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Organizational Development
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Organizational development (OD) is a field of study and practice concerned with how organizations plan, manage, and sustain change over time. It appears most frequently in business and management courses, particularly at the MBA level, where students examine how companies align their structures, processes, and people to meet evolving goals. What makes OD academically interesting is its interdisciplinary character — it draws on management theory, behavioral science, and systems thinking. Concepts such as open systems theory, human performance technology, and process consultation give students rigorous frameworks for analyzing why organizations succeed or struggle when navigating change.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some are straightforwardly conceptual, defining and discussing core OD principles in relation to management practice. Others are applied and case-based, using real organizational situations — such as workplace dynamics under micromanagement or sexual harassment policy failures illustrated through the Mitsubishi case — to ground abstract ideas in concrete outcomes. Planning-oriented papers focus on designing change initiatives, addressing how to support employees and ensure operational continuity. Broader macro-level angles also appear, connecting organizational change to shifts in supply, demand, and pricing environments.

A strong essay on organizational development begins with a focused thesis that specifies what kind of change is being examined and what outcome is at stake. Evidence drawn from specific organizational practices, established OD frameworks, or documented case studies carries the most weight. A common pitfall is treating organizational development as synonymous with any business improvement effort — a precise essay distinguishes OD as a deliberate, systemic process rather than routine management activity.

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Paper Undergraduate
OD Interventions in Knowledge-Centric Industries
Of all areas of Organizational Development (OD) that are the most challenging in terms of translating the strategic, long-term, abstract objectives of an organization into results, it is in the use of interventions.
Paper Doctorate
Diversity in the military
¶ … Diversity Training Programs for the U.S. Armed Forces
Paper Undergraduate
Team Building and Communication in High-Reliability Health Care
Research in areas of employee communication and team building suggests that successful communication strategies must include a decisive effort to connect management's vision with employees at every level.
Paper Undergraduate
Organizational Change - Dupont Case
As Tom Harris and the management team of the DuPont Orlon manufacturer center ready for their plant to be shut down and relocated to China, it is apparent there is no change management plan or strategy in place, in…
Paper Undergraduate
Strategic Development of Human Resources in Organizations
Organizational effectiveness depends on several factors. Companies' efficiency and productivity relies on their ability to invest in technical resources, in the leadership style they encourage, and in the human…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Student Retention and Career Advising in Higher Education
Student retention has long been a concern for colleges and universities. In 1924, W.S. Brooks' article, "Who Can Succeed in College," admonished "college men" for "this wholesale dropping of students." The high school…
Thesis Undergraduate
Role of Leadership in Change Management Role
Role of Leadership in Delivering Change-2
Paper Doctorate
Canadian Military and Leadership Defining Leadership Issues
Canadian Military and Situational Leadership
Paper Masters
Reverse Discrimination Negatively Affects Employee
The following pages focus on providing an analysis of reverse discrimination and its effects on employee behavior. The paper starts with an introduction that provides general information on the subject, in order to help…
Paper Doctorate
Retirement Portability and Pension Reform in the United States
FunTime is going through a very disruptive time in their business model as larger, more well-financed competitors are challenging them at a local and regional level, undercutting the FunTime differentiated approach of using local, high quality suppliers and selling. The diagnostic model that best fits the FunTime case study is the organization. Bill Richardson, CEO and founder had been able to keep the entire organization focused on customer satisfaction and the pursuit of high quality snacks when the company had not been challenged by stronger, more focused competitors at the regional levels. Yet as the case study continues it's clear the distribution and pricing strength of competitors is beginning to force each region to act against the core values and principles of the FunTime business model and corporate culture. From the price discounting and source of inferior snack products to the reliance on market development funds (MDF) and incentive programs, FunTime's regions are beginning to fracture and splinter away from the company. Worse, the pace of new product introductions by Frito-Lay, Borden's Nabisco and Procter & Gamble (P&G) are also forcing the FunTime regions to seek out low-quality products as well to keep up the pace. All of these factors are causing Bill Richardson concern and he acknowledges there needs to be discussion at the corporate level to solve the continued friction in each region against company core values and the heightened competitive pressure on the company overall.