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Organisational Development in Business Associations in
Third World Countries
by Rainer Mueller-Glodde
Business associations have specific characteristics:
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As a meso level institution they have an interface
function between enterprises and the society. Through lobbying, they
are influencing the socio-economic, legal and technical environment
in favour of entrepreneurial activity, through services they are
communicating demands from the society and support the members in
shaping the enterprises.
Lobbying is known in associations in Third World
countries. It is the starting point for all activities of associations.
Services are mostly not provided - not because people are unwilling but
because services are unknown as genuine functions.
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Associations are, just like trade unions,
political parties or churches, organisations that represent
subjective opinions. They differ in the way they are forming
opinions and making decisions internally. Do members, organs, and
staff participate or is the president exclusively representing his
personal position?
In many countries of the Third World, especially in
authoritarian ones, associations appear to be organisations of the pure
presidential type. Changes in leadership usually cause abrupt changes in
policy and discontinuity causes inefficiency.
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The motivation of the voluntary members is located
on a continuum between altruism - one wants to do something in
favour of economy and society - and political, economic and personal
interests. The reasons for certain politics and activities of
associations are sometimes hard to understand from the outside. This
is sometimes called "collective irresponsibility".
In traditionally authoritarian and strictly
hierarchical societies there is a latent danger that individual members
exploit the association in favour of their own interests, in democratic
societies such an attempt will provoke the members' resistance.
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Entrepreneurs who volunteer in associations
usually practice the same leadership style as in their businesses,
regardless of whether this is appropriate or not. The micro
entrepreneur who dominates his business in a centralist fashion will
as a president manage the association in the same way. However,
since the quality of decisions in an association is less relevant
than the integration of the organs and the members in the formation
of opinion and decision processes, the micro entrepreneur's
leadership style will eventually lead to complications.
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Voluntary and professional staff interact in an
association. In the case of qualified professional staff, this may
create a constructive and stimulating atmosphere. The "tunnel
vision" like in an isolated business is less likely. For
service provision, professional staff is indispensable.
In associations in the Third World, it is unlikely to
meet qualified professional staff. First, because services are not
provided, second, because they are considered to be confidants of the
president and thus are chosen on other grounds than professional
competence and are exchanged in case of a change in the presidency. No
staff or weak staff as well as frequent changes at the top prevent the
development of organisational know-how and institutional memory.
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Associations of entrepreneurs are generally
self-confident organisations that take pride in their performance.
In Third World countries as well, their traditions may go back as
long as 200 years. Due to lack of comparison, other forms of
organisational life and practice are unknown. Thus, the pressure to
change the association is minimal.
As a consequence, associations in the Third World
often have the character of an entrepreneur club than that of a service
enterprise.
As for the transformation of entrepreneur clubs into
service enterprises by way of organisational development, the following
theses are brought forward:
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From a static point of view, entrepreneur clubs
may seem to be a hopeless object for interventions of international
cooperation. However, a dynamic analysis emphasizes the search for
personalities and configurations of individuals who, due to their
openness, may be won for ideas and visions of change and who are
willing to support and disseminate them.
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Due to its self-confidence, an association will
rarely subject its whole organisation to change. In addition, the
path from an entrepreneur club to a professional service
organisation cannot be planned since the latter is unknown,
unimaginable and thus unthinkable. Initial planning exercises,
carried out jointly with voluntary and professional staff, will thus
only touch upon subareas of the association and concentrate on
"repairs" (example: increase in courses offered, purchase
of a computer, initiation of a data bank). If efforts concentrate on
repairs within the frame of the existing paradigm, impacts will
hardly be sustainable. There must be room for a vision that the
whole association will change in an open, ongoing process of
planning, implementation and evaluation which is gradually creating
a new paradigm.
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It is highly likely that the unique concentration
of interventions on a single group within the association
(president/board - professional staff - members) will under the
conditions of high staff fluctuation lead to loss of know-how.
Chances to achieve sustainable impact are higher if a constructive
balance can be struck between the groups: professional staff see
themselves as service providers for the members and as the creative
element in the association, members demand adequate performance from
the board and staff, the board is in permanent contact with the
members and sees the staff as the association's human capital that
needs to be invested in and is required to perform. Should one of
these groups fail - weak president, bad staff, quarrelsome members -
there is a chance that the other two groups will initiate action to
keep up the performance standard of the association.
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Organisational Development will then essentially
aim at improving communication structures through working groups,
discussions about objectives and planning, moderation, training and
advice and at supporting the stakeholders in that process.
Individual capabilities will remain unchanged in such a process -
the centralist president remains centralist. However, it may be
possible to change the organisational environment in the association
gradually, so that expectations of the other stakeholders will not
match with this management style. As a consequence, results may
first lead to a better definition of needs concerning the services
provided by the association (information, consulting, training,
support) and a corresponding supply, second, they may lead to more
elaborated proposals vis-à-vis the public and civil society domains
concerning the creation of an enabling environment for member
businesses.
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Enabling the comparison with other associations is
an effective instrument for mobilising associations. This can be a
mission abroad, to initiate reflection about where the entrepreneurs
are standing with their association and where they intend to go. It
can also be the reunion of several associations within a network in
order to stimulate ongoing comparison and a certain competition
among their members, boards and staff. It can also be a benchmarking
process in order to render the comparison of performance between
associations more objective.
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Sustainable impact is achieved when new voluntary
and professional staff follow (or have to follow) the norms, rules
and structures of the new association paradigm and do not fall back
onto the "club" level. This means as a consequence that
organisational development interventions in associations need
long-term planning and high intensity.
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chapter: organisational development - an introduction to the approach
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