Organization Development Organization Development A practitioner’s guide for OD and HR THIRD EDITION Mee-Yan Cheung-Judge Linda Holbeche Publisher’s note Every possible effort has been made to ensure that the information contained in this book is accurate at the time of going to press, and the publisher and authors cannot accept responsibility for any errors or omissions, however caused. No responsibility for loss or damage occasioned to any person acting, or refraining from action, as a result of the material in this publication can be accepted by the editor, the publisher or the authors. First published in Great Britain and the United States in 2011 by Kogan Page Limited Second edition published in 2015 Third edition published in 2021 Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, this publication may only be reproduced, stored or transmitted, in any form or by any means, with the prior permission in writing of the publishers, or in the case of reprographic reproduction in accordance with the terms and licences issued by the CLA. 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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data [to follow] Typeset by Integra Software Services, Pondicherry Print production managed by Jellyfish Printed and bound by CPI Group (UK) Ltd, Croydon CR0 4YY CONTENTS Introduction 1 PART ONE A practitioner’s guide for Organization Development Section 1: OD history and theory overview 1 What is OD? Its brief history 5 7 9 The goals, characteristics and definition of Organization Development 9 A brief history of OD 12 Critical founders who shaped the OD field 14 How the field got its name 16 Values that have informed OD practice 19 The role of the OD practitioner 21 Summary 23 2 Theories and practices of OD: a theory overview 25 The building blocks of our practice 25 The theoretical bases of OD 26 The theoretical bases of OD 26 The relationships between theory and practice 26 Eight core theoretical bases that shape OD practices 29 Methodological/practical implications of the theoretical perspectives 51 Summary 56 Section 2: OD cycle of work 59 3Theories and practices of OD: the OD cycle and the entry and contracting phase 62 Overview of the OD consultancy cycle – six key components 62 Phase one: entry – initial contact 67 Phase two: contracting 72 Summary 78 vi CONTENTS 4 Theories and practices of OD: the diagnostic phase 79 What is diagnosis in OD? What are the wider aims for the diagnostic process? 80 Summary of the tasks and skills required for the diagnostic process 82 Political considerations in managing the diagnostic phase 83 An outline of the different kinds of data you may need 86 Data collection methods and how to ensure that the data collection process achieves its aims 90 Data analysis – how to join different data together 92 Data feedback and action planning 95 Summary 98 5 Theories and practices of OD: the intervention phase 99 Definition of intervention and the key criteria for OD intervention 100 Design interventions (cross-dimensional design) – review of the three ‘cubes of intervention’ framework 105 Levels and types of interventions 111 Summary of cross-dimensional checklist based on concepts from the three cubes, levels and types of intervention 116 Building an intervention strategy – construction of criteria for effective intervention design 118 Summary of the tasks and skills required in an intervention 126 Summary 128 6 Theories and practices of OD: the evaluation phase 130 The three roots of evaluation 131 OD evaluation as part of the OD cycle of work 131 What is evaluation and what are metrics? What does one measure and how? 134 The tasks and skills required for evaluation 149 How to build the culture of evaluation as an integral part of OD work 151 Summary and quick reference for evaluation 155 Section 3: OD and change 7 159 Living at the edge of chaos and change 162 Preamble 162 The dilemma of OD practitioners 163 What is the traditional change paradigm? 166 What are the implications for our change practices? 170 CONTENTS A word about change vocabulary 171 Summary 173 8 Back-room and front-room change matters 174 Overview 174 Back-room matters – macro level of change work 174 Front-room matters (the people dimension and the engagement issue) 190 Change implementation capabilities 198 What areas do we need to pay attention to during implementation? 200 What are change implementation capabilities? 200 What is the benefit case for having effective change implementation capabilities? 210 Summary 211 9 Can behavioural change be made easy? 213 Overview 213 Three different approaches to looking at culture and behavioural change 214 Four ways that offer alternative insights into how to achieve behavioural change 219 Summary – the practice implications for practitioners 239 Section 4: The Organization Development practitioner 10 The Organization Development practitioner 243 245 The roles and tasks of OD practitioners 245 The concept of self and the ‘use of self as instrument’, and its role in the theory and practice of OD 248 The competence profile of the OD practitioner 256 The development journey that OD practitioners should engage in 261 Summary 264 11 Power and politics in Organization Development 266 What are power and politics? 267 Why power and politics are not favourite subjects for OD practitioners, and what they can do differently to change that perspective 268 How power dynamics show up in organizations and the practical implications for ODPs 272 How to build up a personal power base and power strategies to achieve greater impact – and be an ethical power user 277 vii viii CONTENTS What the OD community needs to do to build organization power bases 282 Summary 284 Section 5: Additional thoughts 287 12 What is an organization? What is organization health? 289 What is an organization? 291 The range of definitions and indicators that exist in the literature on organization health 293 McKinsey research on organization health 302 How do you begin to build a practice of keeping an ‘equal eye’ on performance and health? 310 Summary 318 13 How to build up your presence and impact on organization life How to expand your presence and impact on the organization 320 How to build up an internal OD function in the organization 322 Summary 327 PART TWO HR in relation to OD: practice examples 14 HR in relation to OD 331 Why is it important that HR ‘gets’ OD? 332 How well equipped is HR to be change agent? 336 A strategic agenda 339 The COVID-19 pandemic 341 Culture is key 343 Managing the talent stream 345 Model the way 346 How to get the ‘licence to play’ 351 Building credibility 355 Conclusion 358 15 Organization Design 360 What is Organization Design (ODS)? 361 Challenges for the business 362 The changing field of ODS 364 The Star ModelF0E4 366 329 319 CONTENTS The Organization Design process 373 An HR/OD approach to designing organizations 374 16 Transformation and culture change 385 A turbulent backdrop 385 The challenges of profound change 386 Planned change philosophies and approaches 390 HR and transformational change 393 About culture change 401 HR’s role in changing cultures 406 Training as an enabler of cultural integration 413 To stimulate culture change 415 Conclusion 417 17 Building organizational agility and resilience 418 What is organizational agility? 419 Why are agility and resilience so elusive? 422 Unpacking organizational agility and resilience 425 How can HR help build agility and resilience? 429 Modelling HR agility 440 Conclusion 442 18 A culture conducive to innovation and learning 444 Introduction 444 The innovation imperative 445 The innovation process 448 Agile approaches to innovation 451 A change-able, innovative culture 451 HR’s role in building a culture of innovation and organizational learning 453 Conclusion 465 19 Building the context for employee engagement 467 What is employee engagement? 468 Changing psychological contracts 473 The ‘gig economy’ 474 What motivates people to want to do a good job? 476 How can employers create the context for engagement? 481 Building trust and involvement 482 Maintaining engagement in times of change 486 Conclusion: building a more mutual employment relationship 492 ix x CONTENTS 20 Developing effective leadership 494 Defining leadership 495 HR’s role in developing leaders 497 Equipping leaders for the task 498 HR exercising stewardship 510 Crafting a leadership development strategy 511 Conclusion 513 Postscript – towards a better tomorrow 514 References and further reading 521 Index 548