Od Handbook

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Volunteer Training & Learning Department Organisational Development Participants’ Handbook – December 2006 Name: ……………………………………………………… © VSO 2006. Any part of this document, including illustrations and diagrams, may be copied, reproduced or adapted without permission from VSO, provided that the elements used are distributed free or are priced solely to cover production cost, and provided that VSO is acknowledged as the copyright holder. For any usage with commercial ends, permission must first be obtained from VSO.

Transcript of Od Handbook

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Volunteer Training & Learning Department

Organisational

Development

Participants’ Handbook – December 2006

Name: ………………………………………………………

© VSO 2006. Any part of this document, including illustrations and diagrams, may be copied, reproduced or adapted without permission from VSO, provided that the elements used are distributed free or are priced solely to cover production cost, and provided that VSO is acknowledged as the copyright holder. For any usage with commercial ends, permission must first be obtained from VSO.

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Handout 00-1

TIMETABLE

Day 1 (evening) 19:00 Session 1 Introduction

Session 2 Organic Organisation

Session 3 OD Definition 21:00 Session 4 OD Cycle

Day 2 09:00 Session 5 Understanding Organisations: The External and Internal Environment

Session 6 Analysis + Diagnosis

Lunch

Session 7 Organisation Capacity

Session 8 OD in a Development Context

Session 9 Devising an OD Proposal + Activity

Dinner

20:30 Session 9 Devising an OD Proposal + Activity (continued)

Day 3

09:00 Session 10 Presentations Close 12:00 Session 11 Course Review + Evaluation

END OF COURSE

Lunch

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HANDOUT PACK SESSION REF. TITLE PAGE(S)

Introduction 00-1 Course Timetable 1 00-2 Handout pack 2 Session 2 02-1 Phases of an Organisation Development 3 Session 3 03-1 Journey of OD 4 Session 3 03-2 Organisational Development Books and Websites 5 Session 3 03-3 Definition of Organisational Development (OD) 6-7 Session 4 04-1 Illustration of the OD Cycle + Key Elements 8-9 Session 4 04-2 Glossary of Terms 10-12 Session 4 04-3 Organisational Development Course Aim 13

+Link Case Study 14-15 Ministry of Education Case Study 16-17 Romeas Hek Health Centre Case Study 18-19 Session 5 05-1 Contextual Scan 20 Session 5 05-2 Public, Private and Not-for-Profit Sectors 21 Session 5 05-2 Comparison of Formally-Organised Sectors 22 Session 5 05-3 Onion Framework 23-24 Session 5 05-4 Resistance to Change and Strategies 25 Session 5 05-5 Three Circles Framework 26 Session 5 05-6 Key Learning Points/Learning Log 27 Session 6 06-1 OD Values 28 Session 6 06-2 Multiple Roles of an OD Facilitator + OD Spectrum –

Supporting Information 29-30 Session 6 06-3 Stepping Stones of OD 31 Session 6 06-4 Stepping Stones – Supporting Information 32 Session 6 06-5 Situational Matrix – Instructions for Participants 33 Session 6 06-6 Metaphor Matrix 34 Session 6 06-7 Key Learning Points 35 Session 7 07-1 Visualisation Sheet 36 Session 7 07-2 Organisation Capacity Building – Background Material 37 Organisational Capacity Assessment Checklists 38 Organisational Capacity Assessment Strategies 39 Session 7 07-3 Key Learning Points 40 Session 8 08-1 Levels of Culture 41 Session 8 08-2 Characteristics of Organisational Culture 42-43 Session 8 08-3 Why Organisational Culture is Difficult to Manage 44 Session 8 08-4 How do we understand our culture 45-47 Session 8 08-5 Hofstede’s Cultural Dimensions 48 Session 8 08-6 Key Learning Points/Learning Log 49 Session 9 09-1 Devising OD Proposal + Activity 50 Appendix 00-1 Case Studies 51-65 00-2 Metaphors – Proverbs – Quotes – Poems 66-69 00-3 Personal Learning Log 70

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Phases of an Organisation’s Development

Organisations are similar to organic systems in their uniqueness, individuality and complexity. They need to understand and adapt to the surrounding environment and context in order to survive. An organisation’s development is often described in human development or growth terms. As an organisation is created (birth) it goes through different stages or phases of growth, such as adolescence, adulthood, parenthood, the prime of life and in some cases a natural progression towards death with the organisation ceasing to exist, either because of external factors or it has fulfilled it’s purpose. Organisational development interventions need to consider the phase of growth and its implications for an organisation. BIRTH PHASE 1 CHILDHOOD Dependence Great learning and skills acquisition others provide environment and resources for growth PHASE 2 ADOLESCENT Independence Fundamental change in relationship a period of testing and personalising capacities and competencies, using them to act and impact on the environment PHASE 3 ADULTHOOD Inter-dependence Understands the organisation’s own potential through effective collaboration with others. (PARENTHOOD) Supportive Some organisations give birth to new ones and provide the resources necessary for the new growth to find their feet. DEATH It is critical that all these phases are recognised as developmental and one is not judged as being superior to any other. The experience of each phase provides learning and capabilities, which are vital to engage with the next phase. They are continually reoccurring and overlapping in the course of an individual life, organisation and community. Skilled and sensitive interventions can remove hindrances and blockages but there is a limit as to how much this natural process can be speed up. The process is non linear.

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Journey of OD Demystifying Organisation Development Rick James page 9

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Organisations seen as organic systems with properties

associated with living organisms

Organisations should be controlled like machines –

scientific + mechanistic approach

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Organisational Development Books & Websites Books Highly recommended Fowler, Alan, 1997, Striking a balance, Earthscan, London (practical, down to earth book, with tools and examples, NGO development focus) James, Rick, 1998, Demystifying Organisation Development, practical capacity building experiences of African NGOs, INTRAC (good background to OD, principles and approaches, with some helpful case studies of OD interventions in African NGOs. Explores role and implications of Northern NGOs and donors) Recommended Handy, Charles, 1987, Understanding Voluntary Organisations, Penguin (accessible style, good ideas on OD and management, in general)

Pretty, Jules et al, 1998, Participatory Learning and Action, IIED (very good general participatory tool book, ideas that are transferable to OD)

Eade, Deborah, 2000, Capacity Building: an approach to people centred development, Oxfam Publishing (broader aspect of capacity building at different levels, including organisational development)

Holman and Devane, 1999, The Change Handbook: Group Methods for Shaping the Future, Berrett-Koehler Publishers ( useful overview of open systems for change theory with a handy comparative matrix giving a quick overview of eighteen different approaches) Johnson and Scholes 1997, Exploring Corporate Strategy, Prentice Hall publishers (exploration of strategic management in terms of both analysis, planning, strategy, development and change within a cultural and political context) You can find the following in the Learning Centre in Harborne Hall Striking a Balance by Alan Fowler … … … … 361.7 3 copies @ HH Participatory Learning and Action … … … … 371.3 3 copies @ HH Capacity Building: An Approach to People-Centred Development … 361.7 2 copies @ HH Demystifying Organisational Development by Rich James … … 361.7 1 copy @ HH Just About Managing … … … … … … 361.3 1 copy @ HH Breakthrough thinking for non-profit-organisations … … 361.3 1 copy @ HH When in Rome or Rio or Riyadh … … … … … 658.049 1 copy @ HH Websites There are numerous websites on capacity building and OD. We recommend the following:

http://www.cdra.org.za/index.htmExcellent website of the Community Development Resource Association, based in South Africa. Well-written and thought provoking articles on OD, management, development, culture and learning. Plus good links. http://businessballs.com/Businessballs is a free ethical learning and development resource for people and organisations, run by Alan Chapman, in Leicester, England. The site is a rich resource of downloads materials for all aspects of personal and organisational development. http://www.trainingzone.co.uk/A site for corporate training professionals with an online network of 35,000 members. http://www.managementhelp.org/“easy-to-access, clutter-free, comprehensive resources regarding the leadership and management of yourself, other individuals, groups and organizations” NB this is a US site. http://www.new-paradigm.co.uk/resources.htm provides a gateway to some resources and links

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Definition of Organisational Development (OD) There are many definitions and interpretations of OD depending on the organisational sector and country context. VSO uses the INTRAC definition:

INTRAC definition of ORGANISATIONAL DEVELOPMENT (OD) A planned systematic and participatory process of change intended:

• To increase organisational effectiveness. • To develop a continuing capacity for learning.

INTRAC – The International NGO Training and Resource Centre, supports non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and civil society organisations around the world by exploring policy issues, and strengthening management and organisational effectiveness. The definition emphasises the importance of participatory approaches to support longer-term capacity building. OD is about moving the organisation on by taking deliberate planned steps to create an environment that will enable staff to understand and deliver the organisation’s objectives. Responding to and working with key stakeholders forms an essential part of this process. There are some common elements in this approach to OD, which can guide the practitioner’s understanding of the process. These are described as OD Values and the Core Ingredients of OD below: OD Values

Emphasised on SKWID and underpinning the principles of participation and process development, OD is founded on similar values where the attitudes and behaviour of the practitioner makes the process of OD and the techniques used effective, not the techniques themselves. The following are some key values:

• Opportunities for people to develop towards their full potential.

• People are complex with differing needs, not just requiring physical resources.

• Emphasis on openness, trust and collaborative effort.

• To meet the needs of both individuals and the organisation.

• Emphasis on feelings and emotions as well as ideas and concepts.

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Ten Core Ingredients of OD 1. Its goal is organisational strengthening

OD emphasises developing the organisation’s capabilities to solve not just the immediate problems it faces but its future challenges by ensuring ownership of the problem and solutions identified.

2. Improves ability to learn

A key product of OD is that an organisation improves its ability to become a ‘learning organisation’ with a continuous capacity to respond to a changing environment.

3. A systems approach

OD views organisations from a holistic, systems perspective, where issues, events and forces within organisations are not isolated but inter-related. Interventions or change in one part will affect and be affected by other parts of the organisation.

4. Focuses on organisational culture

In recent years the importance of organisational culture in determining how it functions has been increasingly emphasised. OD stresses the centrality of culture to organisational change.

5. Is about conscious not accidental change

It is recognised that organisations develop and change as part of a natural occurring process of development. OD emphasises the importance of conscious and planned change as a means of improving organisational effectiveness and learning.

6. Assessment + diagnosis based on action research

One of the important steps in OD is an appropriate diagnosis based on continuous data analysis and learning: ‘prescription without diagnosis is malpractice whether in medicine or management’ Albrecht

7. Focuses on people not on physical resources

Both central to a participatory and collaborative process and emphasising an underlying element of change is people’s behaviour, OD emphasises human rather than physical resources.

8. Uses both macro-and micro- activities

OD uses a variety of planned activities designed to help an organisation become more effective. These activities may be micro, i.e. specific inputs such as a focus on group dynamics, work design or leadership or increasingly, with recognition of the importance of the changing external environment in which development NGO’s are operating in, is the importance of macro activities such as strategy, structure and external relationships.

9. Is a long term process

OD recognises that organisational change is a long-term process and not a one off intervention and that present OD activities have implications for an organisations future.

10. Focuses on the organisation’s own view of effectiveness

OD is a process that is owned by the organisation itself, emphasising the organisations’ ‘world –view’ particularly on it’s effectiveness and improved performance.

(Adapted from Demystifying Organisation Development, James, Rick, 1998, INTRAC).

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page 1 of 2

Illustration of the OD Cycle

Theory

Analysis

Diagnosis

Contextual Information

Design of activities

Implementation of activities

Review, reflection evaluation

OD Cycle

Orientation

Acceptance + commitment

Impl

emen

ting

+ m

anag

ing

Design of key OD proposal

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OD Cycle – Key Elements

Theory – touched upon in this short course but backed up by the resource table - book references and useful web sites. It is very important that volunteers take responsibility to build up their background knowledge of OD generally and specific issues relating to the development context. Diagnosis – essential not to make the diagnosis before the analysis. Also in a developing country context the organisation must be involved in and have ownership of both the analysis and diagnosis. Contextual Information - essential that volunteer do not come into an organisation from a different country and culture and merely transfer their experience and model of OD onto the organisation. It is essential to spend time understanding the country and organisational culture. This will be key in the adaptation of OD approaches as it will be informed by how decisions are made and processes currently used within the country, organisation. OD endorced by leadership and other members of the organisation– absolutely key in organisational development. Therefore the OD practitioner has to really work at building relationships and a mutual understanding and respect in the orientation phase. Plus they must only go as far as the organisation wants to with perhaps a nudge towards deeper issues. It is not appropriate for the OD practitioner to set their own agenda this will inevitably have a negative effect ( look at the force field examples to resistance to change in session 5.5). Design of OD activities– must be compatable with the country context and tied into approaches and activites understood and relevant to the country context. i.e proverbs.

‘Practical men in authority who believe themsleves to be quite exempt from any intellectual influences, are usually the slaves of some defunct economist’ (Keynes) – laminated quote in course box

‘‘Prescriptions without diagnosis is malpractice whether in medicine or management’ Albrecht laminated quote in course box

“The question is not does OD travel well, but do the OD consultants themselves travel well? Experience is showing that it is more a question of personal values, approaches, sensibilities and behavious and how they practice OD, rather than anything inherent in OD itself” Rick James Demystifying ODp147

“OD practitioners should proceed no faster or deeper than the legitimation obtained from the client system and she stays at a level of consciously obtained felt needs” Srinivas 1995 Rick James Demystifying OD

“recipient organisations gain very limited experience with and benefits from donor imposed assessments…there is a large gulf between donor prescriptions and performance change. this demands the active engagement of those involves and effected…it is not simply a question of organisation participation in their own diagnosis. It relates fundamentally to an organisation owning the process” Canadian IDRC INTRAC rising to the challenge Praxis Paper John Hailey, Rick James + Rebecca Wrigley

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page 1 of 3 Glossary of Terms Advocacy: Tackling the root causes of poverty by taking action to challenge policies and practices of institutions and people in power. Uses a range of methods including public campaigning, lobbying, media work, influencing and building alliances. Appreciative enquiry: an approach which focuses on asking the ‘appropriate questions’ to enable an appreciative or positive reflection on a situation, past, present or future. Baseline data: part of data gathering and diagnosis stages of intervention. Gathering information, which forms the ´starting point´ or baseline. Capacity: ‘Ability to perform or produce; capability’; ‘Innate potential for growth, development, or accomplishment- ability.’ Capacity Building: A generic term relating to interventions designed to develop the ability of institutions, organisations, teams and individuals to plan and deploy resources in order to achieve their changing objectives more effectively and efficiently. Capacity Development: a term sometimes used instead of capacity building. Capacity Growth: a term sometimes used instead of capacity building. CDRA: Community Development Resource Association, South African NGO support agency. Context: the environment in which an organisation is operating, including political, economic, social, cultural, technological and environmental factors. Country Strategic Plans (CSPs): Produced by each VSO country programme to define their work over the next 3-5 year period. Department for International Development (DfID): The UK government’s department in charge of development issues and funding. Efficiency: describes how efficient the organisation is in achieving its activities. Effectiveness: describes how effective an organisation is in achieving its objectives. Entry point: the level, opportunity, activity or leverage to enter into the organisational development process Facilitator: Makes a process happen through guiding, enabling and empowering participants through a range of skills from observation and active listening to clarifying, probing and paraphrasing. The facilitator is neutral and therefore does not take a position on the event or issue at hand or have a stake in the outcome. Framework: Used to describe Organiational Development approaches. Frameworks offer a ´way of looking at OD´and are less prescriptive than a ´model´. Gross Domestic Product (GDP): The measure of how much a country earns in a year. Heavily Indebted Poor Country Initiative (HIPC initiative): An initiative designed by the IMF and World Bank to reschedule the debt of the most indebted countries.

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page 2 of 3 Human Development Index (HDI): A ranking of all nations according to their achievements in different aspects of human development, education, health and GDP, compiled each year by the UNDP. Human resources – individual abilities, skills, staff competencies. International Monetary Fund (IMF): A multilateral institution, which provides loans to members to help them over short-term balance of payments problems. INTRAC: International NGO Training and Research Centre www.intrac.org. Mentor: Supports and advises a less experienced professional. This is often in an informal way and can take place on-the-job. In helping the professional, the mentor builds his/her capacity and confidence to do the job and enables growth in knowledge, skills and attitudes. Mission: The purpose for an organisations’ existence, the goal. Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO): Organisations that are not aligned to a government and are often not political, sometimes referred to as charities. Organisational capacity building: developing the organisational capacity or development to facilitate growth or change. Organisational culture: the culture within an organisation that is unique to that ´mini-society´. Embodies the values and beliefs of an organisation. Organisational Development: The term used to define capacity building of an organisation, usually through a planned process of change in order to make the organisation more effective. Organisational learning: the ability of an organisation to learn from experience in order to assist its development and growth. Linked to how it manages knowledge and information and its monitoring and evaluation systems. OD Activities: Are those activities undertaken to support the capacity of people and systems within an organisation to work effectively and support organisational learning. OD Cycle: The stages in the organisational development process. OD Phases: Describes the purpose and sequence of a particular group of activities i.e. analysis, diagnosis, planning, action, buy-in, implementation. These phases are not limited by time and may overlap. OD Proposal: Describes the intended OD activities which is presented to management team/board for approval OD Plan: Describes the OD activities and their purpose. Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs): Documents prepared by a country before they are able to qualify for debt rescheduling under the HIPC initiative (see above). Participation: A process of collective analysis learning & action and VSO’s role in this process is to facilitate and/or be involved alongside other stakeholders. Participatory Approaches (PA): An umbrella term for any participatory system or method, e.g. Participatory Rural Appraisal.

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Page 3 of 3 Physical resources: buildings, vehicles, equipment, computers etc. Planning for Change: VSO’s Country Planning Process Toolkit. Practitioner: refers to the role of an Organisational Development Practitioner, who may take on different roles along the OD Spectrum depending on the organisational diagnosis. Programmatic Approach: Central to VSO’s work in the future and born out of VSO’s Strategic Plan 2002-5 Focus for Change. The approach requires that there are longer and more dynamic relationships between VSO & its partners that are not only defined by the volunteer placement. Placements will be more geographically and sectorally clustered to increase impact and networking between partners. Programme Area Plans (PAP): The individual ‘strategic’ plans for the priority development goal areas of VSO country programmes e.g. Health, Education and HIV & AIDS. Most countries have only 3 programme areas that form the components of the Country Strategic Plan (CSP). Stakeholders Self - Assessment: an organisation carries out its own internal audit. SPROUT: ‘Strengthening Programme Partnerships Project’, VSO’s Partnership Guidelines for Programme Offices. Structures and Systems – e.g. monitoring and evaluation systems, personnel systems, financial management systems. Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAPs): The conditions that are attached to IMF loans which are based on neo-liberal economics and which open up a country’s trade. Sustainable Development: The concept whereby improvements in quality of life through economic development are not gained at the expense of the environment or of future generations. Trainer: Promotes professional growth by building on the level knowledge, skills, attitudes and experience that learners already have. United Nations Development Programme (UNDP): An organisation that is part of the United Nations that runs development programmes. Values, identity and beliefs – organisational culture, motivation for being in existence, the organisation’s theory of development and ‘world view’. Vision: an organisation’s ‘raison d’etre’, its reason for existence and how it would like the world to be different.

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Organisational Development Course Aim

Course Aims And Objectives Aims:

• To increase participants understanding of the concept of ‘Organisational Development’ in a

development context

• To provide volunteers with a framework, approaches and tools to increase organisations’ capacity

Objectives:

• To enable participants appreciate the potential impact of ‘Organisational Development’ to deliver change

• To provide volunteers with a range of tools and techniques and the understanding of how to use them

appropriately within their organisation and the developing country context

• To develop volunteers’ confidence to facilitate organisational capacity building in developing countries

• To emphasise the importance of volunteer approaches, attitudes and behaviours in facilitating effective &

sustainable organisational change

• To raise awareness of the importance of ongoing learning and suggest possible strategies to achieve this.

This course builds on Skills for Working in Development and supports VSO’s commitment to learning, empowerment and partnership. However, this course is designed for volunteers with a specific role in supporting Organisational Development.

On most courses, there is a wide spectrum of participants from highly experienced business and management volunteers to those new to OD. The course is about Adapting Skills to a development context for those who already have experience in Organisational Development and Developing New Skills, by exploring new approaches and tools. The course is complemented by self-directed learning, research at the programme office of the country placement on arrival and research in placement.

Session 5 Understanding Organisations; external and internal environment Session 8 Analysis and Diagnosis may be familiar to some participants and is an opportunity for revision whilst for others it will be new information. For the next two days participants will have an opportunity to work in teams on case studies related to Organisational Development. It is important to acknowledge the different levels of experience in the group and to reach a common understanding of OD before you go into team work and case studies tomorrow afternoon and evening.

In preparation for the course tomorrow please read the introduction to the three case studies in Session 4 (Handout 04-3)

You will be working with one of the case studies but need to be familiar with the content of all of them.

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Positive Link (+Link), India Briefing Notes for Stage 1

The Organisation +Link is a non-profit making umbrella organisation for community-based organisations (CBO) of people living with HIV and AIDS in the Eastern states of India. It was set up by a small group of HIV positive people from different communities and registered as a local NGO in 1999. Initially its main goal was to enable a handful of organisations based around Bhubaneshwar to share information, resources and best practice for raising awareness of HIV and AIDS and combating the spread of the virus. It was very successful and within four years membership had increased dramatically and reached neighbouring Eastern states. The focus has also widened to include improving the quality of life for people living with HIV and AIDS (PLWHA) by providing opportunities for empowerment. +Link believes that empowered PLWHA are better equipped to take control of issues affecting their lives, such as protecting basic human rights, participating in policy/decision-making and accessing legal assistance and healthcare.

+Link is currently funded by FHI (Family Health International) and UNDP (United Nations Development Programme). +Link’s offices consist of three rooms in a rented building on the outskirts of Bhubaneshwar with four non-networked computers and a telephone. The organisation is managed by a director, one of the original founders, and there are seven other full-time staff members, as well as a growing number of part-time employees. Most of its CBO members are located in urban areas of the Eastern states but some are more remote with little access to telecommunications. Contextual Scan The infection rate of HIV and AIDS is on the rise in India and about to become a serious developmental challenge. The main cause for concern is the lack of accurate knowledge about HIV and AIDS and the public and official lack of will to tackle the issue. Most parts of India are extremely conservative; the subject of sex is taboo and if brought up, is generally met with a wall of silence. Gender is also seen as a major barrier to combating HIV and AIDS as women in India do not have equal status in making decisions on sexual practices.

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page 2 of 6 Bhubaneshwar is the capital of Orissa, one of the poorest states in India. It is well served by train and air both within the region and to other major cities. The economy is almost entirely based on agriculture, which has led to widespread migration of the skilled and well educated to the IT belt and private industry in the wealthier South. Moreover, the local economy is often destabilised by natural disasters with temperatures reaching 45ºC in May and June and flooding not uncommon in the rainy season (September-November).

Navigating Change Despite its success, +Link is still a small organisation and it is finding it increasingly difficult to cope with the demands of a wider more diverse membership and multi-focused mission. The staff, all PLWHA themselves, are extremely enthusiastic but few are graduates and their level of education and skills is low. They have good contact with other local bodies and members within the vicinity of Bhubaneshwar. However, they are finding it increasingly difficult to keep in touch with members and organisations that are further away, as well as abreast of developments that are happening in the sector. On top of this, many of their members wish to see +Link take on a higher profile at national level.

+Link has recognised that it needs help – it is swamped with work and there is a lack of planning, co-ordination, documentation and clear direction. However, it is not easy to find a person with the right skills and commitment to assist them. Furthermore, many people do not want to cope with the stigma attached to working for a HIV and AIDS organisation. +Link has heard of another HIV and AIDS umbrella group in the south of the country that is employing a VSO volunteer from the Business Partnership scheme, and has approached the programme office for similar support.

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Higher Education Strategy Institute (HESI) Ministry of Education, Ethiopia Briefing Notes for Stage 1

Contextual Scan Ethiopia is one of the poorest countries in the world. In its most recent past, it has been ravaged by severe drought and famine, as well as internal and external conflict. Since 1991, however, the country has been reasonably stable and with the help of the international donor community, it is trying to rebuild its infrastructure. New federal policies and plans have been drawn up but implementation has been slow, partly due to a shortage of ‘on the ground’ qualified staff. For this reason there has also been a national focus on capacity building at all levels. Education Sectoral Scan Ethiopia’s development challenges are no more apparent than in the education sector. Only 52% of children attend primary school, less than 10% secondary school and there is a severe lack of Teachers at both levels. Curricula are out-dated and irrelevant to the socio-economic needs of the country. This is especially true in higher education institutions (the numbers of which are continually increasing in both the government and private sectors) where the content of courses are at the discretion of individual faculties. Education Sector Development programmes (ESDP) has been aimed at addressing these needs. For Higher Education they include the establishment of two new internal bodies: Higher Education Quality Assurance and Relevance Agency (QRAA) and a Higher Education Strategy Institute (HESI).

The Organisation The major source of funding for education comes from the government budget but there are many donors who support this, including UNICEF and the World Bank. Some smaller funders along with a selection of NGOs have offices in the Ministry, which is located in Addis Ababa and consists of two four-storey buildings. There is a library, a documentation centre, a restaurant and a staff café in the central courtyard.

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page 4 of 6 There is a severe shortage of qualified personnel at the Ministry especially at senior management level. On top of this, there is a high turnover as skilled personnel are lured to the competitive salaries of the NGOs. Managers have high status though and are not questioned, with tradition discouraging delegation, initiative and motivation. Systems are extremely bureaucratic with an enormous amount of form filling needed before anything can be achieved. Internal communication is particularly poor and a lack of co-ordinated planning has led to a culture of crisis management. Ministry personnel at all levels generally fall into two groups: those who are to be found at their desks everyday and those who spend most of their working lives out of the office. Navigating Change HESI will be a new agency, aiming to formalise, regulate and monitor the educational direction of the higher education institutions and the courses offered. The overall mission of the agency is to make Ethiopian Higher Education contribute its share to the growth and development of the country by improving the quality of education. Along with QRAA, it will be based at the Ministry although the exact location or number and composition of staff have not yet been confirmed. This is a new area for the Ministry to be working in, and with its lack of qualified and skilled personnel - particularly at management level - it has approached VSO for support. The seven-year Ethiopian programme and the Ministry of Education have a good partnership with over 30 VSO volunteers working in senior positions in Teacher and Higher Education.

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Romeas Hek Health Centre Cambodia Apple Project (CAP), Cambodia Briefing Notes for Stage 1

The Organisation CAP’s main goal is to secure a healthy environment for the children of the Svay Rieng province in South East Cambodia. It was established in 1997 when a group of visitors from a hospital in Scotland identified this development need. CAP was registered as a charity in the UK with all 10 original visitors acting as the trustees. A small management committee, comprising local dignitaries and the district Public Health Advisor, was also established in Svay Rieng town. Most of the initial funds went towards setting up a health room on the outskirts of Romeas Hek, a small urban area about an hour’s bus journey from Svay Rieng town. The committee had entered into a partnership agreement with the Ministry of Health that CAP would be wholly responsible for running the health room and meeting all costs (including local salaries). Patients would also be charged a small amount but much less than in the government-run health rooms. CAP also sent out a succession of short-term UK volunteer nurses to manage the room and train up local staff.

Due partly to the keen interest and successful UK-based mobilisation of funds of one of the founders, Mrs Hope, a recently retired practice nurse from Glasgow, the health room has now been upgraded to a Health Centre. It has 20 beds and provides a minimum package of activities such as midwifery and minor surgery. It employs 20 staff including a qualified doctor from Phnom Penh (who has just arrived), two qualified nurses (both from outside the area), two unqualified nurses (‘trained’ for the health room), an unqualified local ‘pharmacist’, housekeeper, administrative assistant, security and various grounds staff. The centre has mains power, as well as a generator, a dug well and incineration facilities. Laboratory services are available in Svay Rieng town. Up to now the staff and health centre have been managed jointly by the volunteers and Mrs Hope, who makes quarterly visits and is chairperson of the management committee. It is still wholly funded by CAP but continues to charge patients nominal fees. Last year CAP was registered as an International NGO in Cambodia. Its vision is “that the communities of Svay Rieng can be self-sufficient and free from disease with access to quality health care”. It has the mission of “reducing the incidence of death and disease, to promote the health of the population by working in partnership with local communities, government agencies and other voluntary organisations”. Its philosophy is “people-centred”, and it believes in “respecting the rights, cultures and values of its partners and in supporting their own efforts irrespective of their health status”.

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page 6 of 6 Contextual Scan Since 1953 when it gained its independence from French colonial rule, Cambodia has been ravaged by continual internal conflict. The fragile administrative systems and structures that exist resemble the hierarchical bureaucracy of the 1950 French civil service, overlaid with a strong patron and client culture. In recent years the donor community has been very active in the country and ‘participatory approaches’ are becoming overused.

Romeas Hek is a small town in the rural province of Svay Rieng located about 7 hours’ drive from the capital Phnom Penh. It is fairly cut off in terms of both communication and roads, particularly at the peak (September-October) of the monsoon season (May-October) when severe flooding is common. Most of its population are engaged in rice farming, usually at subsistence level. The society is quite closed and traditional with respect for elders, local leaders and healers; there are few women in key positions. Government facilities are poor and most of the welfare services are provided by a number of different faith-based organisations. The HIV infection rate is lower than the average for Cambodia but is thought to be on the rise in the region as a whole.

Navigating Change Although the Health Centre has better facilities than other local service providers, it is not being well attended. The arrival of the doctor has made some difference but there is still a long way to go. There is also a problem with absenteeism amongst the staff. CAP feels that the center needs a local manager/ administrator but there is no one skilled enough to fulfil that role and CAP does not want the Doctor’s time to be used in this way. Moreover, Mrs Hope wants to step down as chairperson of the Svay Rieng management committee and does not feel she can continue to travel out to Cambodia so frequently: She will, however, continue to fundraise in the UK. She feels that the health centre, which is the organisation’s main focus of activity, is vulnerable and recommended to CAP and the rest of the local management committee that they approach VSO. On her most recent visit Mrs Hope initiated meetings with staff at the Programme Office.

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Handout 05-1

Contextual Scan

OD stresses the importance of being able to adapt to the changing environment. The NGO environment is increasingly being described as ‘turbulent’ with major changes in funding and NGO roles forcing NGOs to adapt quickly. Before embarking an OD strategy an analysis of the external environment and drivers of change need to be analysed. It is important that the OD practitioner does not do this in isolation but gain insight from the organisation staff and stakeholders.

Political • Political upheaval / conflict • Change in political regime • Tax laws which effect the third sector (not for

profit) • Laws effecting gender, disability, human rights

Economic • Globalisation • Pull out of key funder

Social • Conflict • Death of Director • Health issues – Aids pandemic

Technical • Unreliable phone lines and electricity • Change in technology – access to www

Environmental • Logistical issues due to geography and

climate • Natural disasters – earthquake, flooding • Reduction in electricity supply

Understanding Organisations: The External and Internal Environment

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Handout 05-2

Public, Private and Not-for Profit Sectors Definitions

Organisational science uses the following for short hand: First Sector - Public / Second Sector – Private / Third sector – Not-for-profit

Public Sector

Purpose To protect, secure and regulate the lives and actions of citizens. e.g. to manage how society is defined as well as how it functions and progresses.

Characteristics / Assumptions • Bureaucratic • Layers of decision making • Paper pushing • Slow to react • Driven by policy • Individuals don’t take responsibility • Distant from the problems on the ground

Private Sector

Purpose To make a livelihood and create accumulated wealth.

Characteristics / Assumptions • Driven by money • Uncaring • Fast moving • Focused • Well managed • Competitive

Not-for Profit Sector

Purpose To pursue individual interests or tackle personal or social concerns, which are separate from gaining a livelihood. This sector divides into: • Public service providers- Non Governmental Organisations and

Community Based Organisations who established to give service to others. • Self help or mutual benefit organisations established to give benefits to its

own members e.g. music group, football team.

Characteristics / Assumptions • Poorly managed • Under funded • Well meaning • Limited effectiveness • Under pressure from too many demands • Front line – very aware of needs

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Handout 05-2

Comparison of Formally Organised Sectors From ‘Striking a Balance’ by Alan Fowler The size and content of the three sectors varies from country to country and each is usually distinguished and regulated by specific regulation. Relative size is primarily determined by the political ideology dominating society or the regime in power and is expressed through policy preferences, legislation and public versus private investment choices.

Business Sector

Government Sector

Not-for-Profit sector

Typical North Sectors e.g USA: Activity limits the role of government while encourages private enterprise and voluntary initiative.

Government Sector

Business Sector

Not-for-Profit sector

Typical South Sectors e.g. Tanzania, Kazakstan, India: More typical of societies were the government dominate and ideology has made public ownership and central planning the primary force for economic and social development. It should come as no surprise that the intentions and funding conditions of the international aid system are designed to make the organisational pattern of the countries of the South and East to be more like the north.

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Handout 05-3

page 1 of 2

Onion Framework This framework shows the interrelationship between the different elements of an organisations capacity. What we observe when visiting an organisation can give some indication of how effective the organisation is at the different levels of the onion framework. However when working within an organisation it is possible to spend time trying to understand the effectiveness of the different levels, the interrelationships between them and what opportunities there are for organisational learning.

Physical Resources and Financial Resources • Quality of the buildings: reception areas, signage. • Equipment: vehicles, computers, photocopiers. • Organisational literature: marketing material, newsletters, annual report.

Can give an indication of the financial resources of the organisation.

Skills + Abilities • How people deal with you over the phone. • Welcome you. • Manner of receptionist and staff.

Can reveal individual skills + abilities and perhaps give insight to (HR) human resources and staff competencies.

Structures and Systems • The receptionist (if there is one) knows the extension number of the person you want to meet. • Information is available about the organisation. • How easy it is to find out who is the key contact in the organisation. • Key person is fully briefed and knows where to find further information and the people with

responsibility for specific areas of work. First impressions can give some indication the structures and systems in place. Further research may reveal: monitoring and evaluation systems, personnel systems, financial management systems

Vision, Purpose and Strategy • Mission and Purpose (in some organisations written up in the reception of the organisation –

would need to question if staff are aware of, ‘buy-into’ or even ‘own’ this). • Staffs appear confident and motivated about their role and how they contribute to the

organisation. • The organisation appears to have a clear sense of what it is there for, where it is going and how it

is going to get there. To get beyond the first impression it may be possible to find material written down regarding vision, purpose and strategy but when were they written, who wrote them and for whom (a funder, previous Director, themselves, the organisation); do all current staff and those involved with the organisation understand, ‘buy-into’ or own them?

Values, Identity and Beliefs • What the reception looks like? Is it clean, orderly, information on the walls, welcoming? • What is the manner of staff/people you meet? Confident, happy, helpful, interested?

The ‘culture of the organisation’ is evident in the language, history, way of doing things and unwritten rules that underpin or glue the organisation together (see Session 8).

Organisational Learning • Supportive management style, discourages ‘blame culture’ and encourages staff to take on

responsibility for learning. • Reviews and reflection encouraged at different stages of work and at different organisational

levels – support given to develop staff competencies: visits, exchanges, training, coaching etc. Organisational learning can cut across all levels of the organisation and the onion framework.

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Handout 05-3

page 2 of 2

Onion Framework

Financial resources

Physical resources

Skills +Abilities

Organisational Learning

Structures + Systems

VisionPurpose +

strategy

Values, identity +

beliefs

Context

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Handout 05-4

Resistance to Change and Strategies to Address Resistance

Strategies toAddress Resistance

• Increase the forces for change • Build coalitions for change with like minded individuals • Change styles of management and leadership to

increase trust • Allocate responsibility for change process with those

who inspire confidence. • Linking changes in strategy to changes in outcome • Getting a common understanding of the change

process • Identifying gains from change • Promote wide and systematic communication • Provide personal counselling • Solicit suggestions on ways to go about effecting change • Find ways to disturb • Guide/Facilitate • Develop new organisational competencies • Involve principle stakeholders in an advisory capacity

and as an educational opportunity

Forc

e Fi

eld

Barriers to Change

• Not everyone agrees that there is a problem or weakness because it is an admission of inadequacy and less than competent leadership

• The organisation may have problems being committed to OD as they would rather keep things as they are and not embark on the unknown

• Monitoring and performance systems allow poor practice to go unchallenged: effort = achievement

“good works is enough” and criticism is seen as unfair as everyone is doing their best

• Capacity weakness may be clear but the underlying causes or apparent remedies may give rise to dispute

• Conflicting time and resource pressures • Too many priorities • The scale of the organisation and the range of

different services • Geographic barriers- many services are based away

from the centre and have tended to work in isolation • Inner-service rivalry • Lack of, or poor internal communications • Constant change • Challenge seen as a threat rather than an opportunity

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Handout 05-5

Three Circles Framework (adapted from the INTRAC framework)

Context

OrCulture

Leadership Learning

Systems and Structures

Resources- Human Physical Financial

Internal ganisation

Trade Unions

Donors/Funders

Community Leaders

Private Sector NGOs

Partnerships

Public Sector

Empowerment

ProgrammePerformance

External Linkages

Effectiveness Impact Achievements

Outreach Scale Geography

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Handout 05-6

Key Learning Points • Foundation for analysis

OD facilitators need to make great efforts to understand the context and external forces of change. This is particularly important for shorter-term placements where the volunteer will have to understand the complexity of the situation quickly. It is essential to involve colleagues and stakeholders to enable this understanding.

• Contextual Scan

Supporting the organisations awareness of external drivers ties directly into VSO programmatic approach. This awareness will help the organisation avoid icebergs and benefit from opportunities and collaborations.

• Organisational Sectors -Public, Private + Not for Profit

The role and significance of these sectors in a developing country may be quite different from volunteer’s home country. It is important for the volunteer to understand the role and relationships of the sectors especially if they are moving into a sector they are unfamiliar with.

• Holistic approach

The onion model is a useful framework or ‘visual checklist’ especially for individuals new to OD. It is very important to be aware of the wider impact of any OD intervention and therefore analysis needs to consider the organisation holistically. It can be helpful in questioning assumptions based on previous experience in a different cultural context. Holistic analysis of the organisation can help to clarify what changes are required to support organisational development and shift the focus from ‘fire fighting’.

Understanding the external and internal context and drivers of change are key to the analysis and enables the OD facilitator to move along the OD cycle.

The ability to identify the underlying resistances to change and have strategies to overcome them is key to OD.

Page 27

Learning Log: What has been the key learning for you so far from the course. How might you use the tools discussed so far in your placement?

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Handout 06-1

OD Values

• Opportunities for people to develop towards their full potential.

• People are complex with differing

needs, not just requiring physical resources.

• Emphasis on openness, trust and

collaborative effort.

• To meet the needs of individuals and the organisation.

• Emphasis on feelings and emotions

as well as ideas and concepts.

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Handout 06-2

page 1 of 2

Multiple Roles of an OD Facilitator Adapted from Demystifying Organisation Development Rick James p33 The Lippitt + Lippit consulting roles continuum

DirectiveNon-Directive

Reflector Observer

Process Specialist

Fact Finder

Alternative Identifier –

Joint Problem solver

Trainer Educator

Technical specialist

Advocate

Probes, observes, mirrors and reports what is observed. Retreats from active role in organisations decision making.

Observes, diagnoses and facilitates the human dynamics and interpersonal relationships in the organisation.

Gathers, synthesises and analyses data relevant to the Organisational Develoment.

Identifies and assesses the potential alternatives.

Offers and helps to select alternative actions needed to create the desired change.

Designs, leads and evaluates learning experiences within the Organisatinal Development.

Proposes and guides the changes in content and process. The organisation relies on the practitioners expertise.

Tries to pursuade, proposes guidelines or directs the problem solving exercise whether in process or content.

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Handout 06-2

page 2 of 2

OD Spectrum – Supporting Information An Organisational Development practitioner may adopt different roles depending upon the needs of the situation and the organisation. The Spectrum above identifies some key roles ranging from a more process, client centred approach to a more expert, directive approach.

These roles are not mutually exclusive and may overlap. Indeed the practitioner may take on a number of roles at any one time. The key capacity of the practitioner, sometimes referred to as the Organisation Development Consultant (ODC), is to be able to take on these roles, depending on what is most appropriate and needed by the organisation.

The following identifies characteristics of the directive and non-directive or facilitative approach: EXPERT - Prescriptive + problem solving consultancy BLUE Task focused sometimes termed ‘mafia model’ • Tackle organisational or operational issue • Unlikely to initiate organisation wide issues

• Specific skills • Limited period - quick • Tailored to individual needs • Specialisation • Mobility • Has no formal authority over the organisation • Direct accountability for quality

FACILITATOR – Client Centred GREEN • Facilitate a process to develop the capacity of the organisation to

manage its own change process • Developing organisations capabilities for problem solving after

OD practitioner has gone • Increase organisations ability to learn ‘learning organisation’ • Explorative, process-orientated journey clear outcomes not known • Participatory- attitudes + behaviour • Change in the organisation is viewed holistically • Influencing and changing the culture ‘How we do things round

here’

In defining what is most appropriate given the situation and the organisation concerned is to remember some of the core values of Organisational Development interventions:

Refer back to the OD Definition and Values • Opportunities for people to develop towards their full potential • People are complex with different needs not just requiring resources • Openness, trust and collaborative effort • To meet the needs of individuals and the organisation • Emphasis on feelings and emotions as well as ideas and concepts • The organisation maintains responsibility for choice and change

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Handout 06-3

Stepping Stones of OD

2. Acceptance + Commitment

1. Orientation 3. Implementation+ Managing

B

Future Vision

4

Getting acceptance + commitment

UnderstandingEmotion

Will

7 Implementing key objectives

6 Setting key objective

5 Creating Direction

3 Diagnosis +

planning

2 Getting bigger picture

1 Creating

relationships A

Concern

8 Evaluation

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Handout 06-4

Stepping Stones – Supporting Information

(adapted from D.Scott, cited in Rick James, Demystifying Organisation Development) 1. Creating Relationships

Relationship is at the heart of development itself. The nature and quality of the relationship will have a major effect on the quality of the OD work, and the extent to which it achieves developmental objectives.

• Social Phase of building relationships • Building Trust • To clarify expectations on both sides • Stakeholder consultation • The ability to listen consciously, deeply, actively and with empathy in order to appreciate the

purpose and intentions of others • Spend time • Mirroring cultural behaviour – getting to know you • Field visits

2. Analysis – Getting the bigger picture

• Gathering and analysing information • Clarify nature of the problem, get to the organisations real issue which may lie behind the obvious

problem (onion) • Building a bigger picture – get a feel of the informal issues of power, values, identify and culture • What is happening here and now • Locally appropriate definition of a ‘healthy organisation’ what it looks like along with measures

and indicators • Contextual analysis • Data collection –Semi – structured interview, focus groups, observation, previous reports

3. Diagnosis + Planning

• ‘Ideal’ would be organisation doing self-diagnosis • To get to the organisations real issue which may lie behind the obvious problem (onion) • Analysing raw data, grouping data in a framework which will make sense to the organisation • Use interview statements to provide the organisation with a mirror to look at itself and suggesting

ways to take this process forward (presentation of the information is one of the most difficult aspects as the diagnosis as it needs to be perceived and experienced as true by the client and so the client owns the process of change)

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Handout 06-5

Situational Matrix – Instructions for Participants

The Situational and the following Metaphor Matrices were originally devised by Eddie Obeng 1994,1996 UK management consultant and adapted by Bernard Ross and Clare Segal Breakthrough thinking for Non-profit Organisations publisher: Jossey-Bass Nonprofit and Public Management. The Situational Matrix involves asking two fundamental questions regarding the organisation:

• Do we know where we want to go?

• Do we know how to get there? Do you know how to get there?

Yes No

Yes

1. Which quadrant of the matrix does your organisation fit?

2. What evidence do you have for this?

1. Would other stakeholders agree? Management, staff, funders, beneficiaries etc.

2. What would be your plan for finding out this information and creating good relationships?

Quadrant 1 We know where we want to go and how to get there.

Quadrant 3 We know where we want to go but not how to get there.

Do

you

kn

ow w

here

yo

u w

ant

to g

o?

No

Quadrant 2

Quadrant 4

We know what we’re doing generally but lack a clear direction.

We don’t know where we want to go or how to get there.

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Handout 06-6

Metaphor Matrix Do you know how to get there?

Yes No

Yes

Quadrant 1 We know where we want to go and how to get there.

By the Book

Quadrant 3 We know where we want to go but not how to get there.

Holy Grail

Do

you

kn

ow w

her

e yo

u w

ant

to g

o?

No

Quadrant 2 We know what we’re doing generally but lack a clear direction.

Making a Movie

Quadrant 4 We don’t know where we want to go or how to get there.

Wandering in the fog

Quadrant 1: BY THE BOOK - Know where you want to go and how to get there This can be a powerful situation to be in. Your organisation has a real strategic focus and powerful techniques to achieve results. However, placing yourself in this quadrant could be an indication of severe self-delusion or unwarranted self-satisfaction.

Quadrant 2: MAKE A MOVIE – Know how but don’t know where An organisation in quadrant 2 can simply cruise along reasonably successfully. But this can also be a demoralising position because your energies are not directed - you have no strong sense of why you are doing what you are doing.

Quadrant 3: HOLY GRAIL QUEST – Know where but don’t know how This can be an energising position and one that encourages you to look for creative solutions. Or it can cause frustration because the organisation isn’t bridging the gap between desire and action.

Quadrant 4: WANDERING IN THE FOG - Don’t know how or where You’re in the most challenging quadrant. The good thing is that everyone has agreed that things have to change. But spirits are low, and it is difficult to get people energised. There is also a danger that any energy there is could be wasted, taking you in the wrong direction.

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Handout 06-7

Key Learning Points • There is a wide spectrum of OD activities, the OD practitioner must assess where they are

placed on the spectrum according to the needs of the organisation. • In a development context the OD facilitator needs to consider sustainability of OD and

therefore being sensitive to how they support OD. It is critical that you have an understanding of how you frame your work and the impact upon the organisation. e.g. An OD facilitator who is a computer system ‘expert’ must be fully aware of the interconnected role of the inputs she/he offers and the impact it will have in the longer term.

• Relationships are key to OD and the OD facilitator must invest time and consider what

activities and tools may be appropriate. • Analysis + Diagnosis are keys to ensuring that the organisation accepts and is committed to

OD. • Using simple practical tools to facilitate the organisation with analysis helps to ensure that

the organisation has ownership of the analysis, diagnosis and OD plan: o Opportunities for people to develop towards their full potential o People are complex with different needs not just requiring resources o Openness, trust and collaborative effort o To meet the needs of individuals and the organisation o Emphasis on feelings and emotions as well as ideas and concepts o The organisation maintains responsibility for choice and change

• Remember,

o ‘Prescription without diagnosis is malpractice whether in medicine or management’ Albrecht

Page 35

Learning Log: How might you use the tools discussed in your placement?

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Handout 07-1

Visualisation Sheet

Page 36

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page 1 of 3

Organisation Capacity Building

Background Material Background

Capacity building is a term that receives a wide range of definitions and it is a term that is increasingly used within international development parlance. Capacity Building is a broader term than Organisational Development, encompassing individual, organisational, institutional and societal capacity. You may also come across the terms ‘capacity growth’ or ‘capacity development’. Fundamentally, capacity building is an approach to development and not something separate from it, nor should it be regarded as an ‘input’ to a project. It is therefore much broader than ‘training’, and should be viewed as a process by which sustainable development in the broadest sense can be achieved.

Capacity building and organisation development are ongoing processes. Ideally an organisation should develop a policy and formulate objectives and design relevant activities and budget for it. Such plans and budgets are then also part of the overall funding motivation presented to funders. Consequently annual reports should describe progress made etc. Content and quality of organisation development and capacity building become part of the regular dialogue between the organisation and a funding partner. By treating organisation development and capacity building as normal/essential parts of the life of an organisation, funders are challenged to make part of their support available for these purposes.

There is a range of methods for assessing capacity that have been developed.

The important questions to ask are:

• Who is making the assessment?

• Why are they making the assessment and for whom?

The answer to these questions will affect the process and the outcomes. Funders use checklists or criteria to assess an organisation’s capacity and suitability for funding. These will vary enormously. The following is an adaptation of a donor check list for NGDO capacity from Alan Fowler’s, ‘Striking a Balance’, p201:

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Handout 07-2

page 2 of 3

Organisational Capacity Assessment Checklists WHERE IS THE ORGANISATION GOING?

Identity and historical trajectory • Mission statement; does it make sense and is it realistic? • Can the organisation explain the causes of the problems it is facing? • How has the organisation evolved in terms of scope of operational activity? • Are organizational adaptations a response to crisis or the result of strategic thinking?

Programmes, projects and policies • Are the programmes, projects and activities coherent with each other and with the mission? • Do necessary policies exist on gender, environment and sustainability? • Is the organisation able to assess costs and benefits of its work?

WORKING PRACTICES

Governance, management and organisation • If NGO is it truly non governmental? • Does the governing body exert proper oversight and does it really carry responsibility? • If NGO is the leadership still the founder or has there been a transition? • Is the management style appropriate to the mission, activities and context? • Is the organizational set up and culture appropriate for the tasks and their scope?

Relationships • Does the organisation network and have partnerships with other organisations, institutions, and

communities? • Is it respected by other organisations?

RESOURCES

Implementation • Does the organisation have the technical skills required? • Does the organisation have an effective approach in working with its target audience? • Are the physical resources looked after and well maintained? • Is a monitoring system in place, does it disaggregate information by gender

Administration

• Are financial records produced on time and properly? • Are audit reports satisfactory?

Financial Resources • Has there been a continuity of donor support/ • Is there a strategy for funding and potential income?

PROGRAMMES • Is the organisation offering services appropriate to the community needs? • Does it apply participatory approaches and demonstrate community involvement in decision-

making?

ORGANISATION LEARNING

Performance track record • Can the organisation show sustainable outcomes or impact at any level? • Are evaluations carried out regularly? • Is there evidence of learning from evaluation findings?

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Handout 07-2

page 3 of 3

Organisational Capacity Assessment Strategies Two different approaches: 1. USING EXTERNAL FUNDERS CAPACITY CHECK LIST

Mission and strategic goals are reference points. Steps will vary according to the complexity of the organisation. A range of questions steer the process:

• What is the organisations purpose? • Who does it represent? • What do people we represent values or find important in terms of change? • What results are we achieving? • What is the strategy /plan for the future?

Strategy for OD practitioner

• The answers are checked with written reports / evidence • Staff compare their own answers with those from other sources • Analyse the difference • Identify causes • Plan changes

Limitations:

• Willingness of the organisation to be self critical • Difficult to get frank responses from primary stakeholders especially when dependent on the

relationship with the organisation • An independent practitioner and validation is needed

2. USING A CAPACITY CHECK LIST DEVISED BY THE

ORGANISATION Locally appropriate definition of the ideal / healthy organisation. The specific factors relating to the cultural context inform the process. The environmental context and the age of the organisation will support or impair the OD intervention.

People within the organisation would decide: • What it looks like • Measures and indicators

Strategy for OD practitioner

• Pre entry – win support • Create one or a few key stakeholder groups • Define indicators • Gather information • Analyse • Decide how to tackle • Mobilise

‘Striking a Balance’, Alan Fowler, p197

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Key Learning Points • If the OD process is funder/donor driven and the capacity shortfall identified by them the

OD facilitator needs to ensure that the organisation appreciate the benefits for them and be committed to the changes. A key consideration is the role of the funder/donor in the process.

• If the organisational capacity and OD are driven internally the ownership and

commitment will help ensure success of the OD process or intervention. It is important that the volunteer does not assume the capacity needs of the organisation independently of the organisation or funders.

• The term capacity is often used in the development field whether it is referring to institutional

or organisational capacity. In the OD definition we emphasise an organisation’s capacity for learning.

• Before identifying the range of approaches, which can be used in OD, it is important to get

an understanding of the organisation’s capacity.

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Handout 08-1

Society Culture

Levels of Culture Adapted from (Schein) INTRAC Society Culture: Cultural Values from society expressed in the Organisation. Organisation Culture: the Culture of the Organisation. Interaction: Between Cultures that may cause friction.

Interaction

Interaction

Organisation Culture

Society Culture

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Handout 08-2

page 1 of 2

Characteristics of Organisational Culture

The Advantages and Disadvantages of Different Organisation Culture Types

Advantages Disadvantages Power Culture

• Flexibility with the ability to

react quickly to changing circumstances without having to satisfy procedure.

• Few rules and procedures. • Can be stimulating and

exciting places to work.

• If individuals get it wrong, the

whole organisation suffers. • Organisation can disintegrate

if the current leader leaves with no succession plan.

• Control is difficult if the organisation grows beyond a certain size.

Role culture

• Predictable and stable (an

advantage only if the environment is also stable).

• Can become very efficient over time.

• Suitable for organisations with long programmes of work.

• In-built inertia. • Rule and procedure-bound. • Stifle creativity and

innovation.

Task culture

• Flexible and able to change to

suit changes in the environment.

• Consistent with decentralisation, teamwork and participatory approaches to management.

• Very difficult to produce

economies of scale. • Can be very complex and

difficult to manage. • Can be confusing to staff.

Person culture

• Suitable for small teams of

professionals such as lawyers or architects.

• Inconsistent with NGO

values since it puts the needs of the staff before the needs of the beneficiaries.

One of the key questions for the manager is: “How manageable is organisational culture?” Organisational culture is an immensely powerful aspect of how organisation’s work. It can work positively to support the purpose of the organisation or negatively as a subversive force. Obviously, it is in the interests of managers that organisation culture is aligned with the purpose and strategy of the organisation. But what if this is not the case? How possible is it to change organisational culture?

Pettigrew is cautious about the manageability of organisational culture. He has identified seven major factors that make organisational culture difficult to manage. These are listed in Handout 08-3.

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Handout 08-1 / OHT 08-2

page 2 of 2

Characteristics of Organisational Culture 1. It is learned. It is an internalised result of a socialisation process, which starts when an

individual expresses an interest in joining the organisation and continues throughout their involvement with the organisation.

2. It is determined by the organisation’s history. It is shaped by decisions that people have taken in the past, particularly those taken by significant individuals such as the founder.

3. It is partly subconscious. Not all aspects of an organisation’s culture operate at a conscious level. Much of it becomes internalised after a while and is expressed through unstated assumptions, implicit judgements and shared beliefs.

4. It is heterogeneous. Different parts of an organisation may have different cultures. A common difference is that between the head office and field offices or community-based projects.

5. It is dynamic. Culture can change over time either by adaptation or as a result of a deliberate process of culture change.

6. It is related to macro-culture. National culture and professional cultures will influence organisational culture to varying degrees. Attempts to create an organisational culture that is totally inconsistent with national culture are likely to fail or lead to subversion or conflict.

7. It is a control mechanism. By making explicit what are the prevailing values and norms, managers can exercise control over others by demarcating what is acceptable behaviour in the organisation.

Adapted from: Hudson, Mike (1995). Managing Without Profit, Harmondsworth, England: Penguin, Appendix Three. A number of writers have developed ways of classifying organisational cultures. One of the most commonly used classifications was developed by Charles Handy and based on the work of Roger Harrison.

Charles Handy describes four main types of organisational cultures: • Power culture. • Role culture. • Task culture. • Person culture.

According to Handy, each organisational culture has its advantages and disadvantages. These are summarised in the table on the previous page.

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Handout 08-6

Why Organisational Culture is Difficult to Manage

1. The levels issue. Organisational culture exists at different levels ranging from external manifestations such as organograms, buildings and publicity material down to beliefs and assumptions. Whilst it is possible to change the outward and visible signs of culture, it is much more difficult to alter beliefs.

2. The pervasiveness issue. Culture does not just refer to people’s more deeply held

beliefs but also to their views about such things as their work tasks, organisational structures, systems, strategy and approaches to recruitment, induction and reward.

3. The implicitness issue. Much of organisational culture is taken for granted and it is

remarkably difficult to change things, which are implicitly part of people’s thinking and behaviour.

4. The historical issue. Because culture has deep historic roots, this can make it very

difficult to change. 5. The political issue. Organisational culture is closely connected to the distribution of

power in the organisation. Certain power groups will have a vested interest in the beliefs and assumptions underpinning the current culture. They are unlikely to be willing to discard these beliefs in favour of others without persistent challenge.

6. The plurality issue. Most larger organisations do not have a single organisational

culture but may have a series of subcultures. Tensions may exist between these subcultures. Culture change needs to take into account what may be very complex inter-relationships between the subcultures.

7. The interdependency issue. Culture is interconnected with organisational politics,

structure, systems and strategy. These interconnections make organisational culture difficult to manage.

Adapted from: Pettigrew, Andrew M. (1990). ‘Is Corporate Culture Manageable?’ in Wilson and Rosenfeld (eds.) (1990). Managing Organisations: Text, Readings and Cases, London: McGraw-Hill.

Organisation culture is a very significant element of organisational identity and one that can be extremely difficult (indeed, some would say almost impossible) to change. Nonetheless, in NGOs, it is important for everyone to be conscious of the culture of the organisation and the impact that this can have on almost every aspect of how the organisation operates. Based on: Wye College External Programme (1998) NGO Management, Unit 2 ‘NGO Identity’, University of London, designed by INTRAC.

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Organisational Culture – How do we understand our Culture? “ The basic assumptions and beliefs that are shared by members of an organisation, that operate unconsciously and define, in a basic taken-for-granted fashion an organisation’s view of itself and its environment.” Shein. What is it?

• Expectations and strategy are rooted in the collective experience of the group

• Organisations can be ‘captured’ by their culture e.g. free newspapers: news or advertising?

• Whole organisation and subcultures: different functions, management/staff, UK/overseas, length of service

• Influenced by sector e.g. voluntary sector organisations must maximise (rather than optimise?) spend on beneficiaries

• Looking outside sector for new ideas e.g. voluntary sector increasingly looking at commercial models

• Four layers:

o Values – often expressed as vision, mission statements etc

o Beliefs – expressed as rules

o Behaviours – day-to-day ways in which the organisation operates e.g. work routines, structure, control mechanisms, symbolic behaviours

o Taken-for-granted assumptions – core aspects difficult to identify and explain i.e. ‘what really matters around here’

Why define it?

• How can we decide what to keep and what to change? How can we establish the culture that will best meet our goals?

How can we define it?

• Not easy to define! • Some parts are written down but others are in the way people behave and the assumptions

they make. • How can we identify the taken-for-granted assumptions and therefore decide what to keep

and what to change?

Ref: Exploring Corporate Strategy; Gerry Johnson, Kevan Scholes, Richard Whittington

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Routines & Rituals

Symbols Organisational Structures

Culture

Stories and Myths

Control Systems

Power

Structures Ref: Exploring Corporate Strategy; Gerry Johnson, Kevan Scholes, Richard Whittington

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Rituals and routines Stories and myths

Routine behaviours, the way we do things around here, day-to-day.

Told by organisation members, the history, important events/personalities.

• Which rituals/routines are

emphasised? • What core beliefs to stories

reflect? • Which would look odd if

changed? • How pervasive are these beliefs

(through levels)? • What behaviours do routines

encourage?

• What core beliefs do they reflect?

• Do stories relate to strengths or weaknesses, successes or failures, conformity or mavericks?

• Why do people get a ‘maverick’ label?

Power structures Symbols

Powerful individuals and groups influence the key assumptions.

Logos, offices, titles, language and terminology, shorthand.

• How is power distributed in the

organisation? • Are there particular symbols which

denote the organisation? • What are the core beliefs of the

leadership? • What status symbols are there?

• How strongly held are these beliefs (idealists or pragmatists)?

• What language and jargon are used?

• Where are the main blockages to change?

• What aspects of strategy are highlighted in publicity?

Organisational structures Control systems

Reflects power and shows important roles and relationships.

Measurements and reward systems.

• How formal/informal are the structures? • What is most closely

monitored/controlled? • Do structures encourage competition or

collaboration? • Is emphasis on reward or punishment?

• What types of power structure do they support?

• Are controls related to history or current strategies?

• Are there many/few controls?

Ref: Exploring Corporate Strategy; Gerry Johnson, Kevan Scholes, Richard Whittington

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Hofstede’s Cultural Dimensions Dr Geert Hofstede conducted a study of values in the workplace, which are influenced by culture. From 1067 -1973 while working for IBM as a psychologist, he collected and analysed data from over 100,000 individuals from 50 countries. As with any generalised study the results may or may not be applicable to specific individuals or organisations, often there is more than one cultural group within that country. His dimensions are intended to assist business people or travellers in better understanding the intercultural differences within regions and between countries. Collectivist Individualist - Identity is based on membership of a social network or group. - Strong family and social ties. - Relationship prevails over task. - Collective interests prevail over individual interests. - Employer-employee relationship is like a family link.

- Identity is based on individual. - People focus mainly on their own interests. - Task prevails over relationship. - Individual interests prevail. - Employer-employee relationship is based on contract to mutual advantage.

Small Power Distance Large Power Distance - Inequalities should be minimised. - Managers and staff are considered to be of equal importance in an organisation. - Authority can be questioned. - The ideal boss is a resourceful democrat. - Decentralisation is popular. - Subordinates expect to be consulted. - Power is based on formal position, expertise and ability to give rewards.

- Inequalities are expected and desired. - Managers have considerable power over staff. - Whoever holds the power is right. - The ideal boss is a benevolent autocrat or good father. - Centralisation is popular. - Subordinates expect to be told what to do. - Power is based on family or friends, charisma and ability to use force.

Feminine Masculine - Prominent values in society are caring for others and preservation. - People are warm and relationships are important. - Everybody is supposed to be modest. - Stress on equality, solidarity and quality of work life. - Resolution on conflicts by compromise and negotiation. - Women’s liberation means that men and women should take equal shares both at home and at work.

- Dominant values in society are material success and progress. - Money and things are important. - Men are supposed to be assertive, ambitious and tough. - Stress on equity, competition among colleagues and performance. - Resolution of conflicts by fighting them out. - Women’s liberation means that women will be admitted to positions hitherto only occupied by men.

Weak Uncertainty Avoidance Strong Uncertainty Avoidance - Comfortable with ambiguous situations and with unfamiliar risks. - Students comfortable with open-ended learning situations. - Few and general laws and rules. - Belief in generalists and common sense. - There should be no more rules than are strictly necessary.

- Acceptance of familiar risks; fear of ambiguous situations and concerned with the right answers. - Students comfortable in structured learning situations and concerned with the right answers. - Many and precise rules and laws. - Belief in experts and specialisation. - Emotional need for rules, even if these will never work.

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Key Learning Points

• The key to OD is that the approach and the role of the volunteer match the needs of the organisation.

• The volunteer may need to do more research in the field of OD both books and materials

available in country to identify interventions, which are culturally appropriate.

• The Culture of an organisation has its own language, history, way of doing things, unwritten rules that underpin or ‘glue’ the organisation together, like a mini society.

• Understanding the culture of an organisation, it’s values and attitudes, is key to reading

an organisation and making a diagnosis.

• The OD proposal should be developed with the organisation however the way in which this is conducted and the approaches of the volunteer will depend on the needs of the organisation and the skills and confidence of the volunteer. Ownership of the OD process and outcomes must belong to the organisation.

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Learning Log: What has been the key learning for you? How might you use the tools discussed in your placement?

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Devising OD Proposal + Activity You (as a group) are the VSO OD volunteer in this organisation. You have gained agreement and commitment from the management for your OD work in principle.

You are now presenting the OD proposal and activity to the management to

encourage ownership and ‘buy-in’. You have 25 minutes to present the following, in whichever way you feel is appropriate. TEAM Work

1. Devise an Organisational Development Proposal for your organisation • Aims + outcomes

Outline the aims of the OD and expected outcomes • Proposal Plan

Describe the OD activities: who, what, where, when, how? • Time frame (of the OD activities during your placement) it is very important to

specify time frame for the activities included on the proposal • Roles Outline your OD roles

2. Demonstrate one activity

This will be an activity, which you will be using in your proposal, and you are seeking the agreement from the management that it will be appropriate for their organisation.

Team work • Identifying expertise – speed reading, graphics skills, presentation

skills, motivational skills • Deciding on roles within the team –leader, researcher/reader,

timekeeper • Identifying tasks and allocating to team members • Managing time during preparation + in your presentation

Case Study Decide if you need to read all the material. If you are going to read it how will you divide up the task, different team members can read different things. You will have to trust your team and give up some control. This will be the situation in your placment were you will need to trust your colleagues and others to gather information.

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Appendix: Organisational Development Case Studies

The following case studies are practical capacity building experiences from African NGOs with an organisational development focus.1 The organisational development interventions in each case involve an external ‘consultant’ or OD practitioner. The periods of engagement range from 20 days over six months to 60 days over 2 years. The cases highlight the OD cycle, the phases of OD, the role of the consultant and the factors hindering and helping the process. The cases identify issues around:

• Visioning • Mission Building • Leadership • Identity, values and culture • Strategic Direction • Structural Changes • Systems Development • Conflict Resolution • Team Building

The following questions may be useful to guide you as you read through the case studies:

1. Why were the OD interventions requested?

2. What were the main triggers?

3. What were the key ‘entry points’ for the Organisational Development Consultant?

4. What OD process was used (OD cycle)?

5. What methods of intervention were used (phases and activities)?

6. How long did the process last? The case studies are from the following organisations and countries: Community Resource Centres, South Africa Triple Trust Organisation, South Africa TUBA (AIDS Umbrella body), Malawi EWDFA (Eritrean War Disabled Fighters’ Association), Eritrea

1 James, R, ‘Demystifying Organisation Development: Practical Capacity Building Experiences of African NGOs, 1998, INTRAC, UK

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INDEPENDENCE DAY? The Independence of ‘Community Resource Centres’ from the Fellowship of Churches in South Africa Carol-Ann Foulis (Olive) Introduction Olive (OD & Training) first began working with the client in February 1995, when it was contracted to write job descriptions and develop a payment framework for Community Resource Centres (CRCs). The CRC Programme comprises 14 centres which are all situated within the greater Durban area and provide the following services: paralegal advice, community development, lobbying and networking. There are 28 staff employed by the programme who are paid by the ‘parent’ organisation. Managerial and administrative support also comes from the parent organisation which is the same Durban-based Fellowship of Churches mentioned in the previous case study. In fact dealing with some of the human resource systems issues and structural issues was one of the recommendations of the previous OD intervention by CDRA. The Aim of the Intervention The initial request to look at job descriptions and a payment framework for the centres was based largely on the CDRA work. Furthermore, the importance of the CRCs becoming (more) independent of the organisations within which they are located, as well as the need to increase their sustainability were also strongly emphasized. These recommendations have subsequently been translated into what has become known as the ‘independence process’ – a long-term process of change which has had to be planned and embarked upon in an integrated, holistic way. While Olive initially contracted with the client around the delivery of a specific product – job descriptions and a payment framework, the Director also wanted the work to ‘test’ staff’s understanding of and readiness to move towards independence. This HR request also set the ball rolling for the OD intervention. Shifting from HR to OD Having delivered the product of job descriptions and a payment framework as per the initial brief, in August 1995, Olive then entered into a new contract with the client which had as its longer-term goal the increased independence of the CRCs from the parent organisation. The Intervention Process The intervention process can be divided into three phases: each with its own objectives. Phase 1: Creating a vision of independence The first phase was marked by the appointment of four Zonal Co-ordinators to assist the centres in their move to independence. The objectives were as follows: 1. Consultations with the client to explore ideas and share views to develop an understanding of the

client’s vision of independence. 2. Workshops with staff to assist people in understanding what would be involved in the change

process; providing opportunities for people to share their views, feelings, concerns and challenges about independence.

3. Training and support of Zonal Co-ordinators in the transition from staff member to Zonal Co-ordinator and equipping them with the skills required for their new position, such as planning, supervision, delegation and time management.

Phase 2: Review period and adapted contract A review was conducted in June 1996 to assess the extent to which intended outcomes had been achieved in each of the three areas. Based on this review, the consultant entered into an adapted contract with the client which had as its key objective the training and development of the Zonal Co-ordinators (in recognition of their key role in the change process). Another feature of this phase was the establishment of clearer boundaries regarding the consultant’s role in the change process. At this stage, it was decided that Olive would no longer play a role in the general training of programme staff. It was felt that staff were sufficiently oriented to the idea of independence and that the organisation itself needed to drive the next stage in this process. It was also agreed that the consultant would not be involved in the training and development of local committees. While this was clearly an important component of the next phase, it

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was acknowledged that this was outside of the consultant’s organisational mission and area of ‘expertise’. Other organisations were referred to who could assist in this area. Phase 3: The way ahead From December 1996, the relationship between the client and consultant enters into yet another phase. This is in part because certain objectives have been achieved, and also because new circumstances are calling for new kinds of support and approaches to the change process. At this point in time, the content of this phase is undefined. Factors Constraining the Process A number of factors have hindered or slowed down the process: • The style of the Programme Manager has reinforced a particular way of relating to people that the

independence process is seeking to change. Given that the Programme Manager is the pioneer and possibly stands to lose too much from the change, it has been important for the consultant not to skirt around these issues but to find ways of dealing with them directly and constructively.

• To a large extent, there is no external imperative for change. The parent organisation has initiated the independence of the CRCs and the deadlines by which change needs to take place are variable and extend considerably far into the future. This has its advantages, but the lack of urgency and need to change has sometimes resulted in a level of complacency, which has curtailed the action that needs to be taken.

• The level of management and administrative experience of staff of the CRC Programme is limited in certain respects. Many staff members have worked only for this particular programme and do not have other organizational experience to draw on. This is significant given that management and administrative skills are needed for an independent CRC. The change process is therefore slow as time needs to be spent building the capacity of staff in these areas.

Factors Promoting the Process Many factors have helped or been important in taking the process forward: • The appointment and training of the Zonal Co-ordinators, with an increasing emphasis on their role

as key change agents, has given a sense of urgency, importance and focus to the independence process. They have been a tangible sign, particularly to staff, that this process is ‘for real’. The appointment of a temporary ‘Programme Co-ordinator’ with a very participative style of management, while the Programme Manager has been on sabbatical, has significantly facilitated the move towards independence. The consultant has noticed increased energy, enthusiasm and interest amongst staff which seems to be related to this person coming into the organisation.

• Having dedicated capacity for managing the change process has been particularly important. It has been the responsibility of the ‘Programme Coordinator’ to focus on the independence process.

• The recent introduction of the client to different models of ‘independence’ has provided the client with an opportunity to learn from others’ experiences.

• Olive has used a team for this intervention, rather than one consultant. This has been particularly useful in ensuring that our approach remains open, innovative, critically reflective and professional. Furthermore, keeping the same people part of this team has had a number of advantages, particularly for understanding the complexity and dynamics of the intervention.

• From the start and throughout the intervention, the method of diagnosing the system and making recommendations was a highly interactive process. The consultant did not offer a neatly mapped out path for independence of the centres. As ‘staff were involved throughout the process ... involved in developing and negotiating the ToR.’ this meant that staff very much owned the change process.

• The quality of the reporting was also seen by CRC staff as being important. • ‘The detailed report with key questions to address in the workshop was very helpful. Their reports were thorough and

accessible, prompt and with clear recommendations and conclusions’. • It was important for Olive to regularly define and review its role in the OD process and to set specific

objectives in relation to this role as it became difficult to maintain the different roles and responsibilities of the client versus those of the consultant at certain times. Given the importance of ensuring that ownership of the process remained with the client, the consultants made considerable efforts to continually clarify their role – ‘we were beginning to drive the process. Because they were too busy we

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would be bringing more of the ideas and setting the agendas ... so we said ... we will leave it to you to contact us. They brought proposals and we formalized them into briefs’.

Preliminary Assessment of the Impact It is difficult at this stage to measure the impact of the intervention because Olive’s relationship with the client continues. However, the process has been monitored along the way and a number of goals (both planned and unplanned) have been achieved. The impressions of both client and consultant have also been regularly gathered and reflected upon. The consultant has encouraged the client to establish its own criteria for measuring the impact and using its own means for collecting this information. Some of the impressions of the key achievements to date are: • People are clearer on what is needed for an independent organisation and are in the process of formulating plans, which will indicate how they will go about achieving this. There is a vision for what will be achieved. • Staff (and some of the local committee members) have had opportunities to raise their fears, concerns and questions about the independence process and the parent organisation has responded to these. To some extent, this has built a critical mass of people who understand, support and drive this move to independence. Furthermore, the parent organisation has realised the importance of letting go. • The attitudes and behaviour of certain staff members have changed in the time that the consultant has been working with them. Staff are behaving in a more ‘responsible’ manner. • The growth and development of the Zonal Co-ordinators is also significant. They have received training in a number of areas and are also behaving in a more responsible, independent manner. The management has noted ‘a lot more confidence amongst the zonal coordinators’ with them ‘taking more initiative, greater participation in management meetings and deeper issues raised, delegation of responsibility coped with’. • A number of structural changes have occurred as a result of this intervention. First, the appointment of the Zonal Co-ordinators has played an important role in moving some of the control and power away from the parent organisation to the CRCs. Secondly, it is likely that the post of Programme Co-ordinator will remain as a dedicated internal resource for managing the change process. The change that is required in this process is enormous – it is about moving the CRCs from a state of financial, administrative and management dependence for the last 14 years to one of independence. Furthermore, being independent brings with it a set of challenges for which some people are not and may never be ready. However, the consultant acknowledges that change is a series of steps that need to be managed and be made manageable. They also need to be heading in an agreed to direction. What the consultants have done ‘is walk with the client for some distance along the path of change’. Getting the client on this path and assisting the different components in becoming skilled, aligned and ready for change has been a lengthy but productive process. RESTORING TRUST IN TRIPLE TRUST A CDRA Intervention written up by Rick James Introduction In 1988, four South Africans came together with the idea of training unemployed people – who had little chance of getting a job – to start their own small businesses. Triple Trust Organisation (TTO) was formed and was quickly successful. Their activities soon attracted the attention of international donors and corporate sponsors and TTO was able to diversify and extend the range of services it could offer. In only five years, TTO grew from a small group of four to a large decentralised organisation employing 60–70 staff in 20 training centres throughout the Cape Town area. This very success, however, nearly led to the downfall of TTO. While it brought solutions to others, TTO was not paying attention to its own organizational needs. The structure was no longer appropriate for the size of the organisation (with 17 departments all of which reported to two members of the senior management team); the founders (or pioneers) of the organisation had had to become managers; ‘passion had given way to calls for form, policy and structure’ and there was considerable internal unrest with, ‘staff disillusioned and even the threat of strike action’. As well as being symptomatic of rapid organisational growth, some of these problems were influenced by the

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massive changes in the external environment in South Africa during 1993/4 where everything was changing from white to black. The fight against apartheid had unified individuals and organisations, but when that enemy disappeared after the 1994 elections, people and organisations had to redefine their roles. NGOs were suddenly confronted by their own diversity. They had to deal with their own groups of blacks, whites, coloured, working class, upper class, management and workers. The diversity had been there all along, but because the common focus was lost, conflict arose in the new era. Some of the pressures Triple Trust was facing were simply a microcosm of what was happening in the whole country. Own Doctor As a result TTO ‘spent the year of 1994 trying to be our own doctor’. There were many internal meetings and transitional committees with staff representative bodies and board member associations. Task groups on communication, terms of employment, structural change and cultural diversity were formed. Workshops were held on issues such as ‘Unlearning Racism’. While all this internal activity did give staff forums in which to express their views and showed that management was concerned and interested in their opinions, ‘we weren’t able to fix the problems’. By treating symptoms rather than causes, and the rational not the emotional, TTO experienced a year of grueling accusation and counter accusation. The organisation was paralysed and limped along with programmes and concluded, ‘we weren’t getting anywhere on our own as it is very hard to diagnose issues of heart, values, culture yourself ’ especially when loss of trust had become an issue and polarised staff and management. In an act of desperation TTO sought help from CDRA (a very well respected South African organisation which provides OD consultancy support to the NGO sector). The Intervention Process CDRA developed an OD process, which looked at four basic steps:

• examination and redefinition of the organisation’s mission; • examination and redefinition of their values; • examination and redefinition of the organisation’s structure; • examination and rebuilding of perceptions, feelings and relationships.

