Name: Clara Resti Wahyuningsih
Student ID number: 2511031073
Accounting Department
1. Organizational change is the adoption of a new idea or behavior by an organization. Forces driving change include shifts in markets, technology, competition, product and service innovation and also changes in production processes to improve efficiency.
2. The three strategies are exploration, cooperation, and entrepreneurship. Exploration is encourages creativity, experimentation, and idea incubators. And then cooperation, cooperation uses horizontal coordination, customers, partners, and open innovation. And finally entrepreneurship that relies on idea champions, new venture teams, skunkworks, and new venture funds.
3. Creativity is the generation of novel ideas that might meet perceived needs or respond to opportunities; it is the essential first step in innovation.
Idea incubators provide a safe environment where employees can develop ideas without interference.
Horizontal linkages emphasize cooperation across departments (R&D, marketing, manufacturing) to develop innovations jointly.
Open innovation extends the search for and commercialization of ideas beyond the organization’s boundaries, tapping into customers, suppliers, and external partners.
Idea champions are individuals who passionately promote new ideas and fight for their acceptance.
New-venture teams are groups that separate from the rest of the organization to develop and launch innovations, often supported by skunkworks or venture funds.
4. All successful changes involve changes in people and culture that is shifts in employees’ mindsets, behaviors, and organizational values.
5. Organization Development (OD) is a planned, systematic process of change using behavioral science techniques to improve organizational health, effectiveness, adaptability, relationships, learning, and problem-solving. While, large-group interventions involve bringing together people from all parts of the organization (and sometimes outsiders) to discuss problems or opportunities and plan for change collectively.
Student ID number: 2511031073
Accounting Department
1. Organizational change is the adoption of a new idea or behavior by an organization. Forces driving change include shifts in markets, technology, competition, product and service innovation and also changes in production processes to improve efficiency.
2. The three strategies are exploration, cooperation, and entrepreneurship. Exploration is encourages creativity, experimentation, and idea incubators. And then cooperation, cooperation uses horizontal coordination, customers, partners, and open innovation. And finally entrepreneurship that relies on idea champions, new venture teams, skunkworks, and new venture funds.
3. Creativity is the generation of novel ideas that might meet perceived needs or respond to opportunities; it is the essential first step in innovation.
Idea incubators provide a safe environment where employees can develop ideas without interference.
Horizontal linkages emphasize cooperation across departments (R&D, marketing, manufacturing) to develop innovations jointly.
Open innovation extends the search for and commercialization of ideas beyond the organization’s boundaries, tapping into customers, suppliers, and external partners.
Idea champions are individuals who passionately promote new ideas and fight for their acceptance.
New-venture teams are groups that separate from the rest of the organization to develop and launch innovations, often supported by skunkworks or venture funds.
4. All successful changes involve changes in people and culture that is shifts in employees’ mindsets, behaviors, and organizational values.
5. Organization Development (OD) is a planned, systematic process of change using behavioral science techniques to improve organizational health, effectiveness, adaptability, relationships, learning, and problem-solving. While, large-group interventions involve bringing together people from all parts of the organization (and sometimes outsiders) to discuss problems or opportunities and plan for change collectively.