
quit her job, leaving the group feeling abandoned. The last teacher standing
asked new teachers to continue the curriculum. But the group didn’t accept their
presence so easily. Some participants threatened to quit the curriculum because
of all that had happened. It was really a difficult time for the whole system.
To sum up: we had to deal with resistance against the new teachers, who also felt
uneasy. The company feared losing participants – and income. The participants
who didn’t want to leave feared they might lose their group members. Also, there
was unresolved conflict between a few people. On top of that, there was a lot of
emotional charge. What did we do with this situation?
Back to the case
To deal with this conflict, we decided to work on a Wall of Wonder together,
combined with “Think Advising” (Edu Feltmann), around the question “What
happened?” The new teachers asked the group members, the director of the
company who was also the wife of the teacher who had passed away and the last
teacher who went through it all to list all the events of the previous few months.
In doing so, they asked them to only list those things that were facts: things they
have seen and heard with their own eyes and ears. While they were creating the
list, one of the participants said with tears in her eyes: “I can’t go any further,
I am so sad. We need to talk!” We made room for all the pain, discomfort,
distrust, resistance, anger, grief, etc. to come out. Once it came up, we were able
talk about it. By talking about it, it started to dissolve. In the end, all the group
members graduated with good results. They worked really well together, as well
as with all the teachers. One of them explained: “From that day on I felt more
secure, so I could experiment more and eventually learn more”.
Conclusions from our case
We couldn’t go any further until we dealt with the tensions first. Like Bushe
(2007) suggests, if we had continued without doing so, there would have been
more tension and anger, and group members might have left.
We organized a group conversation with all the people involved, trying to
neutralize the emotional charge by talking about facts. Importantly, emotions are
facts too. The group shared the facts, so everyone could hear the different points
of view, learn from them, and be able to immediately respond to the emotions
that were present in the here-and-now. This case encouraged us to explore
dealing with tension further, as well as how AI helps that process.
AI Practitioner, August 2019, Laarakker and van Kesteren: AI and the Value of Conflict
They asked them to only list
those things that were facts:
things they have seen and
heard with their own eyes
and ears.
We couldn’t go any further
until we dealt with the
tensions first.
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The workshop
We decided to do a short experiment, formed into a workshop. During the WAIC
2019 in Nice, we introduced this workshop with the title “How to appreciate
conflict”. We were scheduled at 8 o’clock in the morning. We thought: “way too
early, nobody will come.” But over thirty participants joined us in this workshop,
a sign that the topic is relevant for a lot of AI practitioners. They came from
different cultures, countries, and fields. We asked them to think about how they
deal with tension, as an AI practitioner. And after that, they divided themselves
in four groups*, as showed in Figure 1.
*Ignoring in this context means not actively doing anything with the tension, keeping focus on the
positive. Inquiring means immediately and in the here-and-now inquiring into the tension, which
sometimes means talking about the negative. Flipping means flipping something negative into
something positive, and from then on focusing on the positive core of the theme. Acknowledging means
acknowledging by naming the tension, and then letting it be, not intervening.
The groups stood in the four corners of the workshop space. The members of
each group had to discuss what was good about their point of view and discuss
different statements that defended their position. Then they had a few minutes
to present their opinion and defending statements to the other groups. They
were also given the opportunity to ask questions to clarify what they had said.
This set-up provoked tension. The different groups faced each other from
different corners of the room. Because they had to “defend” their opinion, it
was a “one against three” situation. And because the facilitators “cornered”
AI Practitioner, August 2019, Laarakker and van Kesteren: AI and the Value of Conflict
Figure 1. Way of dealing with tension
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the groups, they also felt tension towards the facilitators. This was part of the
design, so there was an opportunity to explore tension while present.
After that, we asked participants to encounter a participant “from another
corner” and have an appreciative interview about the tension provoked.
The last question was: “How can I help you to overcome the tension in our
conversation?”
Results and effect
After the interviews, we had a plenary conversation about what happened, and
we were pleasantly surprised by the answers of the participants. Some of the
quotes were:
• The four groups are not distinct but different points of actions in the
AI continuum. It’s not a straight line but a journey where you pick and
choose action.
