Synopses & Reviews
Designing and Using Organizational Surveys provides organizational practitioners with a clear and practical working guide to designing and implementing successful organizational surveys. Drawing on their extensive consulting experience, authors Allan H. Church and Janine Waclawski present a concise seven-step model that covers the entire survey process from its conception to evaluation and-perhaps more importantly-to making the results meaningful and achievable for the future of the organization. Their highly pragmatic approach pays special attention to the political and human sensitivities inherent in the process and clearly shows how to overcome the many potential barriers to conducting a successful survey.
"In my view, this book is simply the best, A to Z resource for organizational survey and assessment practitioners available. . . . A fresh and lucid perspective that inextricably links theory and practice. Comprehensive and practical, the seven-step process approach provides a closed-loop blueprint for designing and implementing organizational surveys that work!"
—Salvatore V. Falletta, manager, global HR research, Intel Corporation
"The many tools that Church and Waclawski offer alone make this book a treasure chest. . . . A considerable array of figures, examples, and samples that are helpful to the experienced and inexperienced practitioner (and consultant), including sample scripts and content for communications and focus groups."
—David W. Bracken, partner, Mercer Delta Counseling, LLC
"A great primer on organizational surveys. Church and Waclawski integrate into their approach to surveying both the science of the field and the art of practice in dynamic organizations. . . . Will provide valuable discussions among even the most seasoned professionals as well as insight for those just starting out in the field."
—Karen B. Paul, manager, HR Measurement Systems
Review
"In my view, this book is simply the best, A to Z resource for organizational survey and assessment practitioners available. . . . A fresh and lucid perspective that inextricably links theory and practice. Comprehensive and practical, the seven-step process approach provides a closed-loop blueprint for designing and implementing organizational surveys that work!" (Salvatore V. Falletta, manager, global HR research, Intel Corporation)
"The many tools that Church and Waclawski offer alone make this book a treasure chest. . . . A considerable array of figures, examples, and samples that are helpful to the experienced and inexperienced practitioner (and consultant), including sample scripts and content for communications and focus groups."(David W. Bracken, partner, Mercer Delta Counseling, LLC)
"A great primer on organizational surveys. Church and Waclawski integrate into their approach to surveying both the science of the field and the art of practice in dynamic organizations. . . . Will provide valuable discussions among even the most seasoned professionals as well as insight for those just starting out in the field."(Karen B. Paul, manager, HR Measurement Systems)
Synopsis
The survey process is a highly complex and situationally dependent one, in need of careful management. If poorly designed and administered, surveys can create disappointment and even disaster. Little has been written so far for those responsible for designing and implementing surveys in organizations. These authors have drawn on their extensive consulting experience to develop a concise, pragmatic, seven-step model covering the entire process, from initiation, to final evaluation, to making the results meaningful to the future of the organization. They pay special attention to the political and human sensitivities concerned and show how to overcome the many potential barriers to a successful outcome.
Synopsis
While many books have been written about survey research methods, few have been designed to provide the organizational practitioner with a clear, concise, and pragmatic working guide on how to go about actually doing a survey-until now. Designing and Using Organizational Surveys offers a hands-on, seven-step process to guide professionals in human resource development, organization development, industrial-organizational psychology, training and development, and other related fields on how to conduct a successful organizational survey. Using a careful, reader-friendly approach illustrated with real-life examples from large-scale survey efforts, Allan H. Church and Janine Waclawski cover all of the critical decisions that must be made in order to conduct an effective survey. The authors review the major issues to be confronted at each stage of the process, examine the options, and suggest the appropriate action to take. They show how to put together a quality survey questionnaire, administer the survey, process and interpret the results, report the findings to the organization, and translate the newly acquired information into meaningful action. And they include practical checklists at the end of each chapter, information about technology application, approaches to action planning, and sensitive coverage of the inevitable political and human issues that arise throughout the process.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. 279-286) and index.
About the Author
ALLAN H. CHURCH is director of organization and management development at PepsiCo in Purchase, New York. He is also an adjunct professor at Columbia University and a distinguished visiting scholar in the College of Business, Technology, and Professional Programs at Benedictine University. Church is the author of numerous articles in professional journals and coeditor (with David Bracken and Carol Timmreck) of
The Handbook of Multisource Feedback (Jossey-Bass, 2001).
JANINE WACLAWSKI is a principal consultant in the Management Consulting Services line of business at PricewaterhouseCoopers, LLP. She is an adjunct professor at Columbia University and has been an instructor in Hunter College at the City University of New York. Waclawski is a past recipient of the American Society for Training and Development's Donald Bullock Memorial Dissertation Award for her research on large-scale organizational change and performance.
Table of Contents
Tables, Figures, and Exhibits xiii
Foreword xvii
Allen I. Kraut
Acknowledgments xxi
The Authors xxv
Introduction 1
What Is a Survey? 4
A Brief History of Surveys 8
Contemporary Use of Surveys 10
Surveys in Contemporary Organizational Life 12
The Seven Steps to Effective Organizational Surveys 17
1. Step One: Pooling Resources 27
Setting Clear Strategic Objectives 31
Obtaining Commitment 38
Overcoming Resistance and Apathy 42
Maintaining Confidentiality 43
Deciding What Information to Collect 45
Balancing Priorities 46
Checklist for Step One 49
2. Step Two: Developing a World-Class Survey 51
Using a Survey Design Team 53
Gathering Preliminary Information 55
Identifying Key Issues 56
Discussing Your Findings 58
Drafting the Initial Survey Document 60
Piloting the Survey 84
Checklist for Step Two 87
3. Step Three: Communicating Objectives 89
The CPR Model of Organizational Communication 91
First Contact with Employees 96
Communicating the Survey 100
Sample Survey Introduction 106
Guidelines for Communicating to Employees 107
Recognizing Informal Systems 109
Checklist for Step Three 111
4. Step Four: Administering the Survey 113
Timing of Administration 114
Working with the Project Plan 116
Sample Versus Census 120
Methods of Administration and Data Collection 122
Paper Versus Electronic Methods: A Comparison 137
Response Rates 143
Learning While Doing 146
Checklist for Step Four 147
5. Step Five: Interpreting Results 149
The Role of Statistics 150
The Importance of Timing 154
Data Entry 159
Data Preparation 162
Item-Level Analysis 172
Conceptual-Level Analysis 178
Comparative Analysis 186
Content Analysis of Write-In Comments 193
Checklist for Step Five 199
6. Step Six: Delivering the Findings 201
Understanding the Roll-Out Process 203
Preparing the Survey Report 207
Balancing Expectations and Reality 225
Checklist for Step Six 227
7. Step Seven: Learning into Action 229
Using Surveys to Create Lasting Change 232
Barriers to the Transfer of Ownership 233
A Commitment to Action 239
Four Approaches to Survey Action Planning 241
Five Critical Factors That Determine the Success of Survey Action Planning 258
The Action Planning Process 259
Linking Survey Results to Other Measures of Performance 267
Building Systems for Evaluating Success 271
The Evolving Role of the Survey Practitioner 272
Checklist for Step Seven 276
References 279
Index 287