lecture 15 Flashcards
innovating and changing
create high-value products and earn superior profits over the long run.
world class
The system-wide application of behavioral science knowledge to develop, improve, and reinforce the strategies, structures, and processes that lead to organizational effectiveness
Organization development (OD)
The process by which a product, service, or business model takes root initially in simple applications at the bottom of a market and then moves “up market,” eventually displacing established competitors
Disruptive Innovation
super trends shaping the future of business
the marketplace is becoming more segmented and moving toward more niche products
more competitors are offering targeted products requiring faster speed to market
some traditional companies may not survive radical change
china india and other offshore suppliers are changing the way we work
knowledge not information is becoming the new competitive advantage
four basic types of OD interventions
Strategic
Technostructural
human resource management
human process
helping organizations conduct mergers and acquisitions change their strategies and develop alliances
strategic
enhancing organization structure and design employee involvement
and work design
technostructural
attracting good people
setting goals
appraising and rewarding performance
human resource managment
improving conflict resolution
team building
communication
leadership
human process
Focused on customers, continually fine-tuned based on marketplace changes, and clearly communicated to employees
strategy
Good people, with decision-making authority on the front lines, doing quality work and cutting costs
execution
One that motivates, empowers people to innovate, rewards people appropriately, entails strong values, challenges people, and provides a satisfying work environment
culture
Making the organization easy to work in and easy to work with, characterized by cooperation and the exchange of information and knowledge throughout the organization
structure
Inertia
Timing
Surprise
Peer pressure
general reasons for resistance
Self-interest
Misunderstanding
Different assessments
Management tactics
Change-specific reasons for resistance: