Transcript
  • 1. PATHS TO HARMONY Working with Conflict among Groups Frank OConnor NZ Psychological Society ~ Annual Conference 2009 Palmerston North, Aotearoa / New Zealand Developing Organisations & Leaders Improving Business Performance & Management Moa Resources, 103 Overtoun Terrace, Hataitai, Wellington, New Zealand 6021+64 21 386-911[email_address]

2. CONFLICTS WITH MAJOR EMOTIONAL AND COMMERCIAL ELEMENTS

    • Conflicts between two or more parties of disparate power
    • Issues addressed
      • goal and role confusion
      • responsibility overlaps or underlaps
      • process mismatches

3. UTILITY OF APPROACHES

    • Theories and approaches designed to assist understanding and intervention are noted
      • Game theory
      • Family therapy
      • Motivation and efficacy work
      • Group dynamics
    • But utilitys low from participants perspectives
      • Watch for their comments: they balance effort with achievement
      • Much theory seems unhelpful: it takes too long to see progress
      • Specific situations, issues or behaviours that exemplify the conflict
    • Examples compare aspects of legalistic and other paths to improvement
      • Clients calls for help seems better met by small changes now than by deeper analysis
      • Best approaches make change quickly

4. CONSEQUENCES OF PATH CHOICE

  • Some consequences
    • Choosing a collaborative path after failed earlier attempts to find an improvement path
  • Well look at
    • Impact of readiness, willingness and ability of participants
    • Timing and extent of benefits

5. NOTHING WRONG WITH MY IDEA 6. HEALING PUBLIC HEALTH

    • Two previously competing health service units, one publicly owned and the other from the private sector, were committed to a joint venture in delivering a range of community and public heath services
      • This joint venture could only succeed if longstanding differences in work priorities and operating style were resolved
      • Levels of manager commitment varied, as some had not been involved in the bidding process that won the contract
    • Aided participants in leaving past differences behind by clarifying common goals for overall businesses, objectives shared in specific service areas and operational issues to be resolved
      • Assisted working parties in defining practice standards and work processes and then timetable tasks allocated to specific people so business as usual would continue during the transition
    • Participants reported confidence in being able to advance with the agreed programme by the end of the planning workshop
      • Follow-up over subsequent months reported regular achievement of standards

7. A HARD POSITION TO MOVE FROM 8. PARTNERSHIP LUBRICATION

    • A dozen players:
      • A District Council (as contract client)
      • Their contract consultant
      • Their lead contractor
    • Expectations:
      • Clients contracted deliverables
      • Reasons deliverables were wanted
      • What would make achievement unacceptablefailure factors
      • Perspectives from consultant then contractor
    • Participants discovered their differences:
      • Much more on the things each group expected to achieve
      • Not things they really needed to avoid (delays and death)
    • The similarity of these failure factors made it easy to agree risks
      • A clearly understood single page of tangible partnership objectives
      • Aligned to the business goals and obligations of the three parties
      • Says What we want to happen and What we dont want to happen

9. AS LONG AS WE KEEP TALKING 10. PUBLIC HEALTH REGULATIONDISPUTE RESOLUTION

    • The Minister of Health requested mediation services
      • A protracted dispute between a health sector regulatory authority, the leading relevant professional association and the primary tertiary education institution providing professional training
      • The dispute had seen more than $250,000 spent on lawyers without improvement and was seen to be adversely affecting the professions ability to safely deliver its services to the public
    • A process of structured conversations
      • Enormous amount of getting ready to talk confidence rebuilding
      • Improved communication increased mutual understanding
      • Participants relationship styles shifted in a constructive way
      • Hearing all the grievances was crucial action on each was not
    • In five months
      • agreed to leave the dispute behind them
      • forged a binding Memorandum of Understanding & Commitment (their choice of title) to guide their interactions over the years ahead

11. GETTING MY MESSAGE ACROSS 12. PUBLIC WORKS 1 RELATIONSHIP BREAKDOWN

    • Shortfall in communication and ease around the delivery sought by both parties
      • territorial local authority (asset owning client)
      • commercial engineering service contractor
    • Essential points of the commercial contract were being met
      • Both parties agreed to assistance in clarifying the issues is there something wrong with the contract?
    • Survey showed their interface not working smoothly
      • Many examples of good performance
      • Expected work not being completed to mutual benefit
      • Issues needing resolution not addressed fairly and promptly
      • Some of the people, some of the time, just didnt get on

13. PUBLIC WORKS 2 TANGIBLE INDICATORS OF DIFFICULTY

    • Contractor: increased staff turnover, especially in hard-to-replace experienced staff
    • Client: increasing public concern about timing and quality of work, especially where it caused disruption to citizens activities
    • Both: low confidence in the other group
      • Small topics of disagreement were difficult to resolve
      • Negotiations on substantial matters were stalling and inflexible
    • Direct cost incurred by the scrambling: $100,000 per month
      • Operating loss for the contractor
      • Recurring rework and repeated communications for both
      • Real money: We could have used that time to do profitable work!

