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Knowing the specific areas in which time is being diverted from fully contributing to the organization's goals (either as individuals or in work units), members can focus their attention on how time can be reallocated-from spending the wrong time on the wrong tasks or the wrong time on the right tasks to the right time on the right tasks. After taking and self-scoring the survey (about 20 minutes), members can decide how to shift the time they spend in addressing these key areas of their organization: (1) culture, (2) skills, (3) teams, (4) strategy-structures, and (5) reward systems. By…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Knowing the specific areas in which time is being diverted from fully contributing to the organization's goals (either as individuals or in work units), members can focus their attention on how time can be reallocated-from spending the wrong time on the wrong tasks or the wrong time on the right tasks to the right time on the right tasks. After taking and self-scoring the survey (about 20 minutes), members can decide how to shift the time they spend in addressing these key areas of their organization: (1) culture, (2) skills, (3) teams, (4) strategy-structures, and (5) reward systems. By Identifying their largest time-gaps and then using the five steps of problem management (sensing problems, defining problems, deriving solutions, implementing solutions, and evaluating outcomes) to close those gaps, members and their work units can fully contribute their time, wisdom, and energy to achieving their organization's goals.
Autorenporträt
Ralph H. Kilmann, Ph.D., is CEO and Senior Consultant at Kilmann Diagnostics (KD) in Newport Coast, California. In this position, he has created as well as produced all of KD's online courses and assessment tools on conflict management, change management, expanding consciousness, and quantum transformation. Ralph's online products are used by such high-profile organizations as Amazon, Bank of America, DuPont, Exxon Mobil, FedEx, GE, Google, Harvard University, JP Morgan Chase, Microsoft, NASA, Siemens, Twitter, the U.S. Army, and the World Health Organization. Ralph earned both his B.S. in graphic arts management and M.S. in industrial administration from Carnegie Mellon University in 1970, and a Ph.D. degree in the behavioral sciences in management and social systems design from the University of California, Los Angeles, in 1972. After Ralph left UCLA, he immediately began his professional career as an Assistant Professor at the Katz School of Business, University of Pittsburgh. In 1991, the faculty awarded him the George H. Love Professorship of Organization and Management, which he held until 2002, when he moved to the West Coast, which eventually led to the creation of Kilmann Diagnostics. Ralph is an internationally recognized authority on systems change. He has consulted for numerous corporations throughout the United States and Europe, including AT&T, IBM, Ford, General Electric, Lockheed, Olivetti, Philips, TRW, and Xerox. He has also consulted for numerous health-care, financial, and government organizations, including the U.S. Bureau of the Census and the Office of the U.S. President. Ralph has published more than twenty books and one hundred articles on such subjects as conflict management, organizational design, problem management, change management, and quantum organizations. Ralph is also the coauthor of more than ten assessment tools, including the Thomas-Kilmann Conflict Mode Instrument (TKI), the Kilmann-Saxton Culture-Gap® Survey, and the Kilmann Organizational Conflict Instrument (KOCI). Since 1985, Ralph's professional biography has been profiled in Who's Who in the World. And then, in 2017, Marquis Who's Who distinguished him as a "Lifetime Achiever" and featured his profile in Sciences.