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Organizational Renewal in the
Alabama Cooperative Extension Service
Suzette M. Jelinek
Extension Associate-Administration
Extension-Auburn University
Internet address: sjelinek@acenet.auburn.edu
Martha R. Johnson
Extension Assistant Director
Alabama Cooperative Extension Service
Auburn University
Internet address: mjohnson@acenet.auburn.edu
William I. Sauser, Jr.
Executive Director and Professor
Outreach and International Programs
Auburn University
Internet address: sauser@business.auburn.edu
In a previous article, "Will Cooperative Extension Survive in the 90s?,"
it was stated that today's smaller, weaker, and more vulnerable
Cooperative Extension was not caused by federal, state, and local
deficits alone but by complacency and a fear of change (Graf, 1993). In
response to the very issues brought to light in Graf's article regarding
complacency and resistance to change, the Alabama Cooperative Extension
Service (ACES) sought to undertake a tactic of "no fear" in addressing
the issue of strategic change. Much as the business sector has
reevaluated, realigned, and reorganized, ACES has also embarked upon a
process of organizational renewal to meet the needs of the citizens of
Alabama today and tomorrow. The following describes how ACES has gone
about this transformation.
Closely following his inauguration as Auburn University's 15th
president, Dr. William V. Muse appointed a broad-based Twenty-first
Century Commission to review the university's operations--including
Extension--in order to position Auburn for the upcoming millennium. In
response to the recommendations made by the Commission in February of
1993, ACES set the wheels in motion for an organizational renewal
process. A total quality management approach was the basis for the
review of operations. Thirty ACES employees--broadly representative of
the unit--were selected to review the organization's mission and values
and to set goals and strategies to carry ACES into the future. It was
deemed crucial to receive input from all areas and all levels. District
agents, county agents, specialists, and administration alike were
incorporated into the renewal process.
After the initial task force met, additional groups representing
different districts and specialties held meetings to determine whether
the initial document met ACES' needs for the future. After nearly seven
months of gathering input and redefining goals and strategies, ACES
produced an internal document, "Meeting the Needs of Alabama Today and
Tomorrow," as a guide. Six key goals were set forth in the document:
- employ and develop a competent Extension staff;
- promote creativity and enhance performance of staff;
- formulate programs that focus on relevant needs;
- improve public credibility and visibility;
- increase effectiveness and efficiency; and
- build a sense of community, trust, and open communication.
For each of these key goals, step-by-step strategies were identified,
timetables were established, and appropriate individuals and groups were
identified to implement the strategies.
While the preparation of this document was a feat of exceptional
teamwork, it has also set the stage for additional efforts. By adopting
an ongoing process of organizational renewal, ACES now must meet the
challenge of actually implementing the strategies and accomplishing the
goals. To that end, internal steering committees and task force groups
have been assigned.
With key leadership endorsement of this process, ACES is challenged to
remain committed to its initial efforts and to effectuate its desired
outcomes. ACES has a great challenge ahead since, "there's nothing more
difficult to take in hand, more perilous to conduct, or more uncertain
in its success than to take the lead in the introduction of a new order
of things" (Machiavelli as quoted in Schmidt & Finnigan, 1992, p. 148).
However, the first essential step in the journey--overcoming resistance
to change and planning for organizational renewal--has been taken. We
will provide further progress reports as the process continues to
unfold.
References
Graf, K. W. (1993). Will Cooperative Extension survive in the 90s?
Journal of Extension, Winter, 30-31.
Meeting the needs of Alabama today and tomorrow: A plan for
organizational renewal. (1994). Auburn, AL: Auburn University.
Schmidt, W. H., & Finnigan, J. P. (1992). A race without a finish line:
America's quest for total quality. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
This article is online at
http://www.joe.org/joe/1995june/iw1.html.
Copyright ©
by Extension Journal, Inc. ISSN 1077-5315.
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