They did this largely by means of an organisational survey, draft report and residential workshop. CDRA Organisational Survey In November 1994, two CDRA consultants (one white, one black) interviewed most of TTO staff to elicit their views, concerns and priorities. They found an organisation on the brink of collapse. Leadership and management, as roles and as concepts, were confused and contested. The staff felt they wanted a share in the ownership of the organisation and had been excluded so far. Trust had broken down and conflict and tension pervaded the whole organisation. Report From the interviews, the CDRA consultants produced a draft report and presented it to the staff and management at the end of December. Importantly, this report was a verbatim summary of what was said, a mirror without any consultant interpretation at that stage. The views of staff reflected in the report were seen by management as ‘very damning’: ‘when we got CDRA’s report we were confronted by tark reality. The report basically said our organisation was very sick, that it was run by three people who didn’t listen to anyone else’. Another of the leadership team said the report was ‘the stuff of suicides. So unbelievably awful. It was a big risk and we had to have lots of counseling to talk us out of resigning’. The consultants in fact spent some time preparing the leadership team to receive the report (even taking them out to lunch!) and convincing them of their need to confront and deal with the issues rather than run away and resign. Change Workshop In order to deal with the issues raised in the report a five-day residential retreat for 40 staff members was arranged for December 1995. This was much more than a mere feedback meeting, but a strategic intervention for organizational change. Individual interviews, small group discussions and full group ‘therapy sessions’ were used to work through both rational and emotional issues. Issues raised in the report were written up as ‘organisational norms’ to provide insight into TTO culture. This statement of implicit norms, many of which were undesirable, provided the basis for a discussion of a set of values by which the organisation should operate, concluding by committing to paper a vision and values statement.

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It proved to be a ‘very tough week’. The retreat was seen by all as pivotal: ‘we worked on the breaking down and building up of relationships. People cried; it was heart wrenching for all of us. At one point we didn’t think we were going to make it. But we did learn we had to improve relationships before we could restructure the organisation’. Resistance, anger, denial, attempted bargaining gave way to listening and trying to understand each other, relinquishing prejudice and preconceived perception. One of the founders concluded, ‘at some point during the workshop, I had an ah-ha moment. I realised people were not saying that I was not doing a good job, but only that they wanted to share in helping us fulfil that vision’. Principles to guide the restructuring were developed as followed:

• information should be more freely available; • decisions should be taken at a range of different levels; • fewer departments with fewer lines to a central person; • leadership should be wider and more focused.

CDRA then worked jointly with TTO to develop a structure which fulfilled these conditions. This workshop was followed up immediately by two days back in the office. One day was for staff who could not be present at the workshop, and although the ground was covered, there was not the same group dynamics. Those who had not participated in the workshop said that they ‘always felt a little robbed’. The next day was spent discussing ‘where do we go from here?’ CDRA’s work with TTO took about seven weeks spread over a nine-month period. Preliminary Assessment of the Impact The CDRA work clearly had a considerable impact on TTO, especially if it is compared with the ‘control group’ of TTO trying to solve its own problems without consultancy support. The senior management in particular attribute the CDRA work as ensuring the very survival of the organisation; ‘that intervention rescued the organisation from complete disaster. It would have closed’. Others said, ‘the clarity of issues set us back on track’... ‘It was a real turning point’. At the very heart of OD consultancy is facilitating the NGO to take charge of its own development. The intervention indicated that this had been achieved to a certain extent as a ‘structure was put in place where we can solve our own problems, before there were no systems or structures to catch these’. The chair of the board has taken on the OD role – a monthly ‘tapping of the wheel’. When a new issue arose for example, senior management at TTO felt that ‘if this current issue had happened before it would have been really serious, but now we can address it ourselves’. Certainly there are a number of organisational indicators to demonstrate that change has taken place to some degree: Values: A values statement was developed which explained the kind of culture within which staff wanted to work. Mission: The mission statement became more fully owned and understood by all staff. Leadership: A broader and more mixed and representative leadership team was developed which resulted in ‘the practice of leadership and management being no longer scorned but respected and is being practised in a coherent and organised fashion’. Strategy: Strategic planning processes were introduced. Systems: HRD, strategic planning, monitoring and evaluation, teamwork and interdepartmental cooperation systems have all been initiated to some degree. Relationships: Staff and management relationships improved considerably with ‘a lot of barriers broken down’. Motivation: In order for staff to be motivated they need to have an understanding of the logic of the organisation. TTO was suffering from staff not having a sense of ownership of the organisation but ‘that happened in that week’... ‘field workers now feel part of the organisation’. Impact on Beneficiaries: If an organisation is suffering from severe organizational problems then this will certainly be a significant constraint on their effectiveness as ‘organisational problems affect the client very negatively’. The TTO case showed that addressing these organisational ills will have a very real impact on beneficiaries: ‘we were paralysed for one year before the intervention and our programmes were suffering’ ... ‘Triple Trust field workers now have a place to be heard and are more empowered to do their own jobs’. Genuine transformation at a deep level is not easy, however, and there is the tendency to slip back into old patterns of behaviour.

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Some middle management staff in Triple Trust were more restrained in their assessment of the impact of the CDRA work feeling that the early momentum for change has been lost – ‘the assumption was that we could continue on our own, but structures were not put in place, people were left untrained. When they left things fell back. The self-momentum carried things on for a while, but it soon waned’. They further point out that OD is not an event, but a process, which needs to be continued within the organisation. ‘CDRA was one event in the process and we see the workshop as a key part of our history’. They believe that although TTO had the potential capacity to take on the change process itself it was not given enough priority and people were not ‘empowered to take it on themselves’. In fact some of the very changes, such as bringing more blacks into the leadership (who had not been part of the OD process), undermined its continuance. Factors Constraining the Process This case and the different perceptions about its effectiveness clearly highlight issues around follow-through. The consultant himself said, ‘continuity in some form is key. One of the main problems with OD consultancy is the lack of follow- up; organisations feel they have moved beyond it’. The consultant felt that insufficient follow-up had been given but that he had to wait to be asked back. TTO were more equivocal, on the one hand saying, ‘we have heard nothing since they left. The consultant felt we had the structure in place to support changes. But the new leadership was not part of that process and perhaps they could give us more follow-up’ and on the other noting that ‘the temptation is to go back to the consultant all the time. We need to take ownership ourselves, and consultants need to hold back’. Even if the consultants themselves did not follow through, there was a feeling amongst some staff that the OD interventions were strengthened by greater staff development in these areas. Factors Promoting the Process External Consultants: The advantages of using external consultants was highlighted by many respondents stating that, ‘we could not have gone through such a deep and painful process on our own. We needed an outsider’. Ownership: The most commonly mentioned success factor was that the NGO itself owned the change process and was prepared to invest in it, ‘even if our funder had refused to support it we would have paid for it ourselves’. The ownership of the change process is closely related to how keenly the NGO perceives the crisis. TTO were in the position of saying, ‘we were at the wall. We had no choice’. Leadership: With the success of OD being closely related to the leadership’s ability to shift, those who felt that Triple Trust had changed considerably attributed this partly to ‘the willingness to face head on tough choices and be flexible’. Consultant: TTO took considerable time to find the right consultants sympathetic to TTO’s beliefs, objectives and values. CDRA provided a very experienced, mixed black/white team. The style and skills of the consultants were crucial as they had to be able to lead TTO through very sensitive and at times conflictive processes. The main consultant was described as ‘very skilled at trying to work through both the rational and the emotional’. Maturity of NGO: The maturity of the NGO was also seen to be a contributory factor in determining the success of OD. TTO said about their willingness to be open to change that ‘we are capable people, and self-assured. We know we are doing good work we have nothing to hide we are not defensive’. Role of Donor: TTO lauded its donor in supporting this OD process saying that, ‘we had a wonderful funder who two years before had asked us for a list of capacity-building projects and had funded 7 out of our list of 11’. This donor, however, was not even a Northern NGO but a bilateral donor – the ODA (now DFID)! Such enlightened behaviour on the part of bilateral donors represents a very real challenge for Northern NGOs. The role of donor was strictly limited to the funding of the consultancy and was not involved in the OD process itself. The CDRA was contracted and reported exclusively to TTO. TUBA – SUFFERING FROM SUCCESS? Rick James Introduction The Umbrella Body for Aids (TUBA) was established in 1993 by a number of different local and international development agencies in Malawi. They were all increasingly concerned at the rising

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prevalence of Aids in Malawi and hoped to share experience and learning. TUBA was to facilitate the coordination and cooperation of NGOs, donors and government involved in Aids-related projects. TUBA quickly secured funding and established a good reputation through its coherent and articulate leadership; its high calibre staff; and regular and useful national coordination meetings and newsletters. Within a short period of time TUBA was credible and trusted with its major donor saying, ‘it’s one NGO we are proud of ’. By 1996, TUBA had grown to 12 staff members and was diversifying its activities into a number of related roles. As well as working on coordination, information and networking activities amongst NGOs, international donors and government, TUBA was also training communities in Aids awareness education; training NGOs and government extension staff in community care and counseling methods and medical aspects to Aids prevention and care; undertaking research and advisory support in gender-related aspects of development; starting an Aids resource centre; undertaking district-level coordination of NGOs involved in Aids care; as well as channeling funds to NGOs as part of a World Bank programme of Aids management. TUBA had already been involved in policy level discussions on Malawi’s Aids prevention and care policy and was also contemplating taking a more active advocacy role towards government as well as being asked by a number of international bodies to be a regional focal point. Potential Crisis? This growth and diversification soon began to cause a number of internal pressures. TUBA leadership and staff were feeling increasingly overworked and unable to complete all their tasks adequately. There was a concern that performance and reputation would soon suffer. Staff morale was falling and programmes were operating in an isolated fashion. It was clear to the leadership, as well as to the staff, that TUBA was being dangerously overstretched and that they needed to better define their role in the future and develop a more focused strategy. This desire coincided with the concerns of a prospective donor; and as part of the first year’s funding (and the indication that funding would be for at least three to five years) a grant was included for TUBA to undertake a strategic directions exercise. The Intervention Process A few months earlier TUBA had met and quickly built up a level of understanding and trust with a British OD consultant doing a short-term contract in Malawi. The donor had considerable contact with and was favourably disposed to the NGO with whom this consultant worked and so TUBA approached the consultant to undertake this work. Much of the planning had to be done by fax; during which time: • it was arranged that TUBA would contract the consultant, not the donor, and that a Malawian consultant would be contracted to work alongside the expatriate; • the different roles and responsibilities of TUBA and the consultants were agreed; • TUBA’s ownership of the need for the intervention was identified; • the process was designed for undertaking the work; • the outputs of the work were clearly defined – TUBA maintained responsibility for writing up any action points into a revised strategic plan and a capacity-building plan; • a questionnaire for staff and another for partner NGOs was designed and sent. The initial process was agreed at two weeks with a follow-up visit from the consultants after six months. While the limitations of such a discrete exercise were understood, it was decided that a limited initial process would not preclude further involvement later should more ongoing support prove necessary. On arrival, the consultants spent a day with the director of TUBA discovering the background to the consultancy and what was expected from the intervention. The key stakeholders in TUBA had previously been identified and individual meetings had been arranged with all TUBA staff, most of TUBA board members, a sample of Malawian NGOs involved with TUBA, TUBA international donors and contractors (such as the World Bank) and other stakeholders such as the national umbrella body for NGOs and the government ministry of health. The two consultants spent seven days gathering data on TUBA from: • the semi-structured interviews; • the questionnaire responses from TUBA staff and member NGOs; • a review of past TUBA plans, reports and evaluations. The data was analysed and structured by the consultants and discussed with 15 members of TUBA staff and board during the four-day workshop, which followed the interviews.

