Achmad Rajwa Alamsyah Marchio_2511031154_Accounting
1. Organizational change is the process of altering an organization's structure, culture, strategies, or processes to adapt to new goals or environments, driven by both external forces like technology and market shifts, and internal factors such as leadership vision and operational needs. These forces push for innovation, which is essential for organizations to remain competitive, efficient, and relevant in a constantly evolving world.
2.Innovation Strategy Categories
Product Innovation: Involves creating new products or improving existing ones, often through incremental enhancements or entirely new features.
Process Innovation: Focuses on improving how a product is made or delivered, leading to greater efficiency or new capabilities.
Business Model Innovation: Involves changing the way a company creates, delivers, and captures value, which can significantly alter market dynamics.
3.Creativity provides new ideas, while the other elements provide structure, collaboration, and focused energy for innovation: idea incubators nurture early-stage ideas, horizontal linkages connect diverse knowledge, open innovation brings in external ideas, idea champions drive promising concepts, and new-venture teams provide dedicated focus for developing these ideas into tangible outcomes.
4.Changes in people and culture are critical to any process because they directly influence an organization's or individual's ability to adapt, adopt new behaviors, and achieve desired outcomes, making the change either a success or a failure.
5.Organization Development (OD) is a science-based, planned process for improving an organization's effectiveness, health, and ability to adapt to change by modifying its processes, strategies, structures, and culture. Large group interventions are specific OD tools that involve bringing together a large number of people from an organization or its stakeholders to collectively diagnose problems, develop strategies, and drive large-scale organizational change in a structured meeting process.
1. Organizational change is the process of altering an organization's structure, culture, strategies, or processes to adapt to new goals or environments, driven by both external forces like technology and market shifts, and internal factors such as leadership vision and operational needs. These forces push for innovation, which is essential for organizations to remain competitive, efficient, and relevant in a constantly evolving world.
2.Innovation Strategy Categories
Product Innovation: Involves creating new products or improving existing ones, often through incremental enhancements or entirely new features.
Process Innovation: Focuses on improving how a product is made or delivered, leading to greater efficiency or new capabilities.
Business Model Innovation: Involves changing the way a company creates, delivers, and captures value, which can significantly alter market dynamics.
3.Creativity provides new ideas, while the other elements provide structure, collaboration, and focused energy for innovation: idea incubators nurture early-stage ideas, horizontal linkages connect diverse knowledge, open innovation brings in external ideas, idea champions drive promising concepts, and new-venture teams provide dedicated focus for developing these ideas into tangible outcomes.
4.Changes in people and culture are critical to any process because they directly influence an organization's or individual's ability to adapt, adopt new behaviors, and achieve desired outcomes, making the change either a success or a failure.
5.Organization Development (OD) is a science-based, planned process for improving an organization's effectiveness, health, and ability to adapt to change by modifying its processes, strategies, structures, and culture. Large group interventions are specific OD tools that involve bringing together a large number of people from an organization or its stakeholders to collectively diagnose problems, develop strategies, and drive large-scale organizational change in a structured meeting process.