• This was really helpful. I will continue to reflect on how AI helps me
respond to conflict creatively.
• Thank you for reaffirming that conflict in a session is a gift.
• A very valuable question in this workshop was “What can I do to help
you to overcome the tension?” After that, we were really in touch with
each other.
Lessons learned and general conclusions
We learned a way in which conflict can turn into sympathy, using AI. We learned
that every suggested approach to conflict and tension has its positive outcomes.
The best approach depends on the situation. Also, talking about differences
and tension can deepen relationships. Most of the time when people have a
controversy and different interests, people only discuss their opinions, not
feelings. When you acknowledge the feelings and give people the opportunity to
talk with their “rivals” in an appreciative way, building a relationship is possible.
This helps diminish tension so that conflicting interests are easier to discuss.
That leads to help improving problem solving, relationships and psychological
health (Johnson, Johnson & Tjosvold, 2000).
AI Practitioner, August 2019, Laarakker and van Kesteren: AI and the Value of Conflict
A very valuable question in
this workshop was ‘What can
I do to help you to overcome
the tension?’ After that, we
were really in touch with
each other.
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Since facilitating the workshop, we have become more aware of the fact that
people do experience tension when you talk about conflict but often only show
it or talk about it when you invite them to discuss it.
As in the case we described earlier in this article, the results of the workshop
show us how liberating and tension-releasing it is when you are able to have
a conversation about it. It makes it easier for us to bring up tension or conflict
when we feel it in a group while facilitating. AI helps with this by starting the
conversation with the right questions.
So, our conclusion is, when working with AI, there is no reason to avoid tension
and conflict.
If you have questions, or would like to know more about the workshop, please contact us at
[email protected]
REFERENCES
Bushe G. (2007) Appreciative Inquiry Is Not (Just) About the Positive, OD Practitioner, 39(4), 30–35.
Cooperrider, D. L. & Srivastva, S. (1987) Appreciative Inquiry in Organizational Life. In Woodman, R. W. &
Pasmore, W.A. (eds.). Research in Organizational Change And Development. Vol. 1. Stamford, CT: JAI Press.
pp. 129–169.
Johnson, D. W., Johnson, R. T. & Tjosvold, D. (2000) Constructive Controversy: The value of intellectual
opposition. In M. Deutsch & P. T. Coleman (Eds.), The Handbook of Conflict Resolution: Theory and Practice
(pp. 65–85). San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Stacy, R. (2016) The Paradox of Consensus and Conflict in Organisational Life. AI Practitioner, 18(1),
52–58.
AI Practitioner, August 2019, Laarakker and van Kesteren: AI and the Value of Conflict
When working with AI, there
is no reason to avoid tension
and conflict.
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Volume 20 Number 3 dx.doi.org/10.12781/978-1-907549-36-6-8
Year after year, decade after
decade, we in Human Resources
have heard it again and again.
We are going to use the great
ideas our employees have to
enhance the workforce, to drive
for greater customer service and
make this a best place to work.
And still, for all of the work that
has gone into such initiatives,
very little has changed.
S o many of our organizations have conducted employee engagement surveys to determine our strengths and weaknesses. What do your employees love? What do they hate? What can we do better? In many
cases, the areas needing improvement come down to two things: communication
and recognition. Our success or failure in those areas are huge factors in
determining the level of employee engagement. Rightfully so. We focus on
improving those areas because superior employee engagement remains the holy
grail of human resources management and development. Drive better employee
engagement, and you drive better customer service. Better customer service
makes for happier, more loyal customers. Happier customers interact better
with your employees, thereby further driving better employee engagement. Who
doesn’t love to work in a place where the people coming through the door are
happy to see you? Ideally, you create a perpetual motion machine of success!
Where we’ve been
The problem has been how to move the needle on employee engagement. We
have tried all sorts of approaches. There have been idea generation programs,
with group meetings, suggestion boxes, incentives and a host of other
methodologies to connect with employees and request their feedback. We have
done these the old school way – on paper – and with a more modern approach,
taking things online. We have designed recognition programs, with everything
from annual service awards to financial incentives to giving away fancy trips for
group achievements.
