The design of organisational intervention: Choosing the approach

The design of organisational intervention: Choosing the approach

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Article ID: iaor19992128
Country: United Kingdom
Volume: 25
Issue: 4
Start Page Number: 415
End Page Number: 435
Publication Date: Aug 1997
Journal: OMEGA
Authors:
Abstract:

At some point in an intervention, the operational research consultant has to choose how to approach the issue in hand. The need for an explicit approach depends on who will be involved and the nature of the relationship between consultant and client. Increasingly, as the organisational distance between the two parties increases, the approach taken has to be declared formally and at an early stage. The approach chosen may be a general approach for consultancy assignments, it may be a specific, named approach taken from the literature, or it may be designed specifically for that particular intervention. The choice of methods will depend on the organisational context, the degree of participation envisaged, the consultant's skills and on the nature of the outcome required. The paper draws on theory to articulate these choices. A personal experiment is described in which critical systems heuristics, soft systems methodology, and the strategic choice approach are used to structure the process of designing an intervention. As a result two concepts are introduced, (i) personal intervention competence and (ii) intervention transformation requirement and context. These concepts are used to suggest a general method mixing approach referred to as the transformation competence model.

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