Module 1 Flashcards
Organizational Cultural Assessment Model
A model that categorizes an organization as having one of four types of culture: Clan, Adhocracy, Market, or Hierarchy
Clan Culture
Friendly place where people openly share like a family or group of friends might. They value loyalty, tradition, collaboration, commitment, teamwork, participation, and consensus. The leader has a tendency to be a mentor or team builder
Adhocracy Culture
Style is entrepreneurial, flexible, and creative. People take risks and are innovative. Cutting edge, anticipates what is needed in the marketplace, and agile. The leader is entrepreneurial and a visionary
Market Culture
Results-oriented, competitive, and driven. Members are goal-oriented and success is achieved by meeting targets and goals. Delivering results to customers and being productive is valued more than developing employees. This culture strives to win and leaders are demanding and drive their people hard to increase market share and profitability
Hierarchy Culture
Emphasis on being formal, structured, and stable. Values rules, procedures, and policies. Individuals are encouraged to be reliable, dependable, and deliver results by following the structure of the group. Leaders are efficient, organized, and strive to run a smooth operation by following processes and procedures
Culture Norms
A culture’s expectations of its members’ behavior in any given situation
Bridges’ Transitional Model
A change process model with three stages: Ending, Losing, and Letting Go; The Neutral Zone; and New Beginning
Ending, Losing, and Letting Go Stage (Bridges’ Transitional Model)
Develop a change management plan, communicate info, explain why it is important and the benefits of it.
The Neutral Zone Stage (Bridges’ Transitional Model)
Develop short-term goals, procedures/policies, timelines. Employ small transition team. Offer feedback, boost morale, relieve staff pressure
New Beginning Stage (Bridges’ Transitional Model)
Communicate post-change roles to staff. Align goals, share success stories, reward team members. Remain conscious of emotional state of staff
First, Second, and Third Order Change Model
A change process model that explores different orders of change:
First (conformative)
Second (reformative)
Third (transformative)
First Order Change (Conformative)
Doing things “better” as it relates to being more efficient and effective
Second Order Change (Reformative)
About doing “better” things by examining and changing assumptions
Third Order Change (Transformative)
Paradigm change. Involves a shift of the operative way of knowing and thinking
Organizational Change
The act or fact of making an organization something different from what it is or from what it would be if left alone