Title: Managing Change
1Managing Change
2What will be covered?
- Definition of Change Management What it is and
what it is not (slides 3-5) - Thinking Exercise (slide 6)
- The Basic Elements of Change Management (slides
7-11) - The Phases in Change Management (slides 12-19)
- A real-world Example (slides 20-26)
- Practice (slide 27)
- Summary (slide 28)
- Readings (slide 29)
3Look at the whole puzzleWhat is Change
Management?
- Process, tools and techniques to
- manage people-side of change processes
- achieve the required outcomes
- realize the change effectively within
- the individual change agent
- the inner team
- the wider system
4Major Barriers to Effective Organizational Change
57 Myths that Undermine Effective Change
- Myth 1 Its really not that big of a change.
- Myth 2 This isnt personal.
- Myth 3 We dont have to involve them.
- Myth 4 We have smart people, they can figure
that out. - Myth 5 We will figure it out as we go.
- Myth 6 They are employees, they should just get
on board. - Myth 7 My boss understands why I am doing this.
6Thinking Exercise
- Think of the most difficult change youve
recently gone through in your work life. - Briefly describe your first reaction and
subsequent reactions (evolution) to this change.
Was it positive? If not, why? - Identify at least one thing that you wish youd
done differently while going through this change.
73 Fundamental Pieces of the Puzzle
- The environment scanning
- Five basic elements
- Three roles of the leader
8Piece n1 the environment
9Piece n2 5 basic elements
- Strategy
- Culture
- Structure
- Technology
- Employees
10Piece n3 Role of the leader
Instrumental
Missionary
113 pieces or one piece?
The environment
5 basic elements
leader
12Getting the puzzle together
13Getting the puzzle together (cont.)
- Phase n1 Map the Influence Landscape
- Phase n2 Identify the Type of Resistance
- Phase n3 Leverage Negotiation
- Phase n4 Overcome Resistance
- Phase n5 Assemble the Puzzle
14Phase n1Map the Influence Landscape
- Identify the key players
- Draw an influence map
- Identify supporters, opponents, and convincibles
15Phase n2Identify Type of Resistance
16Phase n3Leverage Negotiation
- Open both eyes
- Open your mind
- Put yourself in your opponents shoes
- Think outside the box
- Be creative
17Phase n4Overcome Resistance 1 method 5 tools
Coercion
Facilitation
Cooptation
Education
Participation
Negotiation
18Phase n5Assemble the Puzzle Actions
1. Establish a sense of urgency
2. Create a guiding coalition
3. Develop a vision and strategy
4. Communicate the change vision
5. Empower broad-based action
6. Generate short-term wins
7. Consolidate gains and produce more change
8. Anchor new approaches in the culture
19Phase n5 (cont.)Assemble the Puzzle Behaviors
- Each of those steps will help create a new
behavior toward change. - Step 1 People start telling each other, lets
go, we need to change things!. - Step 2 A group powerful enough to guide a big
change is formed and they start to work together
well. - Step 3 The guiding team develops the right
vision and strategy for the change effort. - Step 4 People begin to buy into the change and
this shows in their behavior. - Step 5 More people feel able to act, and do act,
on the vision. - Step 6 Momentum builds, as more and more people
try to fulfill the vision, while fewer and fewer
resist change. - Step 7 People make wave after wave of changes
until the vision is fulfilled. - Step 8 People keep behaving in new ways despite
the pull of tradition, turnover of change
leaders, etc.
20A real-world example ROLEX
21A real-world example ROLEX (cont.)
22A real-world example ROLEX (cont.)
- Six major trends
- 1) context of mergers and acquisition
- 2) emergence of new markets and new competitors
- 3) growing importance of product innovation and
development - 4) disproportion of competitors size structure
- 5) vertical integration
- 6) culture of secrecy
23A real-world example ROLEX (cont.)
- Most pressing challenge for ROLEX internal.
- Externally no leverage on economic conditions
and raw materials price - Internally need to create a culture
- more customer-
- more innovation-
- more-delivery oriented.
- The lack of financial pressure (private company)
causes that particular culture. Managers role to
create the impulse for change in order to be able
to overcome the weaknesses (major Supply Chain
initiative on the way).
24A real-world example ROLEX (cont.)
- Result Supply Chain ROLEX Project
- Ambitious goals of reduction of inventory, of
costs, of time between order and delivery, etc. - Implication of all departments of the firm
- Sense of Urgency established by the CEO with a
strict deadline. - Guiding Coalition newly hired employee
- with extensive background in building world-class
supply chains - did homework by identifying key players and
influence maps - sustained by a Supervisory Committee.
25A real-world example ROLEX (cont.)
- New vision and strategy developed internally
with consultants help. - Communication top-down approach with incremental
steps. - Broader action identification of priorities and
definition of an extensive test on a limited area
of the production to be extended to all areas. - Short-term wins concentration on MRP updates and
adjustments
26A real-world example ROLEX (cont.)
- Consolidation through implication of more
departments, better communication through going
deeper into the organization. - Anchoring new metrics defined for the
compensation system. - RESULT ROLEX enters the industrial era, with a
thorough knowledge of its costs, its production
processes and reliable metrics.
27Practice
- Refer back to our initial exercise(link)
- Revisit the most difficult change scenarios you
identified earlier - Identify one key thing youve learned today which
would have helped you handle the change better - What will you start doing differentlyas early as
todaythe next time you are confronted with
significant change?
28Summary
- Change Management is a difficult science
(because not exact) that succeeds best when
ingrained in the culture. - The role of the change agent (leader) is crucial.
- He/she should master the tools that will help
plan the change. It is about observing and
analyzing. - Then comes the implementation of the 8-step
method where the negotiation skills are critical.
29Readings
- Leading Change Overcoming the Ideology of
Comfort and the Tyranny of Custom, by James
O'Toole, 302pp., Jossey-Bass, April 1995 - Leading Change Why Transformation Efforts Fail,
by John P. Kotter, 187pp., Harvard Business
School Press, September 1996 - The Heart of Change Real-Life Stories of How
People Change Their Organizations, by John P.
Kotter and Dan S. Cohen, 208pp., Harvard Business
School Press, August 2002 - The First 90 Days Critical Success Strategies
for New Leaders at All Levels, by Michael
Watkins, Harvard Business School Press, 2003 - Good to Great Why Some Companies Make the Leap,
and Others Don't, By Jim Collins, 320pp., Harper
Collins Publishers, Incorporated, October 2002 - Useful website with free tools
www.change-management-toolbook.com - sign up for
its free monthly newsletter!