WEEK 3: INDIVIDUAL COURSE PROJECT: ORGANIZATION SURVEY

  • Organization survey: Questionnaires can be created that probe for areas in which systems, structures, or processes are not functioning as intended. They can be used to look toward group, departmental, or individual issues. (Submit your survey to be used for gathering data by the end of Week 3—80 points.)Potential questions include the following.
    Questionnaire Questions

    1. I am involved in decisions that directly affect my job.
    2. My supervisor communicates with me on a regular basis.
    3. I clearly understand what is expected of me.
    4. I am rewarded for good performance.
    5. My opinion has been asked regarding what needs to change in my work area.
    6. I understand why the decisions that affect my job are made.
    7. My supervisor gives me information that is important to me.
    8. I have the skills necessary to perform my job properly.
    9. I am rewarded for working well with others.
    10. I receive frequent feedback on my performance.
    11. I believe the information that I receive from my supervisor.
    12. I have the tools necessary to perform my job properly.
    13. My job leaves me with a sense of accomplishment.
    14. I understand the information that I receive from my organization.
    15. I am encouraged to make decisions that affect my job.
    16. I am encouraged to communicate with my supervisor.
    17. Team goals are supported throughout my organization.
    18. My organization treats all employees well.
    19. I have the information necessary to make decisions that affect my job.
    20. I am encouraged to communicate with others.
    21. The feedback that I receive is directly related to my job performance.
    22. My organization treats all employees fairly.
    23. My supervisor allows me to communicate my thoughts without fear of reprisal.
    24. The feedback that I receive is constructive in nature.
    25. My organization is interested in the growth and development of its employees.
    26. I believe the information that I receive from my organization.
  • Observations: Individuals can be observed on the job, and their interactions and activities can be noted for further analysis. Observations can include the following.
  • Interviews: Interviews can be conducted in person or via a distributed questionnaire that probes for areas where performance may be improved. Potential interview questions include the following.
    1. What do you think the most important part of your job is? What is least important?
    2. What would you like to learn to make your job easier or better? What are the programs, processes, or resources available for you to learn from?
    3. How have you developed the skills that you have?
    4. Who brings problems to you and what kind of problems are they? How do you usually solve them? Whom do you ask for help?
    5. What do you find most frustrating about your job?
    6. What would you like to be spending your time doing? What would need to happen to let you do that?

It is up to you to determine the methodology to be used in conducting the assessment. Considerations should include the willingness of the organization and its employees to provide information, the availability of information from the organization to be studied, and the availability of individuals in the organization to be interviewed and observed.

The nature of the needs analysis, of course, also should be based on the type of assessment desired. Given the broad coverage of the course, assessment may include, but would not be limited to, the following.

  1. Group processes and group effectiveness
  2. Departmental effectiveness
  3. Decision-making process effectiveness
  4. Individual skills development
  5. Group skills development
  6. Career development

 

Submit your organization survey that will be used to conduct your needs assessment. See the Organization Survey document (Links to an external site.).

See the Individual Course Project Overview page in Introduction & Resources for more details and the Grading Rubric.

Remember to submit your assignment for grading when finished.

CHANGE MANAGEMENT AND IMPLEMENTATION

CHANGE MANAGEMENT AND IMPLEMENTATION

Introduction:

This case study introduces a new human resources director, who is responsible for developing a more strategic human resources function. As she begins in the role and starts to implement changes, she is facing many challenges and much resistance. The case study showcases the need for strong communication and change management when introducing both small and large changes within an organization. It also deepens the understanding of change management, the implementation process, and the behaviors and organizational factors required for success.

Case Study:

The Grant Corporation is a financial services firm based in Chicago, Illinois. Its revenue exceeded $1 billion last year, producing a net income of $530 million. It has just over 1,000 employees. Although the organization has been in business for almost 10 years, it has experienced rapid expansion in the past two years due to tremendous business growth and a merger with the Enelrad Group, another local firm. Managers have had difficulty keeping up with this growth, especially in the HR department, which has been stretched thin to keep up with staffing needs and other, mainly administrative, duties.

Six months ago, the CEO, Todd Jackson, recognized the need to expand the size and functionality of the HR department and hired Julia Woodland to be its director, reporting directly to him. This was a newly created position, and its incumbent would replace the HR administrator, who had previously reported to the VP of Finance and who decided to retire when the new HR position was announced.

When Woodland was hired, Jackson told her that she would have “full reign” to create a more strategically focused HR department that would be better equipped to handle the organization’s needs. She had quite a bit of experience at her previous company and was eager to take on the task.

Although the organization used advanced technology for its business applications, HR was still using a basic payroll processing software program and Excel spreadsheets to track various categories of employee information, including personal data, benefits enrollments, performance evaluation schedules, and compensation. All payroll and benefit information was manually entered into these respective systems, and much of the information had to be entered into multiple spreadsheets when there was a change. The department could not keep up with the information needs—new hires were getting paid incorrectly, or not at all. Benefits enrollments were delayed or contained mistakes, and performance evaluations and pay raises were late. The printed employee handbook, benefits binder, and orientation materials were in serious need of updating. In addition, the company had 16 open positions and stacks of resumes everywhere. It was no wonder that the HR administrator had decided to retire!

Julia Woodland spent long hours trying to determine what she could do to address the immediate and long-term concerns of her new department. She brought in a temporary employee to help her staff file, process paperwork, and enter data. She focused on hiring two higher-level HR representatives and a payroll clerk. She turned to a staffing agency to help the firm identify candidates for open positions, including those in HR. Finally, she proposed the purchase of an integrated payroll/HRIS that was capable of integrating with the finance department’s system as well as with the organization’s benefit and 401(k) providers’ systems. The proposed software solution also offered the option of a Web-based employee portal, which would allow employees to view information online and change their personal data. Jackson responded favorably and told her to “go ahead and do whatever she needed to do to fix the mess.” The next day, Woodland contracted with the HRIS provider.

Woodland spent the next week meeting with her new HRIS vendor representative to discuss the installation and implementation of the system. Because she was so overwhelmed and wanted to get the new system in as quickly as possible, she didn’t have time to discuss the project with her staff right away, but she knew that employees would be excited about the new system and the opportunities it would open up for them as the burden of administrative tasks eased. She closed her door during the meetings, so participants could concentrate. She wanted to be able to implement the system by January 1, so that the company’s year-end payroll data were accurate and managers could track other data on an annual basis with a full year of data. Since she had been through the process in the past and was familiar with such systems, she figured that she could manage the implementation with the help of IT and her staff as needed. She would make all key decisions to move the project along and meet her deadline.

The current HR staff consisted of an HR assistant and two generalists who seemed to function as clerks and recruiters. They had all been hired at the same time more than five years ago, when the HR administrator was the sole member of the department. They were very proud of how they had worked so hard together to build HR and keep up with the increasing demand. They were just getting used to working with Woodland but thought that she was very nice and had high hopes for the improvements and new strategic focus that she would help them implement. Day by day, the staff watched the vendor representative come and go, along with a parade of candidates sent over by the staffing agency to apply for the new HR positions. They soon began to wonder about all the changes that their new boss was making and what these changes would mean for them. They started making assumptions that had them very concerned.

Woodland contacted the IT director to tell him about the project. He expressed concern over the ability of the server to handle the new system and wondered how they would address firewall issues with the portal. Furthermore, all his staff members were tied up with a critical upgrade to the customer service system, which had caused more than its share of problems. He demanded to know why he and his staff had not been involved sooner and told her that it would be unlikely that they would be able to participate in the implementation or help her meet her deadline. Upset, she called Todd Jackson, who advised her not to worry about it—he would tell them to get it done.

When she contacted Finance to obtain information that the HRIS vendor needed to link the HRIS to that department’s system, the finance manager was more than willing to help—but she did not know where to get the system information from and did not understand how the information would flow from one system to another. She asked why they couldn’t just keep the systems separate and enter the necessary data into the finance system from reports provided by HR. “That’s the way we’ve always done it,” she said. “It doesn’t take long, and it will be much simpler that way.”

In the meantime, morale was declining in HR. Whenever Woodland asked HR employees for information about payroll or their Excel spreadsheets, they seemed uneasy and never provided her with exactly what she was looking for. She didn’t understand their antiquated forms or their backward processes but decided she could fix those after the new system was in. Also, it felt like the rest of the company was suddenly treating her differently.