14. PUBLIC WORKS 3 RELATIONSHIP RESTORED

    • According to the client:
      • Id like you to meet our marriage guidance counsellor he has saved our relationship
    • According to the contractor:
      • The increase in understanding of the our needs and effort perspective was made possible by open discussion of business drivers and styles we got listened to
    • Review after six months
      • Client: happy with work quality, rate and style
      • Contractor: Monthly commercial loss turned round and each month now showed a small profit, due in part to improved collaboration and in part to renegotiated rates for some work
      • All staff reported improvement in clarity of expectations and ease of getting work done the goals of the intervention
    • Discomfort remained in parts of the interface
      • Awkward relationship remains personality transplant?

15. TENSION PEAKS AT BREAKING POINT 16. TELECOMMUNICATIONS 1 NETWORK CONSTRUCTION

    • A three year $250M project designed and built a new telecommunications network
      • Support was provided at the commencement of the project, with frequent refreshers, to ensure that the planning, staffing and focus of the joint project team was sufficient for the task
    • Effort had been kept up to clarify evolving roles, responsibilities, management practices and key processes
      • Many meetings between the partners were facilitated, to promote a united approach and to plan and agree on the actions and responsibilities for work programmes with high complexity or high risk of conflict

17. TELECOMMUNICATIONS 2 NETWORK BREAKDOWN

    • The partnership between the network owner and a key technology provider was suffering from exhaustion
      • Much had been achieved
      • Differences of opinion about work to be done and quality of work delivered were requiring more and more management conciliation
      • Confidence between the two parties was falling as the public launch approached
    • Conflict flared between the parties and the project leaders sought reorientation of staff to the task in hand, and a collaborative charting of tasks critical to the projects completion

18. TELECOMMUNICATIONS 3 CRITICAL CARE

    • After extensive preparation
    • A two day conversation involving seventy people
      • Cleared the air Without prejudice
      • Refocused on the goal shared and tangible vision of success
      • Developed action plans through to operational completion
    • Relationships were reoriented
      • capability of people valued Well only get there together
      • technical failures and delays acknowledged and prioritised for fixing
    • Reorientation held through to the completion of the project
      • Launch was achieved on schedule within budget and without public problems
      • The projects leadership was recognised by national awards.

19. GETTING IT TOGETHER 20. CHILD YOUTH AND FAMILY 1 SERVICE NON-DELIVERY

    • Field service delivery performance being compromised by the apparent inadequacy of information systems
    • Technical review demonstrated that the systems were largely functioning as expected and the specialist team knew what they were doing
    • However, relationship between business management and the IT service team were characterised by buck-passing and blame-shifting
    • Both parties believed they were being reasonable but the other party would not allow a compromise to be reached

21. CHILD YOUTH AND FAMILY 2 GETTING AROUND THE SAME TABLE

    • Negotiated attendance of key players at a workshop
      • Defined issues
      • Agreed priorities
      • Established joint action plans
      • Documented responsibilities agreed
    • Properly heard, both parties found more common ground than was expected
      • Priorities were sorted out together
      • Interface protocols were understood by the little people
      • Food was enjoyed
    • Monitored action plans for three months to ensure issues arising were addressed
      • Resulting effectiveness improvements and consequent benefits in business performance were reported in a paper jointly presented by representatives of the delivery and IT teams at the annual conference of the New Zealand Computer Society

22. UTILITY RECAP

    • From participants perspectives
      • Watch for their comments: they balance effort with achievement
      • Much theory seems unhelpful: it takes too long to see progress
      • Specific situations, issues or behaviours that exemplify the conflict
    • Clients calls for help seems better met by small changes now than by deeper analysis
      • Best approaches make change quickly

23. FAVOURITE REFERENCES

      • Argyris, C. and Schn, D.A. (1974)Theory in practice: increasing professional effectivenessSan Francisco: Jossey-Bass
      • Argyris, C. and Schn, D.A. (1978)Organizational learning: a theory of action perspectiveNew York: McGraw-Hill
      • Leng, Russell J and Wheeler, Hugh G (1979) Influence stategies, success and warJournal of Conflict Resolution23 p 655

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