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Complete summary Articles + Lectures Organization Development - Master SHOP UU

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This a complete summary with all exam material, including: - all given lectures - following articles and book chapters: • Cummings, T.G. & Worley, C.G. (2015). Organization Development & Change. o Chapter 1 and 2 (Introduction and Planned Change) o Chapter 5 (Diagnosing) o Chapter 18 section 18-4 (Culture change). • Avery, D. R. and McKay, P. F. (2006), Target Practice: An Organizational impression management approach to attracting minority and female job applicants. Personnel Psychology, 59: 157–187. doi:10.1111/j..2006.00807.x • De Vries, G., Terwel, B. W., Ellemers, N., and Daamen, D. D. L. (2015), Sustainability or Profitability? How Communicated Motives for Environmental Policy Affect Public Perceptions of Corporate Greenwashing. Corp. Soc. Responsib. Environ. Mgmt., 22, 142–154. doi: 10.1002/csr.1327. • Harrison, D. A., Kravitz, D. A., Mayer, D. M., Leslie, L. M., & Lev-Arey, D. (2006). Understanding attitudes toward affirmative action programs in employment: Summary and meta-analysis of 35 years of research. Journal of Applied Psychology, 91(5), . doi:10.1037/.91.5.1013 • Jetten, J., & Hornsey, M.J. (2014). Deviance and dissent in groups. Annual Review of Psychology. 65:461–85 • Jones, D. A., Willness C. R., Madey S. (2014). Why are job seekers attracted by corporate social performance? Experimental and field tests of three signal-based mechanisms. Academy of Management Journal, 57, 383-404. • Kish-Gephart, J.J., Harrison, D.A., & Trevino, L.K. (2010). Bad Apples, Bad Cases, and Bad Barrels: Meta-Analytic Evidence About Sources of Unethical Decisions at Work. Journal of Applied Psychology, 95(1), 1-31. • Martin, K.D. & Cullen, J.B. (2006). Continuities and Extensions of Ethical Climate Theory: A Meta-Analytic Review. Journal of Business Ethics. 69: 175. doi:10.1007/s • Van Knippenberg, D., & Schippers, M. C. (2007). Work group diversity. Annu. Rev. Psychol., 58, 515-541. • Scholten, W. & Ellemers, N. (2016). Bad apples or corrupting barrels? Preventing traders’ Misconduct. Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance, 24(4), 366-382, doi: 10.1108/JFRC- • Shore, L. M., Cleveland, J. N., & Sanchez, D. (2018). Inclusive workplaces: A review and model. Human Resource Management Review, 28(2), 176-189. • Van Steenbergen, E., Van Dijk, D., Christensen, C., Coffeng, T., & Ellemers, N. (2019). Learn to build an error management culture. Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance. • Wiese, C. W. & Burke, C. S. (2019). Understanding team learning dynamics over time. Frontiers in Psychology, 10:1417. Summary is written in English.

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January 15, 2025
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Organization Development: Monitoring and Changing Culture and Behavior

Exam 16/1/25

• Exam literature
o All lecture slides and content of lectures
o Book chapters
o 12 articles
• Extra information
o Exam is 50% of grape
o It’s a multiple choice test
o Exam is 16/1/25, 13:30-16:00




1

,Lecture 14/11
Course and lecture overview → how topics are interrelated




Organisation Development → planned process of change in an organization’s culture through the
utilization of behavioral science, research and theory

• Another definition → OD is a long-range effort to improve an organization’s problem-
solving capabilities and ability to cope with change in its external environment, with the
help of external or internal behavioral-scientist consultants (change agents)
• You are doing OD if you are…
o Bringing planned change to align the structure, culture, strategy and individual
jobs of people in an entire organisation (not accidental)
o Applying behavioral science knowledge to diagnose, to facilitate and to evaluate
organisational change (evidence-based)
o Analyzing the effectiveness of an organisation and how to improve that by
involving members of the organisation (interviews, focus groups): gather
evidence on the change needed and the course to take (not intuitive)
o Supporting increase of organisational effectiveness on all levels (high quality and
productivity, financial performance, optimizing teamwork, improving well-
being/health of workers)
o Facilitating organisations’ response to change in a flexible, adaptive and often
participative way
o Developing sustainable change that is continues (not tactics or short-term)




2

, • Why do organisations need continuous development?
o General and task (specific) environment
o Orange → indirectlt influence the company
o Colors inside → directly influence the company
• Important trends in the general environment
o Economic → globalization
o Demographic → diversification of labour force
o Technological → IT revolution and AI, more
automation
o Political/legal → tightened (financial)
supervision, governmental changes (taxes,
regulations)
o Sociocultural → increased focus on Corporate
Social Responsibility (people, planet, profit)
• 88% of Fortune 500 firms that existed in 1955 are gone → three companies that failed to
adapt and why
o Kodak → did not anticipate digital camera → success trap: exploiting what has
been historically working → outperformed by competitors such as Canon
o Toys R us → missed opportunity to develop e-commerce → only kept physical
stores (outperformed by online companies like Amazon)
o General Motors → activists started pointing out that Hummer was worst car to
drive environmentally → eco-friendly alternatives were brought to marked (Tesla)

Types of change

1. Magnitude of change → incremental vs fundamental
a. E.g. you go from old school phones to iphone
b. Iphone was way more fundamental or bigger
2. Degree of organisation → overorganized ‘loosen up’ vs
underorganized ‘tighten up’
a. Many rules or no rules at all in an organisation
3. Setting of change → local vs global
a. Globalisation, so environment becomes
bigger

Models of Planned Change → see figure

1. Lewin’s Planned Change Model
2. Action Research Model
3. Positive Model
a. Main difference → second and third model are
circulative, it’s rather reciprocative




3

, Most important to diagnose what needs to
be changed → diagnosing change: an open
systems model → key aspect of course

• Alignment → if organisatoin has
strong ideas about being eco-
friendly, but they don’t make it easy
for people to do so, they haven’t
align the organisational and
personal needs → there needs to be
higher overlap with culture/higher
management, all the way down to
individual employees
• Boundaries → what parts of the organisation are you actually changing

Organizational culture → blanket above diagnosing change model →
culture is the pattern of artifacts, norms, values and basic
assumptions which describes how the organisation solves problems
and teaches newcomers how to behave

• You diagnose the organisational culture
• Organisational culture → onion model
• Artifacts → visible components of culture
o You can observe it
o E.g. how people talk, dress, what the building looks
like, werkpleinen or individual offices
• Norms → unwritten rules of organisation
o E.g. open door policy
• Values → ideas how people should behave, what organisation should look like
• Basic assumptions → how people are in general, what kind of people do you hire?
o E.g. people are inherently prosocial, helpful, attentive, calm
• Think of it as an iceberg → many things you can’t see from the outside

Why study culture?

• It’s predictive of…
o Financial performance of organisations
o Employee well-being
o Organizational effectiveness
o Innovation
• And more important than formal control systems, procedures, structure and strategy




4

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