Title: Intergroup Development Interventions
1Chapter 11
- Intergroup Development Interventions
2Learning Objectives (part 1 of 2)
- Identify problems of intergroup conflict and
suboptimization. - Experience negative effects of competition on
organization effectiveness.
3Learning Objectives (part 2 of 2)
- Observe and develop strategies for collaborative
intergroup relations. - Diagnose causes of cooperative versus competitive
group relations.
4Power to the People Who Make the Hogs (part 1 of
3)
- HDs Kansas City plant empowers teams to
- Make their schedules and work rules.
- Train new workers and evaluate workers.
- Manage plants operating budget.
- Approve plant strategies.
5Power to the People Who Make the Hogs (part 2 of
3)
- Plants structure centers around employees.
- Work teams of 8 to15 members.
- Group sends member to operating group.
- Four operating groups oversee its division.
- Operating group elects representative to Plant
Leadership Group.
6Power to the People Who Make the Hogs (part 3 of
3)
- The plant is open and does not have walls for
offices. - Productions workers receive financial rewards
based on the performance of the plant.
7Changing Relationships in Todays Organizations
- Managers concentrate efforts on shared
responsibilities among work teams. - Organizations create situations of team
interdependence. - OD interventions aim at developing effective
working methods between teams.
8Collaboration and Conflict
- Organizations need cooperation to be effective.
- Differences in objectives and values between
groups. - Conflict is inevitable between groups.
- Dysfunctional conflict reduced through intergroup
interventions.
9Our Changing World Prototype for
DaimlerChrysler (part 1 of 3)
- Daimler-Benz AG and Chrysler Corp. to form
DaimlerChrysler has entailed challenges. - Indications of a financial flop.
- The 2 have different skills and specialties.
- Instead of collaborating, Mercedes and Chrysler
groups often compete.
10Our Changing World (part 2 of 3)
- M-Class plant in Alabama provides prototype.
- Old rules on how to manage thrown out.
- Plant uses open style offices.
- Gain sharing used in incentive program.
- Dress for all is casual.
- All eat in one cafeteria.
11Our Changing World (part 3 of 3)
- Plants design helped establish culture of
teamwork and open communication. - Each team has a leader.
- Team member can do work of other members.
- A team at a station can do work of stations
before and behind them.
12Intergroup Operating Problems
- Group conflict depends on
- How incompatible the goals are.
- Extent to which resources are scarce and shared.
- Degree of interdependence of task activities.
13Figure 11.1Factors Involved in Conflict
14Suboptimization
- Suboptimization occurs when group optimizes its
own subgoals but loses sight of larger
organizational goals. - Intergroup competition involves groups with
conflicting purposes or objectives.
15Role Conflict and Role Ambiguity
- Role conflict occurs when individual belongs to 2
or more groups whose goals are in conflict. - Role ambiguity exists when individual of group
not clear about his/her functions and goals.
16Cooperation Versus Competition (part 1 of 2)
- Mixed research results on competition and
cooperation among groups. - Members of competitive groups have more
self-esteem for their groups.
17Cooperation Versus Competition (part 2 of 2)
- Groups competing with one another more highly
oriented toward accomplishing task, but no
evidence of increased productivity. - Cooperation promotes productivity between groups
when task is complicated and requires
coordination.
18OD in Practice General Mills Looks to Extreme
Teams (part 1 of 2)
- General Mills (GM) improved teams by looking for
examples outside company. - GM looks at teams that dissect their operations,
analyze them, change them, and put them back
together.
19OD in Practice (part 2 of 2)
- Examination of NASCAR pit crews helped production
operations. - Cross-team cooperation examined between SWAT
teams. - GM replaced separate performance goals for
engineering, purchasing, and production with
single set of goals.
20Managing Conflict
- Organizational conflict does not need to be
eliminated but instead managed. - Diagnosing conflict involves learning basic
conflict styles used in dealing with conflict - Desire to satisfy self.
- Desire to satisfy others.
21Figure 11.2Conflict Styles
22Five Styles of Cooperative Versus Assertive
Behavior (part 1 of 2)
- Avoiding - low concern for self and others.
- Obliging - low concern for self, high concern for
others. - Dominating - high concern for self, low concern
for others.
23Five Styles of Cooperative Versus Assertive
Behavior (part 2 of 2)
- Compromising - moderate concern for self and
others. - Integrating - high concern for self and others.
24Techniques to Deal with Intergroup Problems
- Deal with conflicts openly to manage tensions.
- OD techniques include
- Third-party consultation.
- Organization mirror.
- Intergroup team building.
25Third-Party Consultation
- Uses third party, usually outside practitioner,
to help open communications, level power, and
confront problems between groups. - Third party provides diagnostic insight and is
source of emotional support and skills.
26Organization Mirror
- Gives feedback to teams on how other elements of
organization view them. - Units meet together to process data with
objective of identifying problems and formulating
solutions.
27Intergroup Team Building (part 1 of 2)
- Key members work on issues of interface.
- Meeting usually involves following 5 steps
- Step 1. Working separately, the two work groups
make three lists - How we see ourselves.
- How we think other group sees us.
- How we see other group.
28Intergroup Team Building (part 2 of 2)
- Step 2. Meeting with other group, person from
each group presents their lists. - Step 3. Groups meet separately to discuss.
- Step 4. Subgroups formed by mixing members of two
groups. Develop action plans. - Step 5. A follow-up evaluation meeting held.
29Table 11.1Sample Intergroup Meeting Listing
30Key Words and Concepts
- Avoiding Style - manages conflict by withdrawing.
- Boundaryless - a GE term that refers to reducing
conflict between divisions and departments.
31- Compromising style - manages conflict by seeking
compromise between parties. - Confrontation - parties directly engage each
other and focus on conflict. - Dominating style - manages conflict by attaining
personal objectives and ignoring needs of others.
32- Integrating style - conflict style where there is
high concern for self and others. - Interdependence - performance of one group
contingent upon another group. - Interfaces - meeting point between groups.
33- Intergroup competition - emerges when group
pursues one goal while directly opposing values
that exist in another group. - Intergroup interventions - increase cooperation
among organization subsystems.
34- Intergroup team building - key members of
conflicting groups meet to work on issues of
interface. - Meta goals - superordinate organization goals.
- Obliging style - manages conflict by showing
concern for people satisfactions and smoothing
over conflicts.
35- Open loop - elements of organization operating
without feedback. - Organization mirror - gives work units feedback
on how other elements of organization view them. - Role ambiguity - members of group not clear about
their functions and goals.
36- Suboptimization - group optimizes own goals but
loses sight of larger organization goals. - Team interdependence - performance of one group
contingent upon another group. - Third-party interventions - increases
communication and intergroup problem solving
using outside practitioner.
37Preparations for Next Chapter
- Read Chapter 12.
- Complete Step 1 of OD Skills Simulation 12.1.
- Complete Step 1 of OD Skills Simulation 12.2.
- Read and analyze Case Western Utilities Company.