Title: Organizational Assessment and Development
1Organizational Assessment and Development
- Thomas P. Holland, Ph.D.
- Institute for Nonprofit Organizations
- University of Georgia
2Assessment of Organizational Performance
3Definition and Uses
- Assessment in organizations is a process of
systematically examining one or more aspects of
the organization for purposes of documenting
present performance and planning for
improvements. - Uses
- Identify staff attitudes, behaviors, opinions,
concerns - Examine indicators of organizational
effectiveness - Create baselines for comparisons with other
internal or external measures - Document outcomes (results) of services
- Inform efforts to improve performance and
effectiveness - Caution Leaders must be prepared to deal with
the results and with resistances to change.
4Assessments help by
- Providing diagnostic information for planning
change - Offering opportunities for input and feedback
- Monitoring progress toward goals
- Sending messages to participants about what is
important - Stimulating expectations for change
5Possible Purposes
- To pinpoint issues of concern (such as morale,
engagement, motivations, satisfactions,
behaviors) - To monitor impacts of efforts to change
- To provide input for future decisions
- To compare views across organizational segments
- To observe longer-term trends
6More purposes
- To identify impacts of events
- To add a communication channel and feedback
method - To guide efforts for organizational improvement
- To provide symbolic communication (assessment
signals to staff what management sees as
important) - To align our efforts with expectations of our
customers and sponsors
7Examples of Issues that may be Assessed
- Organizational systems
- Work climate
- Job-skills match
- Motivations
- Individual needs values
- Capacity
- Performance
- External environment
- Mission and strategy
- Leadership
- Organizational culture
- Structure
- Management practices
- Service outcomes
8Motivators for Assessments
- We must be clear about what we want to assess and
why. - Someone must believe we can do better than
this, and then convince others to join the
concern. - Often prompted by messages of discontent from a
constituency group. - Key leaders must be persuaded that the mission
would be better served by addressing the concern
than just keeping things the same.
9Feedback influences behavior
- May confirm or disconfirm previously held views,
assumptions, norms, practices - May call attention to issues needing further
learning and change - May create expectations of rewards and
punishments - May offer cues about inconsistencies, problems,
or errors needing attention - May trigger denial, blaming, retrenchment
10Assessments link culture with actions
- Changing culture essential for sustained
improvements - Assessments should include identification of
aspects of culture warranting attention - Should have clear links with participants
interests (whats in it for me?) - The process of doing them should demonstrate
accountability, modeling the culture you hope to
build - Should attend to strengths and possibilities
important for success, not just problems - May require tailored questions for distinctive
aspects of this organization - Assessments should extend our learning
- First level how we can improve our efforts
- Second level how we can strengthen our learning
about our efforts and their alignment with
stakeholders
11Effective Implementation Requires
- Commitment of leaders and staff
- Openness to learning new things about services
and making changes based on feedback - Interest in clear identification of results
intended and indicators for each of them (this
may be harder than anticipated) - Motivation to understand the relationships
between activities and expected results - Willingness to take risks, to experiment with
trial runs and fine-tuning methods, to make us of
partial information for innovations
12Overview of the Key Steps
- Generate commitment to address the issue
- Engage representatives of the groups needed to
carry out the assessment and act on the findings. - Negotiate shared purposes, uses, plan.
- Specify WHAT will be assessed, WHY, and HOW.
- Communicate intentions and expectations with all
those who are expected to respond. - Collect the information.
- Interpret the results in ways that are
understandable and lead to action. - Distribute the findings and recommendations
- Engage participants in refining action plans and
implementing them.
13Getting Started The Planning Team
- Must involve representatives of those who will be
expected to act on results. - Negotiates shared expectations, purposes, uses of
the assessment. - Strengthens commitments from leaders and members
of the organization. - Communicates plans with those expected to
respond. - Decides on the target(s) and methods of the
assessment.
14Build Ownership from the Start
- Get input and support from those whose
cooperation will be needed to implement findings - Formulate the goals of the assessment together,
dealing with divergent interests from the start
(compromises necessary) - Address barriers and resistances up front
- Identify together who should be contacted, how,
when, by whom, with what questions
15Building Ownership (continued)
- Specify how the project will be communicated to
participants/ respondents in ways that engage
them - Consider alternative possible findings,
implications, approaches to making use of results - Plan for means of communicating findings and
engaging people in action
16Developing the Plan
- Get preliminary information on what is to be
assessed and examine for implications. - Refine the focus of the effort and how findings
will be used. - Decide on whether to involve technical experts.