They had all made her feel so welcome six months ago when she came on board. Now, employees approached her with caution, and managers always seemed abrupt.

Julia Woodland began to wonder if this was the right role for her. Why were things so difficult? She thought that everyone would be thrilled about the new system and its efficiencies and would be eager to help. Was it her problem or theirs?

She thought that perhaps people didn’t realize the impact she was making in the organization. She decided to make an announcement about the exciting new system that would help make things more effective and efficient in HR and help the employees simplify their lives as well. She sent out a company-wide e-mail announcing the new payroll/HRIS and outlining its ability to interface with other systems and its Web-portal capabilities. To her disappointment, no one seemed to understand the significance or even pay attention. A few employees asked her if their paychecks would be delayed as a result.

She wondered how she would ever get through this project and what she needed to do to get everyone on board.

Case Study Questions:

  1. Overall, what did Julia Woodland do right? What could she have done differently?
  2. Were the correct people involved in the process? Whom would you have included and why?
  3. What errors did Woodland make with her own staff? What impact might these errors have had on the success of the implementation? What should have been done?
  4. Discuss the cultural issues involved in this case. Are there things Julia Woodland should have taken into consideration prior to starting the implementation? Why are they important?
  5. If you were in Julia Woodland’s position, what would you include in your communication plan for the implementation?
  6. How can training be used in this case to make the implementation more successful?
  7. How can the Grant Corporation increase user acceptance of the system?
  8. Discuss the potential benefits of process reengineering in this implementation. What impact might it have had?
  9. After the implementation, what steps should the HR department take to ensure proper maintenance and support of the system?
  10. What can Julia Woodland do now to “get everyone on board” and increase the likelihood that this implementation will be successful?

GRADING RUBRIC

Category

Points

Description

Understanding

35

Demonstrated a strong grasp of the problem at hand. Demonstrated understanding of how the course concepts apply to the problem.

Analysis

35

Applied original thought to questions asked. Applied concepts from the course material correctly towards answering case study questions.

Execution

55

Wrote answers clearly and succinctly, using strong organization and proper grammar. Demonstrated effective written communication that is free from errors in punctuation, syntax, spelling, and grammar. Used at least three (3) scholarly sources correctly. Included a cover and reference page in APA format. Answers are numbered such that readers know where to find the various information. Final report is at least three pages, not including title page, graphics, references, and appendices.

Total

125

A quality paper will meet or exceed all of the above requirements

Does not summarize established best practices regarding the use of social media by businesses

COM 310 Milestone One Guidelines and Rubric

Social media often reaches multiple departments within an organization such as human resources, legal, marketing, operations, sales, and more. Planning strategically offers an organization a blueprint of sorts that can be communicated to these various stakeholders. These plans help set direction and also help prioritize initiatives while keeping everyone on the same page. Equally important is planning for social media mishaps. It is never more apparent that strategic planning was not done or did not include a contingency plan than when social media engagement snowballs into a public relations disaster.

In this assessment, you will explore strategic social media use for an existing organization of your choice. This paper will cover two platforms you feel are relevant to the organization’s goals and detail how these platforms can be used in tandem to reach organizational goals. You will be both creative and strategic and align goals to specific tactics on each platform of your choice. You will also include a plan of action to guide decision making when negative comments make a community toxic or when opportunities present themselves to engage the audience in positive communication.

This paper will be informational and is not specifically a social media strategy. Instead, it is meant to inform decision makers and provide them the information they would need to begin creating a strategic social media strategy.

For Milestone One, you will provide an overview of social media and how it might be used by businesses. In addition, you will work to uncover specific business goals related to social media use. Research the history of social media and identify best practices regarding the use of social media. This will allow you to set the stage for your clients and help them understand what the use of social media can and cannot do for their business. Using this information, help your clients specify goals related to social media use. These goals will dictate what platforms you choose, what content you share, and what best practices the organization would follow. Identifying the target audience will also ensure the organization uses appropriate platforms and shares appropriate content.