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Strategic Directions Workshop The aim of the workshop was to get the TUBA staff and board to diagnose for themselves where they thought TUBA was at the moment. This included both an internal diagnosis and an analysis of the current and future threats and opportunities in the external environment. Their analysis was complemented and developed by the findings from the consultants’ previous data-gathering process. The workshop then facilitated participants to determine which of TUBA’s clients were they really there to serve and what did this client group want from TUBA. This prioritizing process enabled TUBA to decide what core role it wanted to play. On the basis of this choice the mission statement was reworked and gender-related objectives were included. The workshop then introduced a role-play visioning exercise for board and staff to dream of where they wished TUBA to be in four years time and the common themes were highlighted. The discrepancy between where TUBA was today and where it wanted to be was then analysed by participants, and the strategic issues which needed to be dealt with in order to get there were identified. In working groups, the external/programming strategic options were discussed and decided upon and the internal issues (such as the lack of a ‘team working’ culture, limited gender awareness, delayed decision-making, and inappropriate systems for internal controls and staff recruitment and development) were also analysed and solutions proposed. The outputs of these working groups were synthesized during plenary feedback. The consultants refused to write up this information. Rather they encouraged the formation of two small voluntary teams to take responsibility for writing up the feedback into a strategic plan and an organisational development plan by a certain date after the workshop. The closure of the workshop involved some ‘reality testing’ by applying the strategic decisions that had been made to actual and contentious programmes. This testing revealed a coherence amongst the staff and the board of the fairly momentous implications of the decisions they had made – such as withdrawing from the funding role which the World Bank was encouraging them to take on. Factors Promoting the Process The leadership was extremely committed to the process, both the chair of the board and chief executive were leading the process. TUBA was a young and flexible organisation in an early stage of its development, which meant it had not picked up too much bureaucratic baggage and vested interests’ leaving it open to change. The process was also helped by TUBA being small enough for the entire organisation to be actively involved in the process. There was sufficient pain being experienced in terms of feeling overstretched and declining morale to preclude the maintenance of the status quo. Unless key people in the organisation feel the need for change (pain) none is likely to occur. There was general agreement amongst all stakeholders (staff, board, partner NGOs, donors, contractors) on the issues, which TUBA needed to address. There was a critical mass of support for change and no great conflict in direction. The donor was flexible enough to let TUBA direct and contract the consultancy process. Their long-term view of a funding relationship with TUBA enabled TUBA to lengthen its strategic perspective and not just go for quick bucks. TUBA themselves invested a lot in the process. The chief executive made it clear to staff that this was the priority for their time and TUBA themselves covered the not inconsiderable workshop costs While the workshop ended on a high note, it was recognized that the real problems would arise in implementing the decisions. Disaster Strikes! Within one month of the workshop, the director of TUBA was found to have been defrauding TUBA of large amounts of money over the past six months. He was immediately sacked. Despite the fact that many of the Malawian staff suspected this to have been the case, the local and international consultant both missed diagnosing this area of weakness for a number of reasons: • the accountant who had all the information was recovering from a motorbike accident during the whole consultancy (and staff were looking to him to expose the fraud)! • the other staff who knew of the fraud felt implicated because they had done nothing to date, fearing for their jobs; • Malawian cultural norms do not promote confrontation and exposure of others and have a great respect for those in authority (one Chichewa proverb encapsulates this sentiment – wamkulu sawuzidwa – ‘he is old, therefore he is right’); • failure on the consultants’ behalf to probe the ‘mud’ of the organisation more thoroughly; • by focusing on strategy, the intervention missed some of the underlying values of honesty and integrity.

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This demonstrates the need for OD consultancies to look at some of the harder financial issues in some detail; to be aware of the resistance of many people to publicly expose their leaders; and to probe further when off-hand comments are dropped. Having said that, if the consultancy had managed to expose the fraud issue this would have undoubtedly derailed the strategic planning process which would have left TUBA without a direction and without a director (as opposed to just without a director!). Preliminary Assessment of the Impact While the strategic plan was written up by the staff after the workshop and approved by the board, TUBA has continued to face difficulties. The decision to withdraw from channelling World Bank funds angered the Bank and so, with the departure of the director, the Bank was soon able to say publicly that it was this mismanagement of funds which had led the World Bank to pull out of TUBA, not vice versa. Within a month of the loss of the director, the Chair of the Board and two foreign volunteers have also left the country (as their contracts had ended) aggravating the leadership vacuum. This has severely inhibited the implementation of the change process, both strategically and in terms of addressing the identified capacity-building needs. Almost 12 months after the departure of the director, the leadership vacuum still has not been filled – one director who was appointed by the board was clearly unsuited and his contract was terminated after just one month. The foreign consultant (now resident in Malawi) has continued with limited involvement with TUBA in an informal counseling role with some of the remaining staff. Donors too were increasingly worried about the situation and were being presented with proposals for funding which were patently unrealistic. Just as it looked as though they would withdraw support and TUBA would collapse, a final opportunity was given to TUBA to revise their proposal. The remaining staff led this process themselves and with donor support asked the consultant to help facilitate a one-day programme-planning day to help them develop some of their strategic priorities into a fundable proposal. The proposal which the staff developed was greeted extremely enthusiastically by donors – ‘it has improved 200%’. This process, for all its limitations of implementation, did result in a small NGO gaining sufficient self-identity to be able to say no to the World Bank and perhaps more importantly did succeed in broadening the ‘ownership’ of the organisation amongst the staff. Prior to the workshop much of the understanding of the rationale and direction of TUBA lay entirely in the director’s head. If this understanding had not been transferred to the rest of the staff, it is unlikely that TUBA would have been able to survive the succeeding 11 months of leadership chaos. It also reinforces the extent to which responsibility for actually bringing about organisational change lies not with the consultants, but with the NGO itself. The Eritrean War Disabled Fighters’ Association (EWDFA) Organisational Self-Definition and Planning Process Daudi Waithaka Introduction The Eritrean War Disabled Fighters’ Association (EWDFA) was founded as an ‘NGO’ with the encouragement and support of the Government of Eritrea. Unlike many other newly independent countries where existing elites take over, the ex-soldiers in Eritrea formed a major part of the new government. This government realised it had an enormous debt to the disabled fighters and had a duty to support their resettlement and rehabilitation. It also soon realised that it could not support them from the national budget for ever and that an organisation owned, controlled and run by the disabled themselves would have the best potential to address their long-term needs for medical care and economic resources. In 1992 and 1993, the government gave EWDFA considerable grants as well as contracts for beer distribution throughout the country to help the NGO get off the ground. A draft constitution was approved by a founding Congress, members recruited, offices established, core staff hired and programmes started. These programme initiatives, however, did not prove successful as the ex-fighters had very little experience of civilian business and management. The programme stagnation soon resulted in internal quarrels over direction and increasing tension between the civilian and military elements and the disabled and non-disabled members. While the desire to contribute was there and the funding was also there, these did not translate into effective programmes. The EWDFA approached Norwegian Church Aid (NCA) (as Norwegian organisations had always been very close to the struggle in Eritrea) to see how

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their organisation could be made more effective. Through discussions NCA suggested that a Kenyan consultancy firm, Matrix, be approached to help facilitate two parallel processes – a five-day workshop with one group to look at vision and mission, as well as a three-day workshop with another group to look at constitutional issues. On reviewing the literature on the organisation and its history, the Kenyan consultant felt that the approach suggested was too superficial to deal with the significant problems of identity in an organisation of 18,000 members and yet with little idea of who it was, what it wanted to be, how to resolve inherent conflicts internally as well as how it should relate to others externally. It was thought that a one-off vision workshop might create a vision statement, but would probably not create a shared vision. A longer-term intervention was suggested which would also keep the entire group of 20 executive committee members and senior staff together. These suggestions were agreed to both by EWDFA and by NCA. The Intervention Process A staggered series of workshops took place with the aims of: • training the participants in the art of analytical planning; • analysing the current situation in the country and of the members with a view to mapping out the organisation’s place in the development of both; • highlighting issues and areas of weakness in the organisation to collectively prescribe potential solutions and actions; • concurrently and practically applying those skills gained to actually produce a 1997 Annual Plan and Five Year Plan. Workshop I: Vision and Mission (ten days) early 1996 A visioning process was used so that the participants defined: • what the fighters ought to be like; • how to get to that desired future; • what the organisation should be like to facilitate that process. In between the workshops participants were required to do a lot of ‘homework’ identifying what sorts of activity each of the categories of the disabled could do and what they needed to be able to do these. Mini-workshops throughout the country were held which helped members feel greater ownership of the process. These wider consultations were written up with the help of NCA-supplied secretarial and translation services. Workshop II: Strategies and Main Activities (seven days) In this workshop the main approaches and activities were outlined bringing together the findings of the wider consultations. Back in the communities after the workshop, participants continued the process of consultation by working out how these activities might be implemented. For example, activities such as providing institutional care for the severely disabled had to deal with questions of implementation including who will supply the medicines and how will it be paid for in the long term. Workshop III: Detailed 1997 Annual Plan and Sketch of Five Year Plan(14 days) late 1996 The actual plans for 1997 and 1998 were detailed with the workshop participants brainstorming the contents of the planning document and then authorizing one person to write it up. A very detailed operational plan and budget was arrived at. These plans were then translated and taken to regional workshops for discussion and further refinement. Towards the end of 1997 a review is planned to find out what has gone right and what has gone wrong and what can be learnt. So far about ten weeks consultancy time has been taken, spread out over the course of the year. Preliminary Assessment of the Impact There is evidence of positive impact in a number of areas:

• Vision and mission statements were produced – a ‘first’ for an Eritrean organisation. • Overall strategies were produced, including a 5 year plan with an indicative budget. • A detailed annual plan with budgets was produced. • Participant skills were enhanced as evidenced by their evaluations. • Cultural shift – despite the military culture, which pervaded at the start, decision-making has become more consultative and decentralised with regular meetings formalised. • Conflict resolution – civilians and combatant colleagues are now happier working together.

Factors Constraining the Process

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The main languages of the participants were Arabic and Tigrigna. The Kenyan consultant had to communicate in English and so there was a need for good translation and interpretation. Communication became much more difficult. The consultant was an outsider and a stranger to an organisation, which had a very strong common history of struggle and yet was now disabled. There was much resistance to an able-bodied outsider who had not fought in the war. This meant that the consultant had to be very open about himself and his own history to gain acceptance, proving that he did understand their context and developing sufficient rapport with the fighters to reach even a point of sharing jokes about their disabilities. Factors Promoting the Process The climate in the country was very conducive to the organisation. The disabled fighters were revered throughout society for their sacrifice in the struggle. The government was very supportive giving them comfortable funding and removing a big burden of having to respond to donor demands. The organisation was truly motivated and committed to change. They recognized they had reached a point of stagnation and if they did not help themselves who would do it for them. The combatants had an extremely strong team spirit. They were used to working together. They had been sharing their beliefs, pains and dreams for many years. The top leadership gave their full commitment to the entire process as all members of the Executive Committee and senior staff participated fully. The consultant spent considerable time in learning the context and history of the organisation and its struggle as well as the Eritrean culture. The consultant also prepared case histories of other struggles in Africa to apply back to their situation. The donor funded the consultancy and provided all the necessary transport, translation services, secretarial services as well as stationery resources. They recognised the need for an ongoing process in the wider organisation, rather than just one-off workshops. They held back from full participation in the early workshops, as they would have been tempted to try to move the process too quickly. At subsequent workshops they were able to be a bit more involved as EWDFA was beginning to establish a clearer self-identity. The donor also separated the OD process from a funding decision. The first stage of OD is building confidence – this cannot be done within the context of a donor decision on funding, as ‘NGOs have to find their feet first and feel they can argue with a donor on an equal basis and that disagreement on certain issues is OK’. INTEGRATING OD Namibian Rural Development NGO (NRDN)2 Lynette Maart (CDRA) Introduction The NRDN had been established in 1987 as a channel for development aid money from the European Economic Community (EEC) to Victims of Apartheid. It aimed to fund local NGOs and CBOs involved in resistance work. In 1990 South Africa finally withdrew from their occupation of Namibia in the face of increased international pressure and the looming possibility of military defeat. The South West African People’s Organisation (SWAPO) won a landslide victory in the first democratic election in 1990. It soon became clear, however, that it was unable to deliver on its election promises of alleviating poverty due to a number of factors including very limited human and financial resources. After independence the NRDN redefined itself as a national service organisation and changed its focus to facilitate the development of NGOs and CBOs in the areas of education, health, agriculture, income generation, organisation development, gender research, as well as lobbying, networking and advocacy. By 1993 the NRDN employed 22 staff members, all of whom were Namibian locals. The organisation prides itself in that it has no European or white person on its staff. The NRDN is based in Windhoek, with field offices in the South and North of Namibia. The Aim of the Intervention In December 1992 the CDRA received a letter from a Dutch-based funding agency requesting the CDRA to assist the NRDN with a routine three-year evaluation process that would cover: • an assessment of the impact of the organisation’s work; • internal organisational development, for example, leadership/management, structuring to support the focus, staff development and policies and procedures. The donor was also concerned about funding,

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questioning whether they should continue to invest in Namibia. The CDRA responded to the funder’s request that it preferred dealing directly with the client rather than through a third party. The CDRA believes that development can only be nurtured where the freedom and integrity of the client, as well as the relationship between the consultant and the client, is sacrosanct. Therefore, the CDRA asked the NRDN to make a request for an evaluation process in its own name. It received such a request from the NRDN in February 1993. The Intervention Process Initially the CDRA thought that an evaluation and strategic planning process (three months in 1993) would be sufficient to boost the staff capacity. However, the intervention took three years and three phases:

1. entry and developing a strategic framework for the way forward; 2. developing the capacity of leadership and management; 3. developing the capacity of the field-work and programme staff.

Each phase was negotiated and contracted for separately. At times the needs emerged out of conversations with the organisation and at other times it was based on suggestions from the consultants as to what could be a potential next step. The NRDN then negotiated with its existing funders or sought new funders to support a particular part of the intervention. Phase One: Entry, diagnosis and developing a strategic framework for the way forward. Most of the negotiation for the first phase took place over the telephone and by letter. In the initial contract with the NRDN the CDRA agreed to: • conduct an organisational survey which would enable the CDRA to gain an in-depth understanding of the functioning of the Namibian NGO. The survey would be focused on both the internal organisational environment (vision and mission, management of resources and functioning of the organisation) and the external context (i.e. communities that the NGO works with and the broader Namibian context influencing the dynamic within these communities); • conduct an organisational workshop that would allow the NRDN to explore its issues and develop skills as well as adequate plans to resolve these issues and move into the future and complete the report of the process; • undertake future work as the need arises. This part of the contract was carried out by two CDRA consultants over a three-month period in 1993. Phases two and three are described in detail under the section titled: The Closure and Next Steps Taken. The Implementation The following methods were used: 1. Organisational survey This process took three weeks. The time frame was influenced by distances. During this phase the CDRA interviewed NRDN clients and board members and identified role-players in the Namibian NGO community. The CDRA visited project sites and the respective offices to observe their functioning. It also carried out a review of relevant organisational literature. This enabled the CDRA to develop overviews of the history and work of the NRDN and the changing Namibian context; analysis of the work done with clients; and an assessment of the internal organisational functions focusing on identity, strategies, personnel, technical support and systems, structures and procedures and leadership and management. The results of the organisational survey were written up in a draft report. 2. Organisational workshop In a one-week residential workshop the CDRA assisted staff to work through the issues raised in the draft diagnostic and evaluation report and devised a strategic response for addressing these including overhauling the technical subsystem of the organisation. 3. Final report The final report incorporated the changes and comments made by staff of the interim report during the first part of the workshop. The final report also contained the outcomes of the organisational workshop and future recommendations by the consultants. The Closure and Next Steps Taken This process ended (according to the first contract) after the organizational workshop. During the workshop, however, we were confronted with the reality of the leadership and management capacity of an

