Organizational Assessment - Innolect, Inc.

Organizational Assessment

Understand what really works in your organization—not just what’s intended.

Allows leaders to act intentionally, leveraging influence where it truly exists

Our Assessments and Diagnostics help leaders see how information, decisions, perceptions and influence flow across the enterprise.
Our assessments surface systemic patterns that shape alignment, accountability, engagement and execution.

Organizational Assessment insights at system-level, team-level and leader-level

We use a multi‑method approach that combines quantitative data with qualitative insight to create a clear picture of your organization’s ecosystem.

Organizational Assessment - Outcomes, Lasting Value, and Customized Solutions

We incoporate our Strategic Listening Architecturethroughout Organizational Assessments. This deliberately planned approach engages with and gains insight from employees, equipping organizations with quantitative and qualitative strategies that lead to greater inclusion and retention success at individual, team and systems levels.

As an industry leader in listening assessment at the individual, team and system level, see our time-tested methods below:

Diagnostic Methods

We tailor each assessment using a mix of the tools below, based on your context, size and goals.

Leadership and Stakeholder Interviews

Our in-depth interviews go beyond the surface level of known issues to gain new insights. Using appreciative inquiry, our one-to-one interviews uncover:

  • Leadership intent versus employee experience
  • Decision‑making and escalation norms
  • Assumptions about accountability, ownership and follow‑through
  • Alignment and/or misalignment across the leadership system
Employee and Pulse Surveys

Our turnkey survey hosting, survey design, administration of the confidential survey, analysis and recommendations provide a seamless process. We offer a quantitative and qualitative baseline:

  • Strategic clarity and alignment
  • Trust in leadership
  • Stakeholder engagement – authentic voices, feedback and communication
  • Accountability and decision clarity
Focus Groups

Our expert facilitators create a safe, accepting space for confidential conversations to explore real experiences to help explain WHY survey patterns exist. Explore:

  • Behavioral signals for “what really matters” in the organization
  • Build confidence that input is valued, and individuals are “seen and heard”
  • Shared narratives that rarely appear in survey data alone
  • Ensured understanding for meaningful impact on change going forward
  • Clarification on how messages are interpreted in day‑to‑day work
Organizational Network Analysis and Communication Audits

Reveal how work and communication actually flow beyond organizational charts.

Help identify:

  • How information flows (channels, frequency, clarity and consistency)
  • Where communication aligns with strategy and where it breaks down
  • Accountability and ownership across functions and levels
  • Places where leader visibility, credibility, trust and collaboration are strong
  • Informal influencers and information brokers
  • Bottlenecks, silos and overload points
  • Where employees seek advice, support and approval

Workplace Effectiveness & Collaboration Blogs

Jackie Robinson

Unwritten Rules: Courage to ACT

By Kittie Watson | June 18, 2013

Good leaders understand and play by the written rules of their organization. Yet, a company’s unwritten rules are the ones that most influence employee behavior.

The Blame Game

By Kittie Watson | August 16, 2012

Headlines are filled with accusations casting blame for misfortune. An unfortunate and unintended consequence of leaders who place blame and fail to tolerate mistakes is that they create cultures that stifle experimentation, innovation, risk-taking and initiative.

Leadership on Edge

Leadership on the Edge…Courage to Fail?

By Kittie Watson | July 11, 2012

Without the courage to take risks, few would achieve high levels of success. While most executives believe that risk-taking is good, they often communicate that failure is bad. This dichotomy confuses employees.

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