General Model of Planned Change

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The world is constantly changing in many different ways. Whether it is technological or cultural change is present and inevitable. Organizations are not exempt from change. As a matter of fact, organizations have to change with the world and society in order to be successful. Organizations have to constantly incorporate change in order to have a competitive advantage and satisfy their customers. Organizations use change in order to learn and grow. However, change is not something that can happen in an organization overnight. It has to be thought through and planned. The General Model of Planned Change focuses on what processes are used by the organization to implement change. In the General Model of Planned Change, four steps are used in order to complete the process of change. Entering and Contracting, Diagnosing, Planning and Implementing, and Evaluating and Institutionalizing are the four steps used in order to complete the process of change in an organization. The diagnostic process is one of the most important activities in OD(Cummings, 2009, p. 30).

Diagnosing

Diagnosis allows an organization to examine the way it is currently functioning and find potential ways to improve. Diagnosing an organization does not mean that there is something wrong. Improvements can always be made to processes and procedures in order to make things run better. The diagnostic process enables the organization to come up with different intervention plans. These plans can be used to improve the way that the organization currently functioning. “Organizational diagnosis plays a critical role in organizational change initiatives in terms of both choosing appropriate interventions and contributing to readiness-to-change within an organ...

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...Works Cited

Cummings, T. G. (2008). Organizational Development Diagnosis. Handbook of organization development (pp. 137-147). Los Angeles: SAGE Publications.

Cummings, T. G., & Worley, C. G. (2009). Organization development & change (9th ed.). Australia: South-Western/Cengage Learning.

Hassin, A. (2010). Effective Diagnosis in Organisation Change Management. Journal of Business Systems, Governance & Ethics, 5(2), 23-29. Retrieved March 12, 2014, from the Business Source Complete database.

Janićijević, N. (2010). Business processes in organizational diagnosis. Journal of Contemporary Management Issues, 15(2), 85-106. Retrieved March 12, 2014, from the OAIster database.

McFillen, J. (2013). Organizational Diagnosis: An Evidence-based Approach. . Journal of Change Management, 13(2), 223-246. Retrieved March 12, 2014, from the Business Source Complete database.

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