Jess A. Bunshaft
Jess A. Bunshaft, Esq., has served in HR management for over
twenty years and was Executive Vice President & CHRO at
Goodwill Industries of Greater New York and Northern New
Jersey. He is president of Synergist Workforce Solutions LLC
(www.synergistwfs.com), providing HR management and
employee development and training.
Contact [email protected]
The Quest for Employee
Voice and the Role of
Appreciative Inquiry
AI Practitioner, August 2018, Bunshaft: The Quest for the Appreciative Voice and AI
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To encourage communication, we have designed newsletters, have held Town
Hall meetings, have done weekly small group breakfasts with the CEO. The
best we usually get is bits of feedback. True breakthroughs in engagement and
communication are a rarity.
In a recent discussion with a colleague at a recognized “best place to work”, she
said what many of us are thinking… “The problem with current programs is that
they’re the same old programs” – tweaked and repackaged with new names.
Since she knew the “big bosses” wouldn’t be happy with that view, as they’ve
ignored her requests to change the approach, she asked that I not use her name.
But the sentiment shouldn’t be unfamiliar to most of us.
At that top tier employer, it seems like it’s all been done before. Yes, employees
who exemplify the best of the organization have been identified. They have
found the core values and behaviors that make those employees special, and they
have trumpeted the successes, setting examples for other employees, putting
these top performers front-and-center in public campaigns meant to drive
greater public awareness and greater business for the organization. For all that,
this veteran HR professional, herself a top performer, can see that these are just
retreads of things we’ve been doing for ages.
How we can do better
While we do get feedback from some employees through these methods, we all
know we can do better. In our practice, we have been exploring the possibilities
for Appreciative Inquiry (AI) as the driver to take the search for employee voice
– and our quest for that holy grail of engagement – to the next level. As most
readers will know, AI goes beyond the usual work-focused communications.
It doesn’t look just to past experiences – particularly to failures as learning
experiences – but rather looks at both the employees’ best work and their vision
for the best possible future.
As stated in Positive Momentum (HR Magazine, June 2013), “Instead of asking
‘What’s wrong with this organization?,’ it’s asking ‘What’s right?’ and ‘What
gives life to this organization when it’s most alive?’”, citing David Cooperrider of
the Weatherhead School of Management at Case Western Reserve University.
Right there, we see the difference between what we have traditionally done and
what we could, and should, be doing. What gives the organization life when it is
most alive? At an employee level, what makes the job its best? When do we hit
our peak as employees? And it’s not simply a matter of identifying those peaks.
Rather, the inquiries themselves are as important as the information gathered.
True breakthroughs
in engagement and
communication are a rarity.
AI Practitioner, August 2018, Bunshaft: The Quest for the Appreciative Voice and AI
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So how do we move in this new direction to explore employee voice and see what
gold is waiting to be discovered?
Taking existing tools, we can easily build in AI and engage with employees like
we never have before. In our consulting practice, we’ve built AI into an existing
facilitated brainstorming framework to begin employee discussions, designed to
introduce AI into the workforces we serve. The open contribution framework of a
facilitated brainstorming approach, when implemented properly, makes clear to
the employees in a brainstorming session that we really want them to share their
best ideas. Why, you may ask, is that particular framework important to this
process? Because AI values employees’ goals and vision above all else, building
on what has worked in the past and where employees dream of taking things in
the future. For those not familiar with the AI framework, the four components,
as shared in A Positive Revolution in Change: Appreciative Inquiry, are:
Discovery: Mobilizing a whole system inquiry into the positive change core.
Dream: Creating a clear results-oriented vision in relation to discovered potential
and in relation to questions of higher purpose: “What is the world calling us to
become?”
Design: Creating possibility propositions of the ideal organization, a design
people feel is capable of magnifying the positive core and realizing the
articulated new dream.
Destiny: Strengthening the affirmative capability of the whole system, enabling it
to build hope and momentum around a deep purpose and creating processes for
learning, adjustment, and improvisation, like a jazz group over time.
