Constant
Dynamic Tension
Thus far the four kinds of group experience have been
discussed and a case example provided of how this experience actually occurs
within the workplace. It is not difficult to come to the conclusion that the
four types of group experience are very different and implicitly contain many
elements in opposition to the others. In this regard each represents a potential
direction for change in group and organizational culture where the three
psychologically defensive group experiences may be thought of as points on a
triangle and at the center of the triangle is the balanced group experience (see
Figure 1). So
long as one form of group or organizational experience is in ascendancy, the
others remain as potential directions for change. It is within the constant
presence of this potentiality that the workplace remains in a dynamic state
where forces for change are pitted against forces of stability. The following
discussion of change dynamics, uncertainty and the balance point of group
experience further articulates the dynamic nature of the model.