- Decide on methods, approaches to gather
information. Look for standard tools for use or
adaptation. If none, then design new one. - Pilot test the selected approach to identify
needed refinements. - Select the respondents to be included and
identify how they will be approached and engaged.
17Communications and Engagement
- Decide what should be communicated with whom and
by what means to maximize ownership of results. - Consider timing and implications for other issues
and activities going on in the organization. - Carry out the communications plan and deal with
issues that arise. - Provide advance notice of the project and its
purposes, components, opportunities for input. - Convey honesty, build trust and credibility with
respondents. Show how anonymity will be
respected. - Demonstrate support by leaders.
- Commit to shared action on results.
18Assessment Methods
- Standardized processes and checklists available
through national centers (example
re-accreditation standards of many national
associations) - Client assessment examining the impacts of
services with target communities through surveys,
outcome measures, exit interviews. - Market analysis of external conditions through
focus groups, key informants, questionnaires - S.W.O.T. analysis and discussions
- Staff questionnaires, focus groups, interviews,
service records, financial records, observations,
self-administered questionnaires - Reviews of existing records or data files
- May use multiple approaches and adapted formats
- Less formal approaches often better for small
organizations
19Sources for Tools
- Internet, searching by topic of interest
- Catalogs, printed compilations of tools available
- Publications that report development and use of a
tool on a topic of interest - Adaptations of existing tools for local
circumstances - Self-developed procedures
20Collect the Information
- Designate implementation responsibilities.
- Make sure implementers and respondents understand
steps, expectations, time-table. - Identify the implications of data collection
method(s) on response rates and timing, level of
resources required, speed of data analysis. - Identify how, when, in what format the reports
are to be submitted. - Specify how questions and barriers will be
addressed and momentum sustained.
21Summarize and Interpret the Results
- Decide how reports will be prepared, by whom,
using what tools (statistics?), with what output
formats to use (charts, tables, examples), in
what time frame. - Decide whether and how previous relevant
information may be incorporated in report. - Deal with respondents questions and anxieties
with process and possible results. - Outline the report and then insert findings as
they emerge. - Develop interpretations of findings that are
understandable, credible, actionable. - Formulate specific conclusions, recommendations,
possible action steps. - Decide on steps to deliver and discuss the
findings, deal with concerns, move to shared
conclusions and actions.
22From Reporting Results to Action for Change
- Start with meetings with top leaders to ensure
understanding of findings and to gain commitment
to action. - Disseminate report widely, including schedule of
opportunities to discuss it. - Demonstrate recognition of important issues and
possible implications for organization and staff. - Minimize barriers to widespread ownership by
clear presentation, discussions, openness to
refinement of conclusions. - Engage staff in responding to interpretations,
conclusions, recommendations, and in identifying
implications for action. - Expect and acknowledge anxieties. We all resist
change.
23Action (continued)
- Work together to formulate targets for change
that will strengthen the organization, keeping
focus on mission and shared values. - Avoid personalizing problems.
- Decide on specific steps for change together, who
will be involved, when and how. - Help participants find own strengths and roles in
implementation. - Decide whether and how outside experts should be
involved. - Identify how organization will track, record, and
acknowledge progress in the plan for change. - Specify how feedback will be communicated and
used. - Set up procedures for dealing with surprises,
barriers, delays, problems. - Recognize successes and share them widely.
24Thoughts from users
- You only get what you measure.
- Dont ask if
- You dont want to know true answers
- You dont plan to act on findings
- Careful preparation, implementation and reporting
are essential for usefulness of findings. - Engage those who will be needed to act on the
findings early in the process. - Dont get sidetracked by a few nay-sayers.
- Model the behaviors and attitudes you hope to
strengthen in the organization.
25Application Exercise
- Identify a nonprofit organization that interests
you. - Meet leaders there to discuss aspects that have
been or may be the focus of an assessment
(internal or external). - Search for possible approaches and tools for
conducting the assessment. - Develop credible recommendations about why and
how to conduct the project.
