Friday, August 20, 2010

change management - implementation

Managing the change
Preparation for change

  •     Environmental analysis.
  •     Set out the strengths and weaknesses of the organisation
–    Current provisions
–    Resources
–    Roles and responsibilities

  •     Identify the change required
  •     Determine the major issues
  •     Identify and assess the key stakeholders
  •     Win the support of key individuals
  •     Identify the obstacles
  •     Determine the degree of risk and the cost of change
  •     Understand why change is resisted
  •     Recognize the need for change, identify current position, devise a suitable method

Building the vision

  •     Develop a clear vision
  •     Make it people clear about what a change involves and how they are involved in it
  •     What is involved
  •     What is the proposed change
  •     Why should we do it
  •     What the major effects will be
  •     How we can manage the change

Plan the change
•           Devise appropriate strategies to introduce change
•           Design the change
•           Identify the significant steps in the change process
•           Discuss the need for change and the full details of what is involved
•           Allow people to participate in planning change
•           Communicate the plan to all concerned
•           Produce a policy statement
•           Devise a sensible time scale
•           Produce action plans for monitoring the change
•           Allow people to participate in planning change
•           Get all parties involved in and committed to the change
•           Inspire confidence by forestalling problems and communicating regularly
•           Devise a sensible time scale for implementation of change
•           Anticipate the problems of implementation
•           Understand why change is resisted

Implementing the change
•           Check on and record progress
•           Make sure that change is permanent
•           Evaluate the change
•           Improve on any weak areas
•           Overcome resistance
•           Involve  all personnel affected
•           Keep everyone informed
•           Devise an appropriate reward system
•           Be willing to compromise on detail
•           Ensure that strategies are adaptable
•           Select people to champion change
•           Provide support and training
•           Monitor and review

Two types of change

(1) Step change

  •     Dramatic or radical change in one fell swoop
  •     Radical alternation in the organisation
  •     Gets it over with quickly
  •     May require some coercion

(2) Incremental change

  •     Ongoing piecemeal change which takes place as part of an organisation’s evolution and development
  •     Tends to more inclusive

Step v incremental change


Techniques to help implement change
Teams building across units
Internal communication
Negotiation
Action planning
Change agents or champions of change
And a certain amount of compulsion manipulation and coercion

Change agents
Managers should be able to act as change agents:

  •     To identify need for change
  •     Be open to goods ideas for change
  •     To able to successfully implement change

Advantages of using a change agent:

  •     Forces trough change
  •     Becomes the personification of the process
  •     Responsibility for change is delegated thus freeing up senior managers to focus on future strategy

Helping people to accept change
  •     Consider how they will be affected
  •     Involve them in the change
  •     Consult and inform frequently
  •     Be firm but flexible
  •     Make controversial change as gradually as possible
  •     Monitor the change
  •     Develop a change philosophy

Six ways of overcoming resistance to change

  •     (1) Education and communication - if people understand the needs for change and what is involved they are more likely to co-operate.
  •     (2) Participation and involvement - to encourage people to feel ownership of the change.
  •     (3) Facilitation and support - listening to the real concerns of people affected.
  •     (4) Negotiation and agreement - agreement and compromise if necessary.
  •     (5) Manipulation - e.g. “buying off” leaders of resistance.
  •     (6) Explicit and implicit coercion - threats where necessary but this is a high risk strategy.

(source: Kotter and Schlesinger In HBR 1979)

Monitor and review


  •     Adapt as necessary
  •     Recording and monitor the changes
  •     Measure progress against targets
  •     Have the desired results been achieved?
  •     Has the process been successful?
  •     How do those affected feel about the new situation?
  •     What might have been done differently?
  •     How can those not responding well to the change be helped?
  •     Sustain the change.- prevent any back sliding

Kotter’s change phases model

  •     Establish a sense of urgency
  •     Create a coalition
  •     Develop a clear vision
  •     Share the vision
  •     Empower people to clear obstacles
  •     Secure short term wins
  •     Consolidate and keep moving
  •     Anchor the change

Change management failures

What not to do
Ways to increase resistance to change:
Managers can increase resistance by:

  •     Failing to specific about a change
  •     Failing to explain why change is needed
  •     Not consulting
  •     Keeping people in the dark
  •     Creating excess work pressure
  •     Expecting immediate results
  •     Not dealing with fears and anxieties
  •     Ignoring resistance

Reasons why change can fail

  •     Employees do not understand the purpose or even the need for change
  •     Lack of planning and preparation
  •     Poor communication
  •     Employees lack the necessary skills and/ or there is insufficient training and development offered
  •     Lack of necessary resources
  •     Inadequate/inappropriate rewards

Eight common reasons for failure of change management:

  •     Allowing too much complexity
  •     Failing to build a substantial coalition
  •     Failing to understand the need for a clear vision
  •     Failure to clearly communicate that vision
  •     Permitting roadblocks against that vision
  •     Not planning for short term results and not realising them
  •     Declaring victory too soon
  •     Failure to anchor changes in corporate culture

(John Kotter)

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