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organisation staffed primarily by Namibians. It was extremely difficult just to walk away. Over the next two and a half years, while not part of the initial plan, the following interventions became appropriate and were conducted as the NRDN developed. Phase Two: Developing the capacity of the management team (three-year project from 1994 to 1996). The second phase comprised the following steps: • a workshop in 1994 which targeted the newly appointed leadership of the NRDN to explore the tasks and functions of organisational leadership and management and self-management; • three members of the management team attended the CDRA – Facilitating Organisation Development (FOD) Course in 1994 and another one in 1995; • evaluation and strategic planning with the entire management team for one week in 1995 and another week in 1996 to tackle internal functioning and management difficulties. Phase Three: Developing the capacity of the field-work staff (one year 1996). This included accompanying the entire field team (15 staff) through the Fieldworkers’ Formation Course (FFC) in 1996, a training and development programme designed to equip participants to better facilitate the building of capacity of clients. Preliminary Assessment of the Impact Clarity was gained in the identity, purpose and strategies of the NRDN and then refined even more in 1995 when the organisation defined itself as working in the area of poverty alleviation through attaining household food security and more specifically agriculture and income generation and capacity-building of local initiatives. The OD interventions resulted in very real changes in strategy with programmes actually being closed down – ‘NRDN, a generalist organisation decided to concentrate on agriculture and income generation. They dropped pre-school education, health, resource centres and libraries’. This did not remain a one-off event, as ongoing strategic planning processes were introduced. There were very real changes in the style of leadership and organizational culture, with ‘the pioneer culture, which knew about everything and was responsive to all demands giving way to a more differentiated way of working where strategic choices were made’. A radical restructuring of the organisation resulting in three decentralized offices and a national office with the role of providing organisational and financial support while ‘regional managers were given a role in determining the organisational direction’. The restructuring process took the organisation approximately one and a half years to complete. It had to secure financial resources and to search from within its ranks and outside for potentially suitable leadership candidates and then train them. Development of leadership and management capacity took place. Without this, the initial intervention would not have been sustained. The CDRA firmly believes that organisational development is intertwined with the capacity of leadership and management collectively and as individuals. An indication of this is that the pioneer leader has indicated that she is willing to move on to greener pastures, as some leadership and management capacity has been developed. She would not have been able to risk this during 1993. There was also the development of staff skills at field level, which led to an ‘increased level of analysis and depth of questions at field-worker level. They became able to critique and change their own practice’. Most importantly, the organisation in the short term dealt with the immediate crisis but also created the institutional framework upon which further capacity could be built. Even though the process has been slow and at times painstaking it has enabled the staff of the NRDN to improve their understanding of their roles within the organisation and of the organisational functioning overall, thus putting the NRDN in a better position to make conscious and informed choices for the organisation’s future development. Key Learning When confronted with the outcome of the initial diagnostic report the organizational leadership (the director – a coloured female and the deputy director – black male) took the criticism as a personal attack on their integrity. Their initial reaction was panic, withdrawal and paralysis. A lot of counseling work was done on the side with the director and she concluded, ‘this was my moment of consciousness. I needed to be shocked to make the shift’. In order to encourage this change the consultants had to use different consulting styles, such as both the confrontational and the nurturing style. The consultants felt that ‘you need both roles, especially in organisations of women where confrontation is very difficult for them to deal with’. It is clear from this case that the context is important in affecting the nature of OD. By consciously choosing to employ only black staff (with a limited educational background) it ‘means that the OD process will take longer and be more expensive.

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It is making up for years of poor education which means you cannot take the knowledge base for granted. Also Namibia has a much smaller pool to draw on than South Africa which makes the pace slower’. While the CDRA intervention was meant to scale down the activities of the NGO and provide capacity-building (allowing the donor to exit), CDRA was clear at the outset to the donor ‘if you want to exit then say so, but do not use an evaluation to do so’. The donor is still there to this day. During the intervention the staff of the NRDN needed time in between interventions to digest what happened, to distil learning and to take forward in implementation what was useful for them. This required considerable patience of the consultant and the ability to hold back. This holding back at times, and not giving up, is vital to the success of an intervention of this nature, particularly with local African initiatives which tend to have organisational capacity constraints. Organisation development is not a one-night stand based only on the needs and requirement of funders. It is a long-term relationship that is based on mutual understanding and respect. Factors Promoting the Process NRDN maintained ownership of the intervention. At the start CDRA insisted that the request for the support come from NRDN and that the contracting be done directly by them rather than by the Dutch donor. The feedback workshop process in Phase one continued this ownership of the issues. CDRA did not just extract information to write a report, but they used this to design the workshop for NRDN to work through the strategic issues and responses. The consultants also showed the importance of holding back from becoming too directive and ensuring that control remained with the NRDN. The intervention recognised the long-term nature of organisational change and did not expect that a one-off workshop would solve all NRDN’s problems. Extensive follow-up was given. This follow-up used a mixture of other capacity-building methodologies such as training, highlighting the benefit of a multi-pronged approach to organizational change. The diagnostic process enabled the consultants to gain an in-depth understanding of the key issues which NRDN needed to address and undoubtedly helped them facilitate the workshop appropriately and manage the initial adverse reactions of the leadership. The intervention shows the importance of ensuring that the leadership is fully involved in the process, not just consenting to it. If the director had not been given such one-to-one counseling support, she may well have derailed the entire process.

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Journey of Open Systems Change Theory

The Change Handbook – Group Methods for Shaping the Future

Edited by Peggy Holman + Tom Devane 1999 Berrett-Koehler Publishers Inc

Open Systems Change Theory includes a range of change methods that are based on two foundation assumptions:

• high involvement • a systematic approach to improvement

These ‘high leverage’ change methods can help you initiate sustainable improvements in your organisation or community. Note the emphasis on high leverage’. In any improvement effort we want the highest possible value for the effort invested. Moving people in a systematic way is the key to high leverage. As a OD facilitator you will need to determine which methods will be best suited to help move the organisation forward Open Systems can be applied to OD processes and OD has been influenced by such thinking. The Change Handbook gives an overview of these approaches and a useful matrix which highlights: Purpose/Outcomes, Process, Number of Participants, Typical Duration, Brief Example, When to use it, When not to use it, Impact on Cultural Assumptions, Creator, Date Created, Historic Context. Eighteen methods are described and these include:

Method Purpose/Outcome Process

Future Search

To evolve a common ground future for an organisation and to develop self managed plans to move towards it

Riding the Roller Coaster Review the past Mind map the present Ideal futures Common Futures Action

Appreciative Inquiry

Using interviews that encourage appreciative participation. Tapping into the organisations positive core and inspires collaborative action.

Discovery –“What gives life” (the best of what is) APPRECIATING Dream “What might be” (What the world is calling for) ENVISIONING IMPACT Design “What should be – the ideal?” CO-CONSTRUCTING Destiny “How to empower, learn, and adjust/improve?” SUSTAINING

Search Conference

To create a well-articulated desirable, achievable future with action plans for implementation within a defined timetable by a community of people who want to and know how to do it

Segments Environment understanding and analysis Systems understanding and analysis Integration of the System + Environment Active Adaptive Process Diffusion (post Search Conference)

Tasks Changes outside the system Historic Events Present System Desirable future Constraints Action Plans Participative Design Workshop Growth

Market Place Open Space To enable high levels of group interaction and productivity, providing a basis for enhanced organisational function over time.

The four principles The Law of

Two Feet

Who ever comes is the right person What ever happens is the only thing that could have Whenever it starts is the right time When it is over it is over.

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Metaphors – Proverbs – Quotes - Poems Metaphors, proverbs, quotes and poems can be used in creative ways in Organisational Development to illustrate, emphasise or clarify a particular activity or phase of activities. They can be short and beautifully

simple analogies for illustrating aspects of causes or dealing with change apeoples responses to it. OD practices can benefit from weaving into the ‘Society Culture’ making links with the traditions, heritage and knowthe specific country. Metaphors and proverbs can also transend country boundaries and can unite and motivate the OD practitioner and organisation in their common goal of organisational change. Researchneeds to be done with national colleagues to seek out appropriate and to check mutual understanding and interpretion.

nd

ledge of

To illustrate this approach a selection of metaphors, proverbs, quotes and poems are listed and some sources for further ideas (in Participants Handbook). In addition a range of materials are laminated and in the course box, to be used at the trainers discretion. It may be useful in presenting a transition of approaches by using quotes in the first part of the course and proverbs as the course progresses. Metaphors An expression which describes a person or object in a literary way by referring to something that is considered to possess similar characteristics to the person or object you are trying to describe. Proverbs / Proverbial Stories A story or saying known by many people stating something commonly experienced or giving advice

• Aesops Fables – Phrygian slave collected 300 fables in 6th centruy BC. • Zen stories – Japanese philosophy: a form of buddhism which developed in Japan. • Bible - Parables – proverbial stories.

Quotes A fact or example referenced in order to add emphasis to what you are saying. Poems The art of rhythmical composition, written or spoken, for exciting pleasure by beautiful, imaginative, or elevated thoughts. Riddles A type of question which describes something in a difficult and confusing way, and which has a clever or amusing answer, often asked as a game.

Sources: Aesops Fables: (Alan Chapman 2001-4) www.businessballs.comPoetry: www.cdra.za

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page 2 of 4 Metaphors

Setting up a support network “palm trees drop coconuts and float to other islands where they grow forests” Vanuatu.

Strategic Planning Boat and island imagery throughout Strategic Planning workshops - Phillipines.

Systematic Planning Stepping Stones for phases of OD – VSO OD workshop. Proverbs / Proverbial Stories Aesop’s Fables (relating to organisatinal change) Aesop's Fables date from the 6th century BC. Aesop was supposedly a Phrygian slave, and met his end when thrown over a cliff at Delphi for being ugly and deformed. Whatever the story of Aesop, the fables that bear his name (Aesop collected the fables, he didn't write them) contain timeless lessons. Aesop's Fables also gave rise to and reflect many of today's expressions and cliches. Aesop's Fables total more than 300. Here are the best of Aesop's Fables. The Crow and the Pitcher. (Necessity is the mother of invention.) A thirsty crow found a pitcher containing some water, albeit too little and low to reach. As it seemed she would die within sight of the remedy, the crow struck upon an idea to drop pebbles into the pitcher. The water level rose and the crow was able to drink. The North Wind and the Sun. (Persuasion is better than force.) The north wind and the sun argued which was the stronger. On seeing a traveler they agreed a suitable test would be to strip him of his cloak. First the wind blew with all his might, but the more he blew, the more than man wrapped the cloak tightly around himself. When the sun's turn came, he gently beamed at the man, who loosened the cloak. The sun shone brighter still, and the man threw off his cloak. The Lion and the Ass. (Enforced change might is right.) A lion and an ass went hunting and agreed that the ass would run down the prey and the lion would kill it, which worked as planned. The lion divided the carcass into three and announced, "I will take the first portion because I am king of the beasts; the second is my half of what remains, and the third you'll give to me or you'll be sorry." The Crab and his Mother. (Lead by example and evidence - or you'll not change people.) A mother crab criticised her son for walking sideways, whereupon the son asked his mother to show him how to walk straight. Of course the mother crab was unable to walk any straighter than her son, and soon apologised for criticising what she herself was guilty of too. The miller, his Son and the Ass. (No single change is likely to please everyone - everyone wants something different.) A miller and his son were taking their ass to sell at market, when they passed a group of girls, who laughed at how foolish the miller was to have an ass and yet be walking. So the miller put his son on the ass. Further down the road they passed some old people who scolded the miller for allowing his young son to ride, when he should be riding himself. So the miller removed his son and mounted the ass himself. Further along the road, they passed some travelers who said that if he wanted to sell the ass the two of them should carry him or he'd be exhausted and worthless. So the miller and his son bound the ass's legs to a pole and carried him. When they approached the town the people laughed at the sight of them, so loud that the noise frightened the ass, who kicked out and fell off a bridge into the river and drowned. The embarrassed miller and son went home with nothing, save the lesson that you will achieve nothing by trying to please everyone.

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page 3 of 4 The Oak and the Reeds. (The need for tolerance - changer or 'changes'.) A mighty oak tree was uprooted by a gale and fell across a stream into some reeds. "How have you reeds, so frail, survived, when I, so strong, have been felled?" asked the oak tree. "You were stubborn and wouldn't bend," replied the reeds, "whereas we yield and allow the gale to pass harmlessly by." The Rich Man and the Tanner. (Time softens change - given time people get used to things.) A rich man moved nearby a tanner and soon found the smell of the tannery so bad that he asked the tanner to relocate his business. The rich man repeated his demands for a while, but the tanner delayed and procrastinated so long that eventually the rich man became used to the smell and never mentioned it again. The Ass and the Mule. (Agree to reasonable change now or you can risk far worse enforced change in the future.) A man loaded his ass and his mule for a journey, but after traveling for a while the ass began to weaken, so he asked the stronger mule to carry some of his load. The mule refused, and in due course the ass collapsed and died. The mule was then forced to carry the ass's load, and also the skin of the poor ass. The mule could only just manage the painful load, and realised his failure to help a little at first had caused a much greater suffering to himself. Africa

Strategic Planning “You can’t eat an elephant in one bite.” “Here delicious things, there delicious things, the monkey end up falling flat on his back.” Malawi. “Bad things do not beat a drum to say they are coming so be prepared.” Malawi. “Walk quietly but carry a big stick”. Organisational Change “If you want to change someone you must start at the heart.” Malawi. Team work “One finger does not squash a tick.” Malawi. Learning “How can we teach people to fish when we don’t know how to fish ourselves?” Conflict “If you have a disagreement with your father, you go and talk to your mother who will talk to your father.” Asian

Zen Stories "The Nightingale does not resent the Cuckoo's simple song. But you, if I don't sing like you, tell me that I am wrong." "If you want to understand, you don't understand. If you attain don't-know, that is your true nature." "If you are attached to words and speech, you won't understand a melon's taste; you will only understand it’s outside form. If you want to understand a melon's taste, then cut a piece and put it in your mouth."

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page 4 of 4 Chinese

Culture hides more than it reveals and, strangely enough, what it hides, it hides most effectively from its own participants. “The fish is the last one to discover the sea."

The effect of supporting organisations to develop themselves – capacity building. “Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime."

You have to be courageous if you're going to be an agent for change. You've just got to be tenacious and stick with it and really believe in what you're doing, otherwise the road is going to be even tougher. "If we don't change our direction, we are likely to end up where we are headed." “Falling down seven times, but standing up eight times.” "Better go home and make a net, rather than dive for fish at random." Indonesian

'Different fields, different grasshoppers' in Indonesian = 'Horses for courses' in English Quotes ‘‘prescriptions without diagnosis is malpractice whether in medicine or management’ Albrecht Poems - To an English Friend in Africa

Be grateful for freedom To see other dreams. Bless your loneliness as much as you drank Of your former companionships. All that you are experiencing now Will become moods of future joys So bless it all. Do not think your ways superior To another's Do not venture to judge But see things with fresh and open eyes Do not condemn But praise what you can And when you can't be silent. Ben Ochri 1991 Riddles – Gender

One day, a father and son go for a drive. Their car is hit by a truck. The father is killed and the son is taken to hospital. When the son is wheeled into the emergency room, one of the doctors gasps, shouting, 'Oh my God, that's my son!' How could that be?

‘Early OD emphasised destination, current practice seems to be more concerned with good seamanship and keeping the craft buoyant and picking a course between many hazards’. McLean.

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Learning Log

What aspect of the course did you find very useful? From your placement document, what tools do you think might be useful in your placement? Which areas would you like more support in Pre-departure/In-country?

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