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Business Question

Description

Please refer to the case study titled Kenworth Motorsgiven Chapter 9 in your textbook and answer the following questio

:

  • 0% Plagiarism
  • 0% Plagiarism

    • 0% Plagiarism

      • You must include at least 5 references.
      • Format your references using APA style.

      234

      THE PROCESS OF ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENT

      KENWORTH MOTORS*

      t began with a telephone call, as did so many
      of my engagements. The person calling identified himself as Robert Denton, the plant
      manager of Kenworth Motors’ Seattle truck
      manufacturing operations. Denton said he’d gotten my name from Charles Wright, a client of
      mine in Seattle. Charlie is the OD manager for
      a major timber products company. I’d been
      doing several projects with Charlie’s group of
      internal consultants for the past three years
      and occasionally served as the OD group’s consultant. Denton noted that Charlie and he were
      members of the same sailing club. He went on
      to say that when, as someone relatively new to
      Seattle, he’d asked Charlie if he knew any consultants, Charlie had spoken highly of me.
      I remember thinking that Charlie probably
      wouldn’t have mentioned me unless he thought
      I could be useful to Denton. My trust in Charlie’s
      competence and judgment was very high.
      Denton went on to explain that he’d been
      the plant manager for only eight months, that
      things seemed to be going well, but that he
      had a gnawing sense that things could be better. I must have murmured something appropriate because Denton invited me to visit him and
      become acquainted with his operation.
      I was both flattered by and interested in
      Denton’s invitation. After all, I thought to
      myself, it’s nice to be wanted, a consulting
      engagement might come out of it, I always
      wanted to get behind the gate of the Kenworth
      plant, and Denton sounded like a basically
      smart guy and nice besides. However, reality
      intruded into my thoughts, as it often does.

      THOUGHTS ON THE ROAD
      I reminded Denton that I lived across the state
      in Spokane and added that I had limited time
      available in the short run. I noted that I had
      plans to visit Seattle in three weeks and could
      see him then, otherwise it might not be for a
      month. Denton sounded almost eager as he
      agreed to a 10 A.M. appointment on April 11.

      *Craig C. Lundberg, Cornell University.

      The drive westward from Spokane across
      the state of Washington on Interstate 90 begins
      with several hours of boring highway. I had purposely put off thinking about my appointment
      with Robert Denton until I was on the road. As
      the interstate stretched out over the rolling sagebrush hills and checkered wheat fields, I turned
      my thoughts to Kenworth Motors and Denton.
      Uppermost in my mind was that I was about to
      talk with a man I knew little about, consult with a
      firm I knew very little about, and I had no
      focused agenda. What should I say and do?
      As the miles went by, I envisioned several
      alternative scenarios for my upcoming appointment with Robert Denton, the plant manager of
      the truck manufacturing division of Kenworth
      Motors Corporation. I saw his office in several
      possible ways. It could be spartan and centrally
      located to the production floor. It could be conventionally furnished but of a fair size. It could
      be large. It might even be opulent. It could be
      personalized with mementos of career, hobbies, or family. It might be far from the production floor, or even in a separate building. The
      more I tried to envision Denton’s office, the
      more alternatives came to mind. So I focused
      on Denton, trying to imagine him from the
      voice cues on the telephone—not old, probably
      fit, probably clean shaven. Again the futility of
      trying to imagine came home to me.
      What did I think I knew? I didn’t know much
      beyond a handful of facts about his title and his
      job tenure, the fact that he knew Charlie,
      believed things were generally going OK at the
      plant, and had some vague notion something
      wasn’t quite right. I also had the distinct impression he had been fairly eager to talk with me—
      after all, he’d initiated calling me and had quickly
      settled for an appointment convenient to me.
      What did I really want to accomplish when
      I met with Denton? The more I considered this
      question, the more I pared down my answers.
      At minimum, it seemed for me a low-cost
      situation—a couple of hours of my time, perhaps some impressions of me that would be
      communicated to Charlie (though I believed
      Charlie and I had a relationship of mutual