So why does this matter? What’s different and how will we make new
discoveries? We have had employee communication, recognition and engagement
initiatives for many years. They have been called different things, but we have
rolled them out in lots of workplaces and in various formats.
As noted in Linking Perceived Employee Voice and Creativity, “Individuals who
believe that a given work role activity is personally meaningful are intrinsically
motivated to invest themselves more fully in it” (Ganjali and Rezaee, 2016). This
article notes that research has demonstrated that strengthening employee voice
leads to more intrinsic motivation, and more intrinsically motivated employees
tend to be more flexible, persevering and creative. These all are characteristics
we value when we want our employees to create a top-performing environment.
Further supporting this push in a positive direction, we see many sources
examining the value of forward-thinking initiatives. In Hope: A New Positive
AI Practitioner, August 2018, Bunshaft: The Quest for the Appreciative Voice and AI
Research has demonstrated
that strengthening employee
voice leads to more intrinsic
motivation.
49More articles at www.aipractitioner.com
Practitioner
August 2018 ISBN 978-1-907549-36-6
Volume 20 Number 3
Strength for Human Resource Development, Fred Luthans and Susan M. Jensen of
the University of Nebraska-Lincoln note that “high-hope human resources
seem especially needed for today’s extremely turbulent environment.” They
go on to note that, “Emerging research also suggests a link between the use of
appreciative inquiry, employees’ hope levels, and the expressed willingness to
perform organizational citizenship behaviors” (Luthans and Jensen, 2002).
Finding employee voice
So how do we bring this background to exploring employee voice? Again, our
focus needs to be on improving communication, so we hear our employees
better. The use of facilitated brainstorming with an AI focus and the use of
retention interviews can help us connect our Appreciative Inquiry structure to
the quest for greater communication and hearing the voice of our employees.
The tools for encouraging employee communication are already in place. As
discussed in Promoting Employee Voice and Upward Communication in Healthcare,
“Leaders created voice opportunity (Ashford, Sutcliffe and Christianson, 2009)
through visibility and approachability and the use of both formal and informal
communication channels” (Adelman and Stokes, 2012). In order to find appreciative
voice, we then use our existing structures and the brainstorming methodology
mentioned above to seek out the dreams of our employees. What is our higher
purpose and what are our ideals driving us to become?
In my recent role as chief human resources officer of a major not-for-profit
organization in New York, our human resources department, working together
with management across the organization, found ways, using limited resources, to
connect with employees and move the needle on engagement. In a workforce spread
across two states, through multiple divisions with different goals, including a large
retail division and a large human services division, as well as youth programs and
contracted business services, improving retention and driving engagement in the
right direction were quite challenging, especially with limited financial resources.
As generational change impacts the organization, as it is doing across the entire
American workforce, it has become necessary to recognize the importance of an
approach that connects with millennials as well as longer-serving employees.
As Executive Vice President & Chief Development Officer Karen Means stated,
“Because the workforce has changed dramatically, traditional employee
engagement falls short of hitting the mark. Millennials in particular are looking
for very specific ways to connect. The savvy employer, if they get it and are open
to a paradigm shift, will have a dedicated, motivated workforce.”
High-hope human resources
seem especially needed for
today’s extremely turbulent
environment.
Luthans and Jensen
AI Practitioner, August 2018, Bunshaft: The Quest for the Appreciative Voice and AI
50More articles at www.aipractitioner.com
Practitioner
August 2018 ISBN 978-1-907549-36-6
Volume 20 Number 3
Of course, to really drive this type of new initiative forward, buy-in from top
management is vital. When this is done correctly, it doesn’t only garner great
results from the information collected and the follow-up, but the process
shows respect from senior management and genuine recognition of the value of
contributions from staff at all levels. That is a great motivator to drive CEOs and
other senior managers to get on board. That should be our main selling point!
