Organizational Development
Organizational Development
Organizational Development
DEVELOPMENT
ORGANIZATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
-Keith Davis
Unless the behavioural patterns of the employees change, the change will have a
little impact on the effectiveness of the organisation.
A commonly accepted model for bringing change in people was
suggested by Kurt Lewin in terms of three phase process:-
(1) Unfreezing:
The essence of unfreezing phase is that the individual is made to realize that his
beliefs, feelings and behaviour are no longer appropriate or relevant to the current
situation in the organisation. Once convinced, people may change their behaviour.
Reward for those willing to change and punishment for others may help in this matter.
(2) Changing:
Once convinced and ready to change, an individual, under this phase, learns to behave
in new ways. He is first provided with the model in which he is to identify himself.
Gradually he will accept that model and behave in the manner suggested by the model.
In another process (known as internalisation), the individual is placed in a situation
where new behaviour is demanded of him if he is to operate successfully.
(3) Refreezing:
During this phase, a person has to practice and experiment with the new
method of behaviour and see that it effectively blends with his other
behavioural attitudes. Reinforcement, for creating a permanent set in the
individual, is provided through either continuous or intermittent schedules.
W H AT I S O R G A N I Z AT I O N A L C U LT U R E ?
Organizational culture is defined as the underlying beliefs, assumptions, values and ways of
interacting that contribute to the unique social and psychological environment of an
organization.
“Organizational culture is the sum of values and rituals which serve as ‘glue’ to integrate
the members of the organization.” — Richard Perrin
Purpose
Young professionals want to be a part of solving a problem greater than themselves,
so they need to understand the “why” of what they do. A strong mission statement
can help a company articulate its’ “why”.
Ownership
Ownership refers to the practice of giving people the opportunity to be accountable
for their results without requiring micromanagement, and giving people the
autonomy on their own time to accomplish goals.
Community
This is that sense of belonging to a group of people that shares similar principles,
goals, and values. Community is a place where there is camaraderie.
Effective Communication
Effective communication sounds like common sense, but is not such a common
practice. It means ensuring consistency in processes and investing time to learn the
personalities and communication dynamics of team members.
Good Leadership
The backbone of the cultural dynamics of any organisation, the leader has to
constantly be pushing the mission, standards, community, and processes of the
company. Without effective leadership, the other four elements cannot thrive.
Why is Organisational culture important?
1. People-Oriented Climate
The organizational culture that includes a core set of values and puts its onus on
care and concern for the employees’ results in people-oriented climate.
2. Rule-Oriented Climate
The organizational culture that provides for featured benefits and puts its burden
on attention to details by all the members’ result in rule-oriented climate
3. Innovation-Oriented Climate
The organizational culture that introduces new ways and processes to develop
new and innovative things results in innovation-oriented climate
4. Result-Oriented Climate
The organizational culture that gives preference to values and puts its onus on
refining every detail of the processes to refine and achieve results is known as
result-oriented climate