      Selected Cases

      I

      PART 2

      SELECTED CASES

      respect and trust based on a lot of shared work).
      On the other hand, there was potentially a lot to
      gain—perhaps another consulting job, perhaps
      more visibility and reputation in Seattle, which
      would be good for my business.
      I decided I couldn’t plan for our meeting in
      much detail; about all I could reasonably do was to
      be true to the posture I found to be useful in situations like this. I had to be myself, be as real as possible. I see myself as a curious, friendly person who
      basically likes others. I also know I can be bold and
      thought I might have to be to get the conversation
      going, to help Denton become clear as to why we
      were talking together, and to clarify my role.
      I also wanted to leave our meeting with a decision to either go forward or not. While I didn’t mind
      investing a little time, my time was valuable. I also
      felt strongly, as I always do, that I didn’t want to
      work with anyone who I didn’t basically like as a
      person or who didn’t seem to genuinely want to
      do some real work. Seeing the Cascade mountains
      on the horizon, I began to feel easier. I’d be myself,
      whatever happened. Only one question nagged:
      Could Denton and I connect swiftly enough so
      there would be time to push for clarity in our possible work relationship?

      MAKING CONTACT
      At the Kenworth plant, the uniformed guard at the
      plant gate checked his clipboard, slipped around
      my car, and copied down my license plate number.
      Returning to my open window, he pointed ahead
      to a one-story brick building attached to the multistoried plant and told me I could park in the space
      in front and then go inside and identify myself to
      the receptionist.
      The floor of the wide hallway inside the double
      glass doors of the office building was freshly
      waxed. Framed photographs of trucks and large
      buildings lined the walls. A middle-aged woman
      in a suit looked up from her desk and smiled.
      After I identified myself, she led me down a side
      corridor to an alcove and informed the secretary
      there who I was and that I was there to see
      Mr. Denton. She then turned to me, smiled again,
      and wished me a good day. The seated secretary
      told me Mr. Denton was expecting me, but was on
      the telephone. She gestured toward a bank of chairs
      and asked me to wait. As I sat down, I observed

      235

      the corridor traffic, busy but quiet. I settled back to
      wait.
      About ten minutes later, a man of medium
      height and build wearing a sports jacket over an
      open-collared shirt came through the door behind
      the secretary and walked directly to me. He
      extended his hand, smiled, introduced himself as
      Bob Denton and motioned me into his office.
      The office was larger than I expected. It was
      paneled and a large Persian rug was centered on
      the floor. At one end were a clean desk with side
      chairs and a table full of papers behind it. At the
      other side of the office were a couch and two
      stuffed chairs around a low coffee table. Drapes
      framed one large window that looked out on the
      parking lot. Denton asked if I wanted coffee, and I
      said I did. He went to the door and asked the secretary to bring us both coffee and added we were not
      to be disturbed. While waiting for the coffee, we sat
      on the two stuffed chairs and made small talk. He
      asked about my drive across the state; I asked
      about the framed sailing prints on the wall and
      whether he’d been sailing lately. We chatted about
      the Sonics, the Kingdome, and the coming World’s
      Fair in Vancouver. After our coffee arrived, I asked
      him to tell me about his plant and products.
      Denton spoke excitedly for 10 or 12 minutes on
      a wide range of topics—the daily production rate of
      23 trucks, the cost of a truck, the sales order backlog, some equipment updating just finished, his
      coming to this job from a plant in the Midwest, his
      spending a lot of time lately with the next year’s
      budget, and so forth. My impression of Denton
      was that he was highly involved in his work. He
      spoke rapidly but clearly with enthusiasm. Finally,
      he leaned back, smiled, and said, “Well, I’ve been
      going on, haven’t I?” I remember thinking I liked
      Denton’s ease and his willingness to talk about his
      plant and himself. I’d already learned a lot about the
      plant and his job without more than looking interested. Denton certainly did seem likable, and he
      was younger and more casual than I expected.

      GETTING DOWN TO BUSINESS
      I clearly recall my response to Denton’s question.
      “Actually, I’ve appreciated your sharing all this
      background with me. I’ve always been curious
      about this plant. Years ago, I had a part-time job
      when I was in college and used to deliver some

