High Expectations....of Change
On this ceremonious day (for a few of you out there), I'm left thinking about a recent experience on a digital transformation project I had.
The beginning was wonderful. Big "hooray!" meeting and pulled everyone together with a very sleek and motivating PPT deck. Seemed the upper management team was very engaged and in support of the changes to be made.
Not to say things went downhill fast, but the reality quickly sunk in that the beginning of the change was actually giving up an old way of thinking/doing/managing... and spending. Spending not just dollars, but also how the organization spent its time and spent its energy.
About three months in after the initial afterglow wore off, I remember the team wanting to know more about the phase after this initial 'streamlining' and 'savings' phase. The "reset" phase was well underway, and it was time for growth. The issue was, the growth plan wasn't quite clear, specifically the how of the plan. I found myself thinking that most people in the organization were mistaking a 'plan' for a 'strategy', and that the 'plan' of "grow the business" wasn't really armed with any definition of an over-arching narrative in decision-making, or more importantly a clear framework to determine what not to do as part of the strategy.
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What started out as high expectations of change and a motivated "art of the possible" quickly changed to a degree of cynicism and doubt.
What I learned from the expectation setting, lack of change management and approach to the transformation were a few things:
What I'll leave you with is that the difference in expectation vs. reality is in part what leads to a high degree of satisfaction or dissatisfaction, and in the case of a large-scale transformation having unclear and lofty expectations is a disaster for the company and most importantly for the team & culture.