Richard Beckhard

Richard Beckhard (1918–1999) was an American organizational theorist, Adjunct Professor at MIT, and pioneer in the field of organization development.

Beckhard co-launched the Addison-Wesley Organization Development Series and began the Organization Development Network in 1967.[1] His classic work, Organization Development: Strategies and Models, was published in 1969. Beckhard was an adjunct professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management from 1963-1984. He died on December 28, 1999.[2]

He helped to define organization development as: "an effort (1) planned, (2) organization-wide, (3) managed from the top, to (4) increase organization effectiveness and health through (5) planned interventions in the organization's 'processes', using behavioural-science knowledge".[3]

Together with David Gleicher, he is credited with developing a Formula for Change. The formula proposes that the combination of organisational dissatisfaction, vision for the future and the possibility of immediate, tactical action must be stronger than the resistance within the organisation in order for meaningful change to occur.

Beckhard is also credited for developing the GRPI model which highlights four key conditions (Growth, Roles, Processes, Interpersonal) for team effectiveness.[4]

Selected publications

Books, a selection
Articles, a selection

References

  1. Organization Development Network
  2. Richard Beckhard Obituary, MIT
  3. Beckhard, R., 1969, p. 9. Organization Development: Strategies and Models
  4. Beckhard, R. (1972). Optimizing Team Building Efforts. Journal of Contemporary Business, pp. 23–27. Credit to Beckhard and citation as under: Douglas O’Loughlin (August 2013). "Creating Teams That Work — A Position Paper on Team Effectiveness". Retrieved 7 December 2014.


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