      236

      PART 2

      THE PROCESS OF ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENT

      industrial supplies in this end of town and always
      wanted to know what happened in this plant. All I
      could see from the road were those lines of big
      shiny trucks. It’s nice to know they’re built with
      care. But you asked for this meeting, Bob.
      Remember you told me that while things were
      going well here you sensed something wasn’t
      quite right. Can you tell me a little more now?”
      “Not really. I know the plant is doing fine. I feel
      pretty much on top of my job. I like what I’m doing
      here very much. My department heads—all nine of
      them—are all good people. All but two have been
      here quite a while. They’re dependable, damn
      good at what they do, get along fine, and basically
      are good managers,” he said.
      “I get along good with everyone. I go out in
      the plant every day and circulate around. Things
      are moving smoothly. My two newer managers—
      one runs our purchasing and inventory, the other is
      in personnel—couldn’t be working out better. Yet
      some things nag at me that I can’t put my finger
      on. I guess it boils down to some crazy notion I
      have that while we get along fine and work
      together well, we haven’t jelled together as a
      team quite like I’d hoped.”
      I bombarded Denton with questions, trying to
      find something that didn’t hang together or might
      indicate a problem. No matter what I asked
      about—from union relations to accounts receivable,
      from engineering-production relations to turnover
      figures—Denton’s responses were consistently factual and full, and everything seemed to be in
      remarkably good shape.
      I caught myself from going on with more questions. Instead I said, “Bob, everything I’ve been
      asking about tells me you’re OK. Maybe things
      here really are OK. Maybe you’ve just got some
      apprehension that things couldn’t be that good.
      After all, you’ve been here long enough to really
      know. While there is some chance that you’re
      not well informed, and some things aren’t so hot,
      the odds are against it. About all I can suggest is
      whether you might want someone like me to independently confirm how things are going.” Denton
      smiled as if to himself and replied, “Hmm, maybe,
      what would you suggest?”
      “What’s usually done in situations like this, if
      there is the interest and if there is the money to
      pay for it, is to engage someone like me to spend a

      few days interviewing a sample of managers and
      other key staff people to see what might turn up.”
      “From what you’ve heard so far, do you think
      that makes sense here?” Denton asked.
      “Frankly, I don’t know. It might be worth it to
      you just to learn things really are OK. What usually
      happens, however, is that I do find out about something that could be improved. After all that’s what
      I’m supposed to be good at, finding problems. One
      way or another, Bob, the mere fact I was here
      would have some impact. The word would spread
      pretty fast that some outsider was snooping
      around. What impact that might have I can’t say. If
      things really are OK, my presence might mean little.
      If there are real problems, my being here would
      probably create some tensions, it could raise expectations that something would be done about them,
      and it could even cause problems.”
      Denton nodded, “I see what you mean. If you
      came in, it would cost me some bucks, it would
      have some risks in how my people reacted; one
      way or another I’d have to do something.” He
      paused and then went on. “Well, to tell the truth,
      I don’t want to upset things if they’re OK, but just
      finding out whether they are or not appeals to me.
      Isn’t there some other way to do this?”
      Bob Denton seemed to me to be open to some
      minimal work by me. He’d responded as I’d hoped
      to my candidness about the risks of some conventional diagnostic snooping. He’d really seemed to
      pay attention to what I’d said, and I was beginning
      to like him and was intrigued with the situation. At
      times like this, my thought processes seem to jump
      into high gear. After all, a careful response was
      called for and there were a number of considerations to factor in. The things I recall noting to myself
      went like this: apparently some minimal motivation
      on Bob’s part; my real lack of information about the
      Kenworth situation; my own schedule for the coming months—which was pretty full; my intuition that
      probably nothing major was wrong with Bob and his
      managers; and that whatever I proposed had to be
      of modest cost.

      LET’S HAVE A RETREAT
      I said to Bob: “Let me sketch out one idea that
      comes to mind. We could do a modest retreat.
      You, your department managers, and I could
      meet away from here for a couple of days, say

      SELECTED CASES

      on a weekend, to jointly explore how things are
      going. At minimum, I see several probable outcomes from such a meeting: everyone would get
      somewhat better acquainted with one another;
      we’d know better if there were serious issues to
      tackle; we’d have the experience of jointly going
      through problem identification; and you’d get a
      sense of whether or not your team was open to
      working with an outsider like myself.”
      I paused and went on: “Such a meeting would
      be relatively efficient. It wouldn’t take time away
      from work, and it wouldn’t cost an arm and a
      leg.” Bob nodded, sipped his coffee and looked
      at me intently. “OK,” he said, “I can see your
      points. Just what would we be doing?”
      Seeing Bob’s interest as well as warming to
      the idea myself, I went on to outline a retreat. I
      suggested doing it at a country club or lodge within
      a few hours’ drive of Seattle. This setting was to
      provide a symbolic break from the customary business environment, and because it would cost
      everyone weekend time and the company the
      expense of travel, food, and lodging, it would
      show Bob’s seriousness about the event. I then
      suggested we begin with cocktails and dinner on
      a Friday evening, work all day Saturday with appropriate breaks, and conclude by noon Sunday.
      Again, Bob nodded. He then asked, “But what
      would we do? What would you charge?”
      I did some quick calculations and responded,
      “As for my fee, I’d have to bill you for a minimum
      of three days at my daily rate of $___ per day, and
      travel expenses—assuming Kenworth would

