appreciative inquiry for strategic management workshop presentation
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Appreciative Inquiry for Strategic
Management Workshop
www.humanikaconsulting.com
www.humanikaconsulting.com
Introduction “Hope sees the invisible, feels the intangible, and achieves the impossible. ... “ Anonymous
Facilitators
• Managing Director of www.humanikaconsulting.com
• Certified in Industry and Organization Psychologist
• 15 years experience in HR Industry as Practitioner, Consultant and Public Speakers
• Registered speaker on www.speakerindonesia.com
• Book Writer – SOBAT : Semua Orang Bisa Hebat : Conquer Yourself and…The World!
• Faculty member at University of Indonesia, Mercu Buana, and Pancasila University
• Major Client: MD Media (Member of Telkom), Infomedia Nusantara (member of Telkom), Sanggar Sarana Baja (Member of Trakindo), Bank Ganesha, Bank Bukopin, Bank Mestika Darma, Narrada Communication,ISBG Group, Bryan Communication, HRA Group, Pandu Selamat Utama (Pandu Safety), Komatsu, Fonterra, Aetra Air Jakarta, Jaya Construction, Jaya Trade, Jaya Gas indonesia, Perum Jasa Tirta II, Metrodata, Total Indonesie, Lembaga Sandi Negara, Mandiri Panca Prima, Hale international, and Many More
Seta A. Wicaksana, M.Psi., Psikolog
Workshop Purpose
To introduce the philosophy, practice and process of Appreciative Inquiry so that you can apply it to your work and to your life.
What is Appreciative Inquiry?
Ap-pre’ci-ate, v., recognize and value the contributions or attributes of things and people around us . In-quire’ (kwir), v., explore and discover, in the spirit of seeking to better understand, and being open to new possibilities.
What is Appreciative Inquiry?
A process, philosophy, and life practice grounded in research demonstrating that
focusing on what’s working and aspirations for the future achieves more and does it faster and more sustainably
than solving problems.
The 4D Appreciative Inquiry Model
Decide what the topic should be
Cooperrider, David and Diana Whitney, “Appreciative Inquiry: A Positive Revolution in Change”, The Change Handbook, Holman, Peggy and Tom Devane, eds., Berrett-Koehler, 1999.
Appreciative Inquiry
PROBLEM SOLVING ORIENTATION
Fill the Gap
APPRECIATIVE ORIENTATION
Realize the Possibilities
CURRENT
STATE
THE QUESTIONS What’s wrong?
How do we fix it?
PAST FUTURE
THE QUESTIONS What’s working?
What’s possible?
What shall we do to achieve it?
Problem Solving vs AI
• What to grow
• New grammar of the true,
good, better, possible
• “Problem focus” implies that
there is an ideal. AI breaks
open the box of what the
ideal is first.
• Expands vision of preferred
future. Creates new energy
fast.
• Assumes organizations are
sources of infinite capacity
and imagination
Appreciative Inquiry • What to fix
• Underlying grammar =
problem, symptoms, causes,
solutions, action plan,
intervention
• Breaks things into pieces &
specialties, guaranteeing
fragmented responses
• Slow! Takes a lot of positive
emotion to make real change.
• Assumes organizations are
constellations of problems to
be overcome
Problem Solving
How it works
First, understand the positive core of a living system (yourself, your work). What makes it most effective and vital, in personal, professional and working terms?
We move in the direction of our deepest and most frequently asked questions.
Positive guiding images of the future trigger action in the present. Images are found in our dialogue with both ourselves and each other. Ratio of positive to negative statements is a success factor for change. Individuals & groups can then weave the best of what is into formal and
informal practices.
This new approach to change, based on the power of the positive question, has emerged from revolutions in many fields
Appreciative Inquiry Principles
• Constructionist Principle We construct realities based on our previous experience, so our knowledge and the destiny of the system are interwoven.
