Title: Leading Change
1Leading Change
- L.H. Newcomb
- Professor Emeritus
- College of Food, Agricultural, and Environmental
Sciences - The Ohio State University
2Objectives
- The learners will
- Explain why change is needed in their
organization - Explain the difference between structural change
and cultural change - Explain Kotters eight-step process
- Begin to develop a strategy to lead change
- Develop the beginning of a strategy to lead a
change effort in their current assignment
3Objectives - continued
- The learners will
- Generate ways to increase a sense of urgency
- Design a preliminary guiding coalition
- Discuss communication strategies
- Suggest ideas for short term wins
4Land Grant Administrators. . .
- What are tough issues they face?
- What are impediments in
- Organization and structure
- Business practices
- Organizational culture
- What makes it difficult for them to make
significant change? - What must they change for the future?
5Your Position/Area of Influence
- Identify a significant change that is absolutely
needed. - Examples might be
- Reorganization
- Changing the reward system
- Eliminating functions
- Dramatic altering of the portfolio of efforts
- Destroying silos
- Merging with another unit
6Your Position/Area of Influence
- Identify something
- that is real for your situation
- that you care about
- where you want to make progress
- where applying what you learn here could help
accomplish it - Describe what is
- Describe what you envision must be
7Kotters Eight Stage Process for Leading Change
- Establish a Sense of Urgency
- Create the Guiding Coalition
- Develop a Vision and Strategy
- Communicate the Change Vision
- Kotter, J. P. (1996). Leading Change. Boston
Harvard Business School Press. p. 21.
8Kotters Eight Stage Process for Leading Change -
continued
- Empower Employees for Broad-Based Action
- Generate Short-Term Wins
- Consolidate Gains and Produce More Change
- Anchor New Approaches in the Culture
- Kotter, J. P. (1996). Leading Change. Boston
Harvard Business School Press. p. 21.
9Behavior Patterns that Create Paralysis
- Each unit/individual for itself
- Hierarchy rules
- Consensus at all costs
- Always have the right answer
- Whatever is done must be done by all
- All will agree to whatever is decided
10A New Set of Rules
- Questions are more compelling than answers.
- Learning is more a function of critical thinking
than being right. - Purposeful experimentation is more important than
predictive thinking. - How could you use this notion to help you lead
change where you are now?
11Sources of ComplacencyKotter, J. P. (1996).
Leading Change. Boston Harvard Business School
Press. p. 40.
- The absence of a major and visible crisis
- Too much happy talk Too many visible
- from senior management resources
- Human nature, with its Low overall
- capacity for denial performance
- especially if people are standards
- already busy or stressed
- A kill-the-messenger-of
Organizational - bad-news, low-candor, structures
that focus - low-confrontation culture employees
on narrow - functional goals
COMPLACENCY
12Building a Coalition That Can Make Change Happen
- Find the Right People
- With strong position power, broad expertise, and
high credibility - With leadership and management skills, especially
the former
Kotter, J. P. (1996). Leading Change. Boston
Harvard Business School Press. pp. 57-61.
13Discussion Create Trust
- How can you create trust within your organization?
14Empowerment
- People wont help when they feel powerless
- Move commitment to change AND participation in
change out beyond the guiding coalition and the
management team - Beyond the umbrella organization
15Discussion - Empowerment
- What can you do to empower people to lead,
assist, and enable change in your organization? - What are you willing to try?
- What are you will to assault to make progress in
this area?
16The Role of Short-Term Wins
- Provide evidence that sacrifices are worth it
Wins greatly help justify the short-term costs
involved. - Reward change agents with a pat on the back
After a lot of hard work, positive feedback
builds morale and motivation.
Kotter, J. P. (1996). Leading Change. Boston
Harvard Business School Press. p. 123.
17The Role of Short-Term Wins
- Help fine-tune vision and strategies Short-term
wins give the guiding coalition concrete data on
the viability of their ideas. - Be willing to keep building the bridge as you
cross it. - Undermine cynics and self-serving resisters
Clear improvements in performance make it
difficult for people to block needed change.
Kotter, J. P. (1996). Leading Change. Boston
Harvard Business School Press. p. 123.
18The Role of Short-Term Wins
- Keep bosses on board Provide those higher in
the hierarchy with evidence that the
transformation is on track. - Building momentum Turns neutrals into
supporters, reluctant supporters into active
helpers, etc.
Kotter, J. P. (1996). Leading Change. Boston
Harvard Business School Press. p. 123.
19Discussion Short Term Wins
- What might some short term wins be for the
change effort you are committed to leading?