      237

      provide food and lodging. As for what we’d actually
      do, that’s more difficult to say exactly. Frankly, while
      I have several ways to get us started, I’d need to
      play it by ear. In general, it would be my responsibility to see we talked straight and a lot with one
      another to surface our concerns both big and
      small. I’m afraid you’d have to trust me on this.”
      I said this last couple of sentences with some trepidation, knowing from my experience that most
      managers would want much more clarity, but
      I needed to know how Bob was viewing me.
      I was surprised at what happened next. Denton
      quickly agreed to have a retreat weekend as I’d
      outlined. We also selected a weekend a monthand-a-half away. He would find a site and let
      me know. In addition, we agreed he would use
      the phrase “a communications workshop” when
      he informed participants. Glancing at my watch as
      I left Denton’s office, I saw it was just 11:30.

      Questions
      1. How well did the OD consultant prepare for
      the meeting with Denton? Would you have
      done anything differently?
      2. In the discussion between the OD consultant
      and Denton, what was effective and ineffective about the consultant’s behavior?
      3. How effective was the contracting process
      described in the last part of the case? What is
      the scope and clarity of the agreement?
      4. How would you design the upcoming retreat?

      ‫المملكة العربية السعودية‬
      ‫وزارة التعليم‬
      ‫الجامعة السعودية اإللكترونية‬

      Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
      Ministry of Education
      Saudi Electronic University

      College of Administrative and Financial Sciences

      Assignment 2
      Organization Design and Development (MGT 404)
      Due Date: 22/03/2025 @ 23:59
      Course Name:

      Student’s Name:

      Course Code: MGT404

      Student’s ID Number:

      Semester: Second

      CRN:
      Academic Year:2024-25-2nd

      For Instructor’s Use only
      Instructor’s Name:
      Students’ Grade:
      Marks Obtained/Out of 10

      Level of Marks: High/Middle/Low

      General Instructions – PLEASE READ THEM CAREFULLY







      Restricted – ‫مقيد‬

      The Assignment must be submitted on Blackboard (WORD format only) via allocated
      folder.
      Assignments submitted through email will not be accepted.
      Students are advised to make their work clear and well presented, marks may be reduced
      for poor presentation. This includes filling your information on the cover page.
      Students must mention question number clearly in their answer.
      Late submission will NOT be accepted.
      Avoid plagiarism, the work should be in your own words, copying from students or other
      resources without proper referencing will result in ZERO marks. No exceptions.
      All answered must be typed using Times New Roman (size 12, double-spaced) font. No
      pictures containing text will be accepted and will be considered plagiarism).
      Submissions without this cover page will NOT be accepted.

      Learning Outcomes:
      1. Describe the basic steps of the organizational development process.
      2. Evaluate the strategic role of change in the organization and its impact on
      organizational performance.

      Assignment Question(s):
      Please refer to the case study titled “Kenworth Motors” given Chapter 9 in your textbook
      and answer the following questions:
      1. What were the primary organizational challenges Kenworth Motors faced that led
      them to initiate a change process? (2 marks)
      2. What diagnostic tools were used to collect data on the organizational issues at
      Kenworth Motors? How did the data inform the intervention process? (3 marks)
      3. Explain how employee involvement was encouraged in the change process at
      Kenworth Motors. What impact did this have on the success of the intervention? (2
      marks)
      4. How did Kenworth Motors address resistance to change among its employees?
      What strategies were implemented to minimize resistance? (3 marks)

      Note:

      Restricted – ‫مقيد‬

      You must include at least 5 references.
      Format your references using APA style.

      Answers
      1. Answer2. Answer3. Answer-

      Restricted – ‫مقيد‬

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