• Principle of Simultaneity Inquiry and change are simultaneous
• Poetic Principle The system’s story is constantly co-authored, and is open to infinite interpretations
• Anticipatory Principle What we anticipate determines what we find
• Positive Principle As an image of reality is enhanced, actions begin to align with the positive image
Creating Powerful Questions
GOOD QUESTIONS:
• Captivate interviewees through focusing on what matters
• Invite personal stories and aspirations
• Stimulate fresh thinking and deep feelings through evocative language
• Spark the appreciative imagination
THROUGH THE MIX OF QUESTIONS:
• Uncover the best of what’s working and what’s possible
• Explore many dimensions: past and future, relationship with self, connections to others and to the subject area
• Uncover essential values, aspirations and inspirations
DISCOVERY STAGE “The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes” Marcel Proust
AI Questions
1. Describe a peak experience or "high point" in your work with your organization. What was happening? Who was involved? What made it such a powerful experience?
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Adapted from Cooperrider, David and Diana Whitney, “Appreciative Inquiry: A Positive Revolution in Change”, The Change Handbook, Holman, Peggy and Tom Devane, eds., Berrett-Koehler, 1999.
AI Questions
2. What do you most value about... yourself? your work? your organization?
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Adapted from Cooperrider, David and Diana Whitney, “Appreciative Inquiry: A Positive Revolution in Change”, The Change Handbook, Holman, Peggy and Tom Devane, eds., Berrett-Koehler, 1999.
AI Questions
3. What core factors give life to your organization?
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Adapted from Cooperrider, David and Diana Whitney, “Appreciative Inquiry: A Positive Revolution in Change”, The Change Handbook, Holman, Peggy and Tom Devane, eds., Berrett-Koehler, 1999.
AI Questions
• Imagine a miracle happened. You were asleep for ten years and wake up to find your organization is exactly as you'd like it to be (Three Wishes). What's happening that's different? How would you know it is what you want?
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Group Discussion/Discovery
• Find common themes & strong resonances 1. High points
2. Continuity (things we want to keep)
3. Images of the future we want
• Record highpoints on a flip chart
SOAR: A NEW APPROACH TO STRATEGIC PLANNING • SOAR- Strengths, Opportunities, Aspirations and Results
A more strength-based spin than SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats)
• A strategic planning framework that…
Focuses on strengths
Seeks to understand the whole system by including the voices of the relevant stakeholders.
• Helps organizations focus on:
What they are doing well,
What skills can be improved and
What is most compelling to stakeholders.
• Pushes organizations to develop strategic plans that are more dynamic, creative and optimistic.
STRENGTHS: WHAT CAN WE BUILD ON?
• What are we most proud of as an organization? How does that reflect our greatest strength?
• What makes us unique? What can we be best at in our world?
• What is our proudest achievement in the last year or two?
• How do we use our strengths to get results?
• How do our strengths fit with the realities of the marketplace?
• What do we do or provide that is world class for out customers, our industry, and other potential stakeholders?
OPPORTUNITIES: WHAT ARE OR STAKEHOLDERS ASKING FOR?
• How do we make sense of opportunities provided by the external forces and trends?
• What are the top 3 opportunities on which we should focus our efforts?
• How can we best meet the needs of our stakeholders, including customers, employees, shareholders, and community?
• How can we reframe challenges to be seen as existing opportunities?
• What new skills do we need to move forward?
ASPIRATIONS: WHAT DO WE CARE DEEPLY ABOUT? • When we explore our values and
aspirations, “what are we deeply passionate about?”
• Reflecting on Strengths and Opportunities conversations, who are we, who should we become and where do we go in the future?
• What is our most compelling aspirations?
• What strategic initiatives (e.g. projects, programs, processes) would support our aspirations?
RESULTS: HOW DO WE KNOW WE ARE SUCCEEDING?
• Considering our Strengths, Opportunities, and Aspirations, what meaningful measures would indicate that we are on track to achieving our goals?
• What are 3 to 5 indicators that would create a scorecard that addresses a triple bottom line of profit, people and planet?
• What resources are needed to implement vital projects?
• What are the best rewards to support those who achieve our goals?
Implications for managers and leaders
The main task of management is meaning making
and creating possibilities to go on
Organisations are networks of conversation in which
accounts are created
More than one account can exist, none is the truth,
all may be true
Conversation/communication contains moral order
Affect action through communication
‘The most exciting breakthrough of the twenty first century will occur not because of technology but because of an expanding concept of what it means to be human’ Futurist John Naisbitt
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