Introduce social media to your client and determine business goals in relation to social media use. Specifically, the following critical elements must be addressed:

  1. Social Media Overview: This section will give you the opportunity to research the history of social media and identify best practices regarding the use of social media. This will allow you to set the stage for your clients and help them understand what the use of social media can and cannot do for their business.
    A. Overview how social media has been used by businesses over the past decade. Support overview with research. B. Summarize established best practices regarding the use of social media by businesses.
    C. Explain the opportunities and limits of social media as a communications tool.
  2. Business Goals: The purpose of this section is to help the organization uncover specific goals related to social media use. These goals will dictate what platforms you choose, what content you share, and what best practices the organization would follow. Identifying the target audience will also ensure the organization uses appropriate platforms and shares appropriate content.

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A. Analyze the business’s current state and identify gaps that you will use social media to address. Consider how the organization communicates with its target audience, how well it retains customers, or how frequently it updates its website.

  1. Select two of the following four goals for the business, based on the identified gaps. Justify your selections.
    • Drive traffic to website
    • Increase brand awareness
    • Connect with customers and clients
    • Demonstrate expertise
  2. Explain how audience engagement through social media can help the business achieve its goals. Support explanation with examples.

Guidelines for Submission: Your paper must be submitted as a 3- to 4-page Microsoft Word document with double spacing, 12-point Times New Roman font, one-inch margins, and at least three sources cited in APA format.

Critical Elements

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Proficient (100%)

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Needs Improvement (75%)

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Not Evident (0%)

Value

Social Media Overview: Social Media

Overviews how social media has been used by businesses over the past decade, supporting overview with research

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Overviews how social media has been used by businesses over the past decade but overview is cursory, verbose, or not supported by research

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Does not overview how social media has been used by businesses over the past decade

15

Social Media Overview: Best Practices

Summarizes established best practices regarding the use of social media by businesses

Summarizes established best practices regarding the use of social media by businesses but summary is cursory or is missing key details

Does not summarize established best practices regarding the use of social media by businesses

15

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Social Media Overview: Opportunities and Limits

Explains the opportunities and limits of social media as a communications tool

Explains the opportunities and limits of social media as a communication tool but explanation is cursory or lacks clarity

Does not explain the opportunities and limits of social media as a communication tool

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15

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Business Goals: Current State

Analyzes the business’s current state and identifies gaps that will be addressed using social media

Analyzes the business’s current state and identifies gaps that will be addressed using social media but analysis is cursory or unclear or gaps are not clearly identified

Does not analyze the business’s current state or identify gaps that will be addressed using social media

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15

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Business Goals: Identified Gaps

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Selects goals for the business based on the identified gaps and justifies the selections

Selects goals for the business based on the identified gaps and justifies the selections but justification is cursory or illogical

Does not select goals for the business based on the identified gaps

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15

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Business Goals: Achieve Its Goals

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Explains how audience engagement through social media can help the business achieve its goals supporting explanation with examples

Explains how audience engagement through social media can help the business achieve its goals but explanation is cursory or not supported with examples

Does not explain how audience engagement through social media can help the business achieve its goals

15

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Articulation of Response

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Submission has no major errors related to citations, grammar, spelling, syntax, or organization

Submission has major errors related to citations, grammar, spelling, syntax, or organization that negatively impact readability and articulation of main ideas

Submission has critical errors related to citations, grammar, spelling, syntax, or organization that prevent understanding of ideas

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10

Total

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100%

What early experiences have shaped your beliefs?

Respond to each question below with a brief paragraph. Offer specific examples, rather than vague, general statements. There is no right or wrong answers to this assignment. However, thoughtfulness and thoroughness do count. Please write professionally (spellcheck, good grammar, etc.)

1.  What early experiences have shaped your beliefs?

2.  When your beliefs have changed over time, why did this happen?

3.  What traditions and values do you hold as you enter into new learning experiences?

4.  Do you have any regrets about how you handled past learning experiences?

5.  Do you learn the same way that most other people do, or are there any characteristics you have that make it more difficult – or easier – for you to learn new things?

6.  As a learner, where are you on Kolb’s diagram- acquisition, specialization, or integration? Give examples that validate your position (Refer to Kolb: “How We Learn and Develop The Self: The Big Picture)

Your paper should be double-spaced and include a centered title. Any sources used should be properly cited in MLA format.