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Evolving organizations
Leonardo Caporarello Organization and HR Dept. [email protected]
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Why many change initiatives do not succeed?
Most significant obstacles to change % of respondents
Organizational resistance to change Inadequate sponsorship Unrealistic expectations Poor project management Case for change not compelling Project team lacked skills Scope expansion No change management program No horizontal process view Lack of required investments in technology
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Why many change initiatives do not succeed?
Most significant obstacles to change % of respondents
Organizational resistance to change 82 Inadequate sponsorship 72 Unrealistic expectations 65 Poor project management 54 Case for change not compelling 46 Project team lacked skills 44 Scope expansion 44 No change management program 43 No horizontal process view 41 Lack of required investments in technology 41
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Change: a definition
Change is “an individual and group sensemaking process taking place in social context that is a product of constant and ongoing human production and interaction in organizational settings”
George, J.M., and Jones, G.R. (2001). Towards a process model of individual change in organizations. Human Relations, 54
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Phases of change
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How many change initiative do succeed?
Michael Hammer and James Champ estimate that “as many as 50 to 70% of the organizations that undertake a reengineering effort do not achieve the dramatic results they intended.”
A review of the research literature on change suggests that a large percentage of change efforts end in discouraging results.
Experts suggest that the figure may be as high as 70 percent.
So, why is introducing change so difficult?
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The 13 factors are: 1. There was visible support from the sponsor throughout the change project 2. People understood what they had to do in order to make the change work 3. The effort was adequately staffed and funded 4. The project team was dedicated and capable 5. There was a strong project manager 6. Other organizational priorities did not get in the way 7. Progress toward the goals was tracked and publicized 8. The change was explained to everyone 9. There was continued support from the sponsor throughout the project 10. The change was kept small and manageable 11. Employees were treated fairly 12. The sponsor had the support of other key executives 13. There was a detailed plan
Characteristics of effective change programs
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Barriers to organizational change
Changes usually mean:
• losses of power as responsibility and accountability are
shifted,
• losses in relationships as new patterns of interaction are
demanded by new approaches to management,
• losses in rewards, particularly status, and money, as power
shifts.
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Two basic approaches to change
Based on over 40 years of study and research in the change field, Beer and Nohria suggest there are two fundamental
approaches that drive change initiatives:
“Theory E” and “Theory O”.
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Theory E is considered the “hard side” of change and is focused on creating economic value by increasing shareholder value (e.g. cash flow and stock price).
This approach to change is often related to addressing a financial crisis of some kind. Strategies to improved shareholder value may involve use of performance incentives and bonuses, layoffs, downsizing, and restructuring.
Theory E change is driven from the top.
Where short-term performance results tend to be paramount, the Theory E approach to change is used more than Theory O.
Two basic approaches to change
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Theory O is characterized as a softer approach to change. The focus here is on building organizational capability by capitalizing on its human capital, building employee commitment, and creating a learning culture that can respond, adapt, and change in the face of the driving forces in its environment.
Leaders of the Theory O approach to change recognize that they can’t manage change by themselves or issuing an edict from the top.
Leaders rely on bringing out the hidden talent in their workforce by involving them in the process and reinforcing behaviors and attitudes that will help ensure success.
Two basic approaches to change
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Managing the change: dimensions
The following dimensions provide a useful way to think about creating and implementing organization-wide change:
• Driving forces
• Change assessment
• Change/project leