Title: Managing Change in Health Care Organisations PU 5004
1Managing Change in Health Care OrganisationsPU
5004
- Lecture 2
- The Nature of Organisational Change
2Introduction
- Kathryn Charles, University of Aberdeen Business
School - e-mail k.charles_at_abdn.ac.uk
- Practitioner
- Researcher
- Teacher
3Objectives
- To define the nature of organisational change
- To provide understanding of diverse the
theoretical frameworks for managing
organisational change - To develop understanding of the practical
dilemmas for practitioners in designing,
implementing and sustaining organisational change
in healthcare organizations
4Organizational Change What is it?
- New ways of organizing and working
-
Dawson,1994 - Differences in - how an organization functions,
who its members and leaders are, what form it
takes, or how it allocates its resources - Huber et al, 1993216
5Defining the territory
- Change implies
- Differences between two successive conditions,
states, or moments in time, - (Smith,1982)
- Is the term organising more appropriate?
- Organisations are dynamic Chia, 2002
- The co-ordination and standardisation of human
actions in response to context overtime - The complexity of context provides the stimulus
for organisational actors to adjust these
institutionalised cognitive structures
organisation is a process! -
6Theoretical Perceptions
- Multi-disciplinary Sociology, psychology,
philosophy. - Covers individual, group and organisational
levels - Useful Resource Review of the theory -National
Co-ordinating Centre for Service Delivery and
Organisation Managing Change in the NHS, Iles
and Sutherland - Much debate open / closed systems, top down
imposed change or bottom up participative change
or umbrella strategies, structural v actor
perspectives systems v people focus - http//www.sdo.lshtm.ac.uk/managingchange.html
7Five Dimensions to Change
- Content/ Character of Change of the change TQM,
Technological change, BPR, Cultural Change - Temporal Dimension rate or pace of change
- Scale of change incremental or transformational
- Political Dimension Change contested or
accepted? - Intentionality
8The Nature of Organisational Change
- Character
- Dominant forms
- TQM
- BPR
- Technological Change
- Culture Change
9The Nature Of Organizational Change
- Defining the territory
- Scale, Scope and Time dimensions
- Episodic Change
- Infrequent, discontinuous and intentional
- Weick and Quinn, 1999
- Transformational / Paradigmatic
- Non routine, non incremental and discontinuous,
- Tichy, 1983
10The Nature of Organisational Change
- Epigenetic change
- Change seeded in the old order
- Which is felt to fall outside some existing
recipes, but nevertheless finds its genesis
inside the organisation. - Burt, 2003
11The Nature of Organisational Change
- Incremental Change
- viewed as a process whereby individual
elements of the organisation address specific
internal and external problems, as they arise, in
a piecemeal fashion, which over time results in
organisational transformation. - Hedberge et al,1976 Quinn, 1980b and 1982.
-
12Integrating Incremental and Transformational
Change
- The Punctuated Equilibrium Model
- Miller and Friesen, 1984 Tushman and
Romanelli, 1985 Gersick, 1991 - Sets of interdependencies that converge and
tighten during a period of relative equilibrium,
often at the expense of continued adaptation to
environmental changes. As adaptation lags,
effectiveness decreases, pressures for change
increase, and a revolutionary period is entered.
(Weick and Quinn, 1999367)
13Punctuated Equilibrium Model of Change (adapted
from Balogun and Hailey, 2004)
14Change as an evolutionary unplanned Process
- Continuous / Emergent Change
- Absence of explicit prior intentions
- Characterised as being ongoing, evolving and
emergent where micro-level improvisation,
translation, reactivity and pro activity can
cumulatively result in substantial change - NHS as a Learning Organisation
- Creating Communities of Practice
15A Learning Organisation
- A Learning Organisation is an organisation
skilled at creating, acquiring and transferring
knowledge, and at modifying behaviour to reflect
new knowledge and insights, (Garvin, 199380) - The learning organization conceives agency as a
team process, where collaboratively all
organizational actors use their skills ,
knowledge to promote and work towards
organizational success. This occurs via
cumulative micro-processes of enactment which
iteratively generate new knowledge, which are
then transmitted throughout the organisation,
(Senge, 1990).
