Change Management, An Approach To Transition Individuals, Teams, And Organizations To A Desired Future State

Change Management, An Approach To Transition Individuals, Teams, And Organizations To A Desired Future State

Given the need to make a significant change in your business, especially one that will affect people require their involvement and commitment to be successful, you really need to think of change as a process, the fact is, principles and practices of so-called "change management" do exist. And they can mean the difference between a change effort that improves your business and fires people up and one that bogs you down, fails to achieve its objectives and damages your company's morale to boot.

So, let's look at my guide effectively managing change, one by one.

Step One: The Status Quo Is Not an Option

First, as a leader, you need to demonstrate to all who need to get behind the change, that the status quo is unsustainable. Ironically, this is easier when there's a crisis at hand than when only you and a few other leaders see the rationale for change. But if you're the first one to see that you have a problem or that something is wrong in your company that need to be significantly modified to suit the tastes of a rapidly-changing market, then you need to marshal the right facts and arguments to make your case. This is a must. You can't escape it. But that alone isn't enough.

Step Two: Create a Compelling Vision of the Future

Along with the first step, you need to create in the minds of those you want to enlist a very compelling picture -- a vision -- of how much better it's going to be once you succeed in making this change. In other words, you need to give people something to change for. So, the upside of fixing the quality problem or effectively up-grading the key product line is the integrity involved in adhering to your heritage of quality and the excitement of winning in the marketplace through constant innovation. And so on.

Step Three: Build a Change Team

So far, you've established that business-as-usual is not an option anymore and you've dramatized the new and better state that the required change will lead to. Now you need to get some help. You need to establish a team, of folks who buy your rationale for change and agree to lead it with you. This is not always easy. Managers and employees can sometimes look at the same data and come to different conclusions, and the pages of the newsletter are full stories about executives who have parted ways over disagreement on business strategy.

Be that as it may, your job as a change agent is to win over a "Team" to help you move your change program forward. This heightens the critical importance of building your case solidly in steps one and two.

If you are a CEO, your team would typically be drawn first from your leadership team. But don't forget to look more broadly to thought-leaders, key influencers and subject experts elsewhere in the company. If you have a quality problem, support from your plant manager will be key. And key influencers within marketing will need to be on board if you're going to successfully update that major change.

Step Four: Mobilize Commitment

With a solid case for change and a strong core team beside you to help lead it, you're now ready to go out and enlist more broad organizational support. And this is best done, not just by being the boss

Or from “top-down," so to speak. True, you need to make the case, and you and your team need to "get the ball rolling." But if this change is going to be successful, it's going to need more arms and legs than you and your core team could ever supply alone.

So you need to provide opportunities for a broad range of individuals to actually get "in the waters" with you to make change happen. You also need to structure this involvement to ensure that, pretty quickly, they can achieve some small "wins" that indicate success and motivate them to continue to move this new change program forward.

The guiding principle behind this kind of approach is that people on the front lines know their jobs better than you do. So if you're a store manager, has a problem “too many dents in new refrigerators," your MAINTENANCE Team are probably better equipped to help you solve that problem than your VP of sales. So involve them, and let them tell you, specifically, how the work they do needs to be changed to improve quality. Once they do and you approve, you have just turbo-charged your change program with the strongest force there is: personal ownership through meaningful involvement.

Step Five: Cheerlead

Once these early "wins" start to happen, you need to be the biggest cheerleader as if the change depended upon it -- because it does! You need to celebrate and praise what's being done that's helping to "move the needle" and identify and discourage what isn't. Use every opportunity -- chance face-to-face meetings, formal speeches, and other company communications channels to reinforce the kind of behavior that supports your change program.

Sunil R. Harrypersad Sales Leadership, Talent Optimization, Strategy.

Successes: ?Business Development?Culture Builder?Mainstreet Disruptor?Revenue Growth?Success Champion?Stategy Implementation?Talent Activation?Startups & Scaling?Operational Management?Family Guy?

9 å¹´

Great post Charlene... I believe this is an arena that many organizations and leaders struggle in, simply because it can be considered unchartered territory of the unknown. The leaders who are "strong change agents," can quickly attest that it requires a total team commitment to make the change work. Change is vital for growth and success of any organization. Teamwork makes the dreamwork....by aligning leaders, managers and teams with the change, an empirical approach to winning the change becomes possible. As a change agent myself, I have recognized the importance of helping leaders see the value that they bring while connecting them to the vision and the changes that will occur along the way. One more important factor to recognize is feedback, change cannot sustain without it, it's important to lead through change, but also solicit feedback during the change management process. This allows for fluid communication and quicker abilities to course correct that will lead to more suitable results.

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