Structuring our efforts
As we move forward in group efforts based in AI, we may dovetail this with
individual interviews, as well as brainstorming sessions. Individual interviews
may serve multiple purposes, but they can largely follow the structure of a
retention interview (sometimes called a “stay interview”), where the interviewer
seeks from long-term star employees their feedback on what makes them
stay and keeps them engaged with the organization. These interviews don’t
always have the full components of an AI process, but they echo some of the
same sentiments, as they are looking primarily for the positive. Rather than
fixing things that are wrong, they build on things that are right and look for
opportunities across the organization, infecting the other staff with the same
kind of dedication and forward drive.
Examples of stay/retention interview questions include:
• What motivates you?
• What do you look forward to when you come to work every day?
• What talents of yours would you like to use more at work?
• If you could change something about your job, what would it be?
These questions can open the door, as they focus on the positive. Building in
elements of AI lets us drive for the brightest future for an organization. By
marrying the elements of AI to a robust communication program, we can drive
the appreciative voice into what we are doing and find the very best of our
workforce, revealing a path forward to greatness. We explore the best of our
best employees, find their dreams for the best future for themselves and our
organizations, and build to levels previously unattainable. Through these efforts,
organizations can climb from being good employers to great ones, from being
great to one of the handful who can see themselves as the best of their industry!
To really drive this type of
new initiative forward, buy-in
from top management is vital.
AI Practitioner, August 2018, Bunshaft: The Quest for the Appreciative Voice and AI
Back to Table of Contents
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Practitioner
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Volume 20 Number 3
REFERENCES
Adelman, K. and C. Stokes. (2012) Promoting Employee Voice and Upward Communication in Healthcare:
The CEO’s Influence/Practitioner Application. Journal of Healthcare Management, 57(2), 133–4.
Bengtsson, J. and M. Rokka. (2011) How is Appreciative Inquiry Experienced by the Employees at Abba
Seafood? University of Gothenburg School of Business Economics and Law.
Bushe, G.R. (2007) Appreciative Inquiry Is Not (Just) About the Positive. OD Practitioner, 39(4), 30–35.
Clayton, M. (2015) Appreciative Inquiry and Employee Engagement. Unpublished dissertation. Trinity
Washington University.
Cooperrider, D. L. and D. Whitney. (2005) Appreciative Inquiry: A Positive Revolution in Change. San
Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers.
Ganjali, A. and S. Rezaee. (2016) Linking Perceived Employee Voice and Creativity. Iranian Journal of
Management Studies, 9(1), 175–191. doi: 10.22059/IJMS.2016.55041
Hart, R., T. Conklin, T., S. Allen. (2008) Individual Leader Development: An appreciative inquiry approach.
Advances in Developing Human Resources, 10(5), 632.
Johnson G., W. Leavitt (2001). Building on Success: Transforming Organizations Through Appreciative
Inquiry. Public Personnel Management, 30(1), 129–136.
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Lee, T.H. (2014). The Strategy That Will Fix Healthcare. PressGaney Associates.
Ludema, J., M. Manning and A. Johnson. (2016) Six Questions That Can Lift Your Leadership: An Intro to
Appreciative Inquiry. Center for Values-Driven Leadership, Benedictine University.
Luthans, F. and S. Jensen. (2002). Hope: A new positive strength for human resource development.
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Marwah, P. (2012). Appreciative Inquiry: The emerging need for training and development. International
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Meinert, D. (2013) Positive Momentum. HRMagazine, 58(6), 68–70,72,74.
Srithika, T. and S. Bhattacharyya. (2009) Facilitating Organizational Unlearning Using Appreciative Inquiry
as an Intervention. Vikalpa, 34(4), 67–78.
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centered culture. European Conference on Innovation and Entrepreneurship, 44(6), 2274–2306.
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Whitney, D., D. Cooperrider, M. Garrison and J. Moore. (1999) Appreciative Inquiry and Culture Change at
GTE: Launching a positive revolution. Available at:
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Whitney, D. and A. Trosten-Bloom. (2005) The Liberation of Power: Exploring how Appreciative Inquiry
“powers up the people.” In D. L. Cooperrider, P. F. Sorenson Jr., T. F. Yaeger and D. Whitney (Eds.),
Appreciative Inquiry: Foundations in Positive Organization Development, 231–255. Champaign, IL: Stipes.
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