26Assessment of Service OutcomesA specific
type of organizational assessment
27Nonprofits can assess many aspects of their
programs and services
- Documenting how consumers benefited by receiving
a service - Financial accountability documenting how funds
were spent - Program outputs assessing what services are
provided and to whom - Adherence to standards of quality in service
delivery - Participant-related assessments characteristics
of consumers and their concerns - Key indicators of performance inputs, services,
outputs, costs - Views of consumers and other organizations with
our program accessibility, timeliness, courtesy,
condition of facilities, overall satisfaction
with services
28Distinguishing Outcomes from Inputs
- Outcomes are documented benefits or changes for
participants as a result of their involvement
with a program. - May include aspects such as changes in
participants knowledge, attitudes, values,
skills, behaviors, or conditions - Inputs (resources, services, staffing) are used
to bring about expected results or outcomes. - Merely participating says nothing about results
of participation. - Outcomes may be immediate or longer-term changes.
29Growing National Attention to Outcomes
- Many national nonprofit organizations and
associations support studies of the outcomes of
their programs and services. - Some of them provide resources and tools for use
by local organizations. - Managed-care companies stress service results for
reimbursement. - Accrediting bodies increasingly require outcome
assessments as review criteria. - Grant-makers want evidence of results, not just
efforts.
30Benefits of Assessing Outcomes
- Clear definitions of intended results provides
focus for the organizations work and guidance on
improving it. - Understanding current level of outcome
achievement provides basis to examine progress
and plan for future. - Knowledge of results motivates staff and
volunteers by showing if efforts make a
difference. - Information about results motivates people in
deciding how to use their time. - It helps the organization identify training
needs. - It helps justify budget changes and fundraising
purposes. - Information positions organization as successful,
leading to greater recognition and financial
support.
31Benefits of Outcome Assessments emphasized by
users of them
- It showed us what difference the program really
made for our consumers. - The information helped us do a better job,
improve our services and their value to our
clients. - It helped us get everyone focused in the same
direction. - Our organization benefited in many ways
- documenting results to board, staff, and donors
- redirecting attention to more productive
activities - attracting new consumers, collaborators and
funders.
32Challenges for the Future
- Assessing hard-to-measure outcomes, such as
consequences of prevention or advocacy efforts - Sharing useful findings and approaches with other
nonprofits, so everyone doesnt have to start
from scratch - Building assessments right into service
activities - Using software programs to store, update, and
analyze information - Strengthening board and staff attention to
results and willingness to make changes based on
them - Setting reasonable benchmarks or performance
targets (what constitutes good performance?) - Using organizational findings to contribute to
community-level changes
33Organizational Development
- Interventions intended to restore healthy
performance and growth in an organization
34Assumptions
- Changes are continually occurring inside and
outside organizations. - Organizations are systems composed of component
parts. - It is better to improve performance and
productivity than to accept low effectiveness. - Accurate information is helpful knowledge can
lead to health. - Informed, free choices are good for people and
organizations. - People should have some ownership and
responsibility for their own jobs. - Adapting to new conditions is good.
- Opening up conflicts can lead to productive
growth if handled skillfully. - Organizational change does not have to be
haphazard, but the results of change efforts are
not always 100 predictable or controllable. - It is O.K. for us to make mistakes along the way
and learn from them how to improve our efforts. - Both formal and informal relationships are
important components for change.
35Organizational Life Cycles and Internal
Challenges
- Metaphor of human development
- Stages birth, childhood, adolescence, maturity,
old age - Stagnation tendency to level off at one stage of
development, resist change - Founders Syndrome resistance of founder to let
go and allow others to run organization - Mission Drift attention moves from goals to
self-maintenance of organization
36Why change?
- To create better alignments between our
organizational strategy and operations with the
views of our key stakeholders - Employee behaviors and processes
- Customer satisfaction and loyalty
- Perceived value in community
- Donor expectations
- Financial results for organizations future
- Benefits of action must be made clear
37Coping with change
- Since views and resources change, organization
should - Monitor internal and external environments
- Understand what is going on and how that relates
to strategies and operations - Be prepared to make adaptive changes and
innovations - Organizational culture resists change
38Principles of Change
- Successful change is an on-going journey of
learning and growing, not a quick fix. - Incentives for change must be greater than those
for keeping status quo. - There must be some degree of buy-in and support
for new practices to be tried. - You cant change everything at once, so start
where your people are right now and what theyre
interested in doing. - People are more motivated to make changes they
have helped design. - There will always be anxiety, fear, resistance
when doing things differently. The greater the
change, the greater the resistance. - Making positive changes is more effective than
negative ones. - There must be some champions of the changes and
their purposes. - Steps should be consistent with the values
driving the new ways of working. - Energy and commitment dissipate quickly and
motivation wanes as time lapses.
39Organizational Culture
- Culture that set of unspoken habits, norms, and
practices that guide how a group goes about doing
its work, provides order and meaning to everyone,
shows how to respond to problems - Group culture develops over time, emerging
from the work habits of founders - It typically focuses on operational maintenance.
- Newcomers are socialized into cultural
assumptions about how we do our work here. - These assumptions and habits are resistant to
change, continuing to guide work even when
outside conditions change.
40Power and politics
- Power the degree to which individuals can
influence others in any system - Position power authority based on role
definition - Relational influence based on informal networks
- Politics the ways power is used
- Power is unequally distributed in any culture,
may be misused, stifling engagement and effective
performance - Coalitions people who work together for shared
goals - Dominant coalition those who exercise the most
power in a system - Power analysis understanding the configuration
of power and the ways it is used to frame
situations and agendas for action - Organizational development seeks to strengthen
shared power through interventions designed to
increase inclusive political processes and
expertise-based influence
41Force-field analysis
- Identify those influences that are pushing toward
change. - Identify those influences that are resisting
change, supporting the status quo. - Explore ways to strengthen the pushing influences
and diminish the resisting influences.
42Possible Barriers to Change
- People and organizational cultures resist change
- Reward system reinforces old ways of doing things
(such as conformity to rules rather than
producing results or trying new ideas) - Making mistakes has been punished
- Fear of the unknown
- Changes may threaten existing balance of power.
- Fear that changes may open up conflicts between
individuals or groups. - Poor communication of purposes and plans for
change - Incomplete follow-through on initiatives
- Insufficient skills or resources
- Leaders demand quick changes or they cave in to
resistances. - The higher the resistances, the lower the
prospects for successful change.
43Guidelines for planning interventions
- Explore possible solutions to problems
identified, not more detailed dissections of the
problems. - Brainstorm alternative routes to success before
evaluating them. - Consider realistic constraints on choices and
changes. - Consider short-term and longer-term implications
of alternatives. - Make sure choices serve to advance org. mission
- Go with alternative that generates most support.
- Begin with small-scale experiments working toward
solutions. - Identify criteria for monitoring results.
- Verbally rehearse steps to take.
- Identify possible barriers and ways to deal with
them. - Make sure steps, tasks, expectations are clear.
44Engage people in finding solutions
- In what ways do the findings from this assessment
enrich our understanding of the issue that
prompted it? - Given those findings, what are some things we
could do to improve our performance? - What would be going on here if this organization
(place/ community) were functioning as we would
like? - What are the results we want to accomplish?
- What sorts of changes and steps would be useful
for us to try in reaching those results? - What are some small-scale experiments we could
try that could take us there? - Who should do what, when?
- How should we monitor our progress and assess our
results?
45Types of interventions
- Individuals
- Teams
- Inter-groups
- Total organizations
46Types of interventions and uses at the
individual level
- Training helping person learn specific
knowledge or skills. - Coaching guidance on mastering skills or solving
interpersonal problems (using, for example, 360
assessments, Joharis window, Myers-Briggs,
stress management techniques) - Goal setting helping people formulate goals and
priorities for improving their effectiveness - Performance appraisal modifying ways of
assessing employee performance more carefully and
using feedback to improve. - Job descriptions useful when job duties are
ambiguous and expected results unclear. - Cross-training rotating individual to other
positions in organization - Career planning for individuals who have
outgrown their roles and want new skills and
challenges. - Procedures manual formalizing the approved
methods for handing common problems in work. - Process improvement steps to improve the
effectiveness of ways people do their work and
interact.
47Interventions at the Team level
- Team building activities to increase work group
cohesiveness, reduce biases, build trust - Job enrichment changing mix of job
responsibilities so members have greater
responsibilities - Quality of work life improving work conditions
and employee participation in decisions that
affect them and org. - Quality circles using small work groups to
identify ways to improve performance and
effectiveness - Goal setting helping work groups establish
shared goals and steps for improvement - System mapping clarifying inputs,
transformations, outputs, and feedback loops to
improve efficiency - Conflict management reducing destructive
conflict between members of a work group through
healthier communications
48Build Strong Teams by fostering
- Understanding, relevance and commitment to shared
goals - Open communication of ideas and feelings
- Active participation and distribution of
leadership - Flexible use of decision-making procedures
- Encouragement and constructive management of
conflicts - Equality of power and influence
- High group cohesion
- Strong problem-solving strategies
- Interpersonal effectiveness
- Positive interdependence
49Team Building Activities
- Hold brief retreat where members get to know one
another, interests, hobbies, ambitions - Lets imagine all the things that could go wrong
about this project and see if we can think of
some ways we might solve or avoid them. - What are some characteristics or descriptions we
would like to see in this group? Which of us
could take the lead on each of them? - Design a problem that requires everyone to solve
- Ropes course
- What would you take onto lifeboat?
- How many ways could one use this brush?
- Im think of something Ive done (or about
myself) that Ill bet nobody here knows - Find others on web and in books on
organizational development
50Interventions at the
inter-group level
- Goal setting negotiating changes between teams
through agreements on shared goals and ways of
working - Work flow planning improving the flow of work
and products from one part of the organization to
another - Inter-team development two or more work groups
work to improve their relationships - Cross-training / job rotation building skills
and knowledge needed to work in another part of
the organization
51Interventions with total organization
- Management by objectives setting shared goals
and steps for achieving desired results - Strategic planning establishing long-term goals
and directions for the whole org. - Re-engineering radical re-design of work
processes to improve efficiency - Total quality systems improving value and
excellence across components of the organization
through feedback and ongoing changes - Structural change altering reporting
relationships and objectives for component parts
of the organization - Culture transformation changing assumptions
about who we are, why we are here, what are
right and wrong ways of doing things
52Example Continuous Quality Improvement
- Move from emphasis on productivity and compliance
to quality of performance and services - Components
- Making sure purposes and goals are clear
- Encouraging pride in individual work
- Monitoring how each persons work affects others
(interdependencies) - Gathering information on internal and external
consumers responses to services provided - Encouraging risk taking, innovation,
collaboration - Reducing waste, duplications, inefficiencies
538 Steps to Leading Change Effectively
- 1. Identify participants for change efforts,
depending on level and issue. - 2. Explore together the findings of assessment
and implications for people and the organization
(or community). - 3. Formulate together specific areas for change,
targets and goals. - 4. Link everything with the mission of the
organization. Why are we doing this?
545. Formulate work plans for
achieving changes together
- a. Specify objectives for each dimension.
What do we want to accomplish? - b. Identify results to be attained for each
objective.
What will success look like in
each area? - c. Set clear work assignments and timetable.
Who will do what, by when? - d. Identify evidence of success.
Assessed by what criteria? - e. Publicize intended results and steps.
How will we be accountable to others?
556. Make success a team effort
- Be sure everyone knows what is expected of
her/him and how that links to group goals - Articulate how each individuals talents
contribute to success of the whole - Identify means for problem-solving and
accountability as a team (what will we do when
problems and barriers show up?) - Specify methods for reporting and communicating
progress (how will we know its done?) - Monitor, evaluate, and report on results
- Find ways to reward successes
567. Coordinate implementation
- Maintain emphasis on mission and goals
- Keep in contact with team members
- Empower and encourage them to sustain movement
toward goals - Accept the anxieties of change
- Encourage risk-taking and nontraditional ideas
and actions - Remind members to hold themselves and others
accountable - Take barriers and obstacles back to the group for
solutions (dont fix it)
578. Reinforce Changes
- Communicate progress widely, using multiple means
- Articulate the connections between
actions and results - Recognize and reward successes
- Report results to others outside team
- Encourage group learning from experiences
(sharpen the saw) - Develop and nurture new leaders,
ensuring leadership succession - Model the behaviors expected of others
58Application Exercise
- In a nonprofit of your choice, interview leaders
about a recent project for organizational
development. Ask the questions of why, how, who,
when, what experiences and results? - What were lessons learned?
- What might have been done differently (or in the
future) to make the work more effective? - Identify alternative approaches that you think
would be more useful now. Why? How?
59For additional resources, See file on
web resourcesincluded in this course web site