Week 3 - Notes
Week 3 - Notes
Organisations -> way of working structured or unstructured with goals and purposes. Interactions
of people members of an org implies structuring of their activities organisational roles;
Subsystems and components are part of the wider system in organisation- subsystems formal
and informal Formal strategy formed by one or group of leaders in a group / BOD / Top mngt
group.
Other components goals and the procedure of achieving through services and product; The
organisation as a system;
Clear from any examination of complex systems such as organisations the some kind of structuring of
activities is required Child (!973) drew attention to the role of other far more intangible
elements of organisational life.
External triggers
Political:
Government legislation
Government Ideology
International Law
Universal rights
Wars
Local regulations
Taxation
Trade Union Activities
Economic:
Competitors
Suppliers
Currency Exchange rates
Employment rates
Wage rates
Government economic policies
Other countries economic policies
Lending policies of financial institutions
Changes from public to private ownership
Sociocultural:
Demographics trends
Lifestyle changes
Skills availability
Attitudes to work and employment
Attitudes to minority groups
Gender issues
Willingness and ability to move
Concern for the environment
Business ethics
Technological:
Two types of converging change – Fine tuning and incremental adaptation. Both these types of
change have the common aim and maintaining the fit between organisational strategy, structure and
processes.
Predictable Change:
Change could be viewed as neither wholly emergent nor planned. Griener was taken with Quinn and
Camero – used to describe the stages organisation go through to develop and grow. Griener
maintains that, as organisations mature and grow in size, their activities go through five phases.
Evolution and revolution stages are implemented to describe a typical life cycle pattern that is
completed by Clarke (1994) useful organisation of the characteristics and crisis points associated with
phase of growth.
The linear paradigm reflects the influence of Lewis’s well known three stages model of change (!948(,
which encompasses the following points:
Unfreezing: a stage within which those involved come to recognize that something must change.
Moving: a stage during which new ideas are tested and new ways of working emerge.
Refreezing: a stage within which new behaviors, skills and attitudes are stabilized and commitment to
change its achieved. Being unitary in focus - linear in approach;
More importance to an employee; in it and inputs, systems, and output deals with everything.
Hodges (2018) argue - success in org change high dependent advocacy of stakeholders; Org
change MULTIDIMENSIONAL AND EMOTIONAL PROCESS - and the employee experience of
change represents and important decision with an ongoing commitment with the organisation.
Large scale organisations 19th century - began to employ profession people; Move forward to
hospitals - with employed professionals; Became bureaucratic and specialized; - Extently emerge
to lose purpose by focusing on quantity rather than quality; Moral issues starts to surface in the
decision-making process; Leaders are not subjected or expected to see between right or wrong but
rather between two rights? In many ways, this is the most challenging of leadership dilemmas
because the understanding of how leaders come to choose alongside with vision, strategy, and skills.
Clarke and Clegg (1998) argue that paradigm underpinning management knowledge is changing.
The relational perspective
Stewart (1982) 3 elements: Demands, Constraints and Choices; The leadership is shaped by the
interactions of the demands and choices applied or to available in the organization; Demands
derive through environment and key stakeholders, the governance and regulatory arrangement
within the organisation operates colleagues aspirates of goals and ambitions;
Conversely constraints provide the boundaries within which leaders operate - Constraints
create routines, including cultural routines. Routines provide stability and order and therefore pre-
dictaility. Routines are part of psychological contract between employees and the company.
Respect Others
Seek to serve others
Be fair and just in dealings with others
Be honest;
Seek to build a sense of purpose and community.
Exchange theory Northouse uses of Graen (!995) ‘Phase model of leadership making’
In the latter ‘partner’ phase, the roles (of leader and follower) are negotiated, influence is reciprocal,
exchanges are high quality and interests are group focused.
“Adaptive Leadership” involves the leader being willing to take responsibility for creating the ‘space’
within which people can come to terms with tough decisions. Creating space? In essence, the
leader creates “space” leader will use his or her own authority and credibility to “buy time”.
When tough choices are to be faced, there will always be pressure for choices and action.
Leaders manage or cope with that pressure focus on leadership or relational process forced to
face a reality that many leadership models tend to minimize.
The Force Field Analysis model is a model of system wide change that helps change agents diagnose
the forces that drive and restrain proposed organisational change.
LEWINS Change process involves the “unfreezing” the current situation, moving to the chosen
condition and then “Freezing” the system so that it remains in the chosen state
Fundamentally different to other two change models because the focus is NOT on what is
not working but on WHAT IS WORKING
Uses an approach known as Appreciative Inquiry
Everyone is involved in creating the ‘positive vision’ and so is more motivated to be
committed to making the change happen.
Differences -> the role of the ‘change agent’; Fixing problems vs building on strengths approaches;
Diagnostic – data => The choice of diagnotistic model must be carefully chosen
Input -> Human and other resources acquired from the external environment
Outputs -> Goods and services resulting from the transformation process;
BURKE-LITWIN MODEL:
Aim is to get members to own the data and engage in the change process
The focus should be on the process ie how the data is fed back to the organisation.
The typical feedback session comprises a ‘meeting’ which allows discussion of data but these
are often filled with anxiety, defensive behaviours unless the change leader manages the
environment successfully.