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Industrial Psychology Consulting Case Study Diagnostics Phase Case Study

Pages:3 (1087 words)

Sources:1

Subject:Science

Topic:Industrial Organizational Psychology

Document Type:Case Study

Document:#31223536


Diagnostics

Industrial Psychology Consulting Case study - Diagnostics Phase

The inter-group situation

The current situation at the described office is marked by intense, apparent divisiveness. On the surface, there seems to be no cohesion to the existing organization. Sales reps are said to be more interested in bolstering their personal reputations than the reputation of the company, hence their tendency to make promises that they cannot fulfill to clients. They are, however, highly motivated to promote the company, given that they work largely on commission. In contrast, the operations staff is unionized and actually has a motivation to work more slowly, rather than swiftly, thwarting the goals of the salespersons.

The issues of this company are organizational, informational, and psychological. First and foremost, there are two sets of employees with apparently very different goals. The sales staff is profit-driven, while the operations staff is procedure-driven. Both are necessary for the company to succeed -- high levels of sales and exemplary performance are required, but it is also necessary for the operations staff to fulfill their requirements in a meticulous fashion. There are signs that the sales staff, for all of their desire to put on a good performance, may be playing 'fast and loose' with the rules and promising more than the organization can give to clients.

There may be a clear cultural division between both organizational spheres. Sales staff tends by nature competitive risk-takers -- this personality type is often attracted to this particular profession. The personalities of the unionized operations staff may be attracted to a profession that is relatively stable and does not 'rock the boat.' Unionized wages, benefits, and other stable job components as well as relatively routine and bureaucratic jobs attract a professional mindset very different from that of sales staff. Also, the educational backgrounds of both workers are likely to be different. Sales staff tends to be drawn from the middle-class, have a college education, and are required by the demands of the job to be eloquent, well dressed, and suggest a certain level of deportment and 'class.' Unionized operations staff members at most organizations work behind the scenes and are less likely to be college educated. The positions are less personality-dependent and more dependent upon fulfilling the specified job requirements and specifications in a narrow fashion. Finally, in general, sales staff at all organizations tends to be transient, because of the commission-driven nature of the job. A salesperson can relatively easily transfer his or her skills to another sales job; an operational staff member is trained in a highly specific, technical function for the job. This can create resentment of salespersons earning high salaries who are relatively new employees. All of these components of the different staffing areas should be analyzed -- education, duration at the company, and results from personality screening tests (if conducted) to see if these classic profiles of sales vs. lower management hold to be true. A clear demographic portrait of both groups should be constructed.

Given this likely lack of organizational cohesion, the second step is to talk to the members of the organization to understand their perceptions of one another in detail. The nature of this division suggests that the consultant should speak with representatives of both sides separately, to…


Sample Source(s) Used

References

Block, Peter. (2011). Flawless Consulting. Jossey-Bass.

Dewhurst, M. & Kellett, T. (2013). Evaluating client capabilities and business opportunities.

From Management Consulting.

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