Entering and Contracting - Organizational Development
Entering and Contracting - Organizational Development
Entering and Contracting - Organizational Development
Contracting
Chapter IV
Entering into
an OD
Relationship
Selecting an OD Practitioner
The last activity involved in entering an OD
relationship is selecting an OD practitioner who
has the expertise and experience to work with
members on the organizational issue.
OD Practitioners can be gained within or
outside the organization.
Proper selection of the OD Practitioner is vital to
the growth of the Organization especially
because, the flow and the arrangement of the
entire organization could altered through the
hands of the OD Practitioner.
Gordon Lippitt
a pioneering practitioner in the field, suggested
several criteria for selecting, evaluating, and
developing OD practitioners.
Lippitt listed areas that managers should
consider before selecting a practitioner
including their ability to form sound
interpersonal relationships, the degree of
focus on the problem, the skills of the
practitioner relative to the problem, the
extent that the consultant clearly informs
the client as to his or her role and
contribution, and whether the practitioner
DEVELOPING A
CONTRACT
DEVELOPING A CONTRACT
Contracting is a natural extension of the entering
process and clarifies how the OD process will proceed. It
typically establishes the expectations of the parties, the
time and resources that will be expended, and the
ground rules under which the parties will operate.
The goal of contracting is to make a good decision
about how to carry out the OD process.
It can be relatively informal and involve only a verbal
agreement between the client and the OD practitioner.
Developing A Contract
A team leader with OD skills, for example, may voice his
or her concerns to members about how the team is
functioning. After some discussion, they might agree to
devote one hour of future meeting time to diagnosing
the team with the help of the leader. Here, entering and
contracting are done together, informally.
In other cases, contracting can be more protracted and
result in a formal document. That typically occurs when
organizations employ outside OD practitioners.
Mutual Expectations
This part of the contracting process focuses on the
expectations of the client and the OD practitioner.
The client states the services and outcomes to be
provided by the OD practitioner and describes what the
organization expects from the process and the
consultant.
Clients usually can describe the desired outcomes, such
as lower costs or higher job satisfaction.
The OD practitioner also should state what he or she
expects to gain from the OD process. This can include
opportunities to try new interventions, report the results
to other potential clients, and receive appropriate
compensation or recognition.
Requirements:
things that would
be nice to have
but are not
absolutely
necessary.
Ground Rules
The final part of the contracting process involves
specifying how the client and the OD practitioner will
work together.
The parameters established may include such issues as
confidentiality, if and how the OD practitioner will
become involved in personal or interpersonal issues,
how to terminate the relationship, and whether the
practitioner is supposed to make expert
recommendations or help the manager make decisions.
Failure to address the concerns may mean that the
client or the practitioner has inappropriate assumptions
about how the process will unfold.