16A Learning Organisation
- Senge ,(1990) The Fifth Discipline stresses the
organisational attributes - Organisational Learning is a process of improving
actions through better knowledge - Organizational learning via such learning
cultures employs the development of exploitative
or single loop learning, (Argris and Schon,
1978), and explorative or double loop learning,
(March, 1991).
17The Learning Organisation
- Single loop learning adaptive learning
feedback and monitoring - Double loop learning Challenging and
reconstructing basic aspects of an organisations
operations - Triple loop learning - questioning the rationale
for the organisation and radically changing it - Creation and adaptation of environment
- Communities of practice - acknowledges that
organizations are emergent and constellations of
practice, (Wenger 2000). Engagement in practice
providing the medium by which collaborative
action produces iterative self organizing
processes of organizational learning.
18Contemporary Ideas
- Change as the normal condition of organisation,
whereas organisation is an emergent property - of change
- Change is not a product of organization, but a
pre curser to organisation, a condition which
makes organisation possible. - The re-weaving of actors webs of beliefs and
habits of action as a result of new experiences
obtained through interactions - Tsoukas and Chia,2002
19Plurality of views of the pace of organisational
change
EPISODIC
PARADIGMATIC
INCREMENTAL
EPIGENETIC
EMERGENT
20Theoretical perceptions of the nature of
organisational Change
21Why do we study organisational change processes ?
- Critical issue facing managers employees within
organisations - Significant multi-disciplinary topic within
organisational studies literature economics,
management, psychology, sociology - Ongoing debate concerning links between theory
practice - Contrast between the rationale for change
results of change initiatives (70 fail)
22Major Problems Managing Change
- TQM failure rates USA at 90 , (Crosby, 1979)
- BPR failure rates 60 - Bywater, 1997
- 70 of all change efforts fail Beer and Nohria,
2000 - Common problems associated with change Hamel
and Prahaled - Extreme downsizing creates corporate anorexia
- Re-engineering is often catching up with someone
else's benchmark - Efficiency driven and short term strategies
- Strategy not just action plan must develop
behaviour change
23TRIGGERS
24External Triggers
- Drucker (1999) referred to the five certainties
which are primarily social and political which
will influence organisational strategy. - The collapsing birth-rate.
- Shifts in disposable income.
- Defining performance.
- Growth in global competitiveness.
- The growing incongruence between economic
globalisation and political splintering.
25Internal Triggers
- Leavitt,(1964), identifies
- Technology
- People
- Tasks
- Administrative Structures
26How does it link with other areas of management
- How does it link with other areas of management?
- Central association with strategic management
(business policy) why an organisation should
change - Links with operations management how an
organisations processes should change - Key concern with human resource management who
should be involved in any change initiative how
to manage that change process
27Why is Organizational Change Important?
- It is generally accepted that managing
organizational change is inherently difficult and
represents a key challenge to competitive
success - Hanson,1993 Worral and
Cooper, 1997 - Organizations in transition Drivers both
internal and external to the organization - The industrial terrain has been changing so
quickly or have industry boundaries been so
malleable. Never before have competitors,
partners, suppliers and buyers been so
indistinguishable. - Hamel and Prahaled,
1994ix -
28Summary
- Defining the nature of organisational change
- Five dimensions to organisational change
- Exploring planned and emergent Change
- Organisational change triggers
- Why is organizational change important
29Group activity
- Exploring organisational change
- Examine the extracts from the NHS Live Annual
Report (www.dh.gov.uk/Publications) and case
studies (www.nhslive.nhs.uk)? - What is the function of NHS Live?
- Identify the character, pace and magnitude of the
change processes being discussed? - What are the benefits of this change strategy?
- What are the problems generated by this strategy?
30Next week
- Managing organisational change
31Useful References
- www.cci.scot.nhs.uk
- McDonald.R, (2005), Shifting the balance of
power? Culture change and identity in an English
health care setting, Journal of Health
Organization and Management, Vol.19,i3,pp.189-204.
- Burke, R. J,(2004), Implementation of hospital
restructuring and nursing staff perceptions of
hospital functioning, Journal of Health
Organization and Management, Vol.18,i4, pp279. - NHS Modernisation Agency
- Office for Health Management Learning from NHS
Change -
- Scottish executive Organisational Change in NHS
Scotland - http//www.healthmanagementonline.co.uk
/toolkit/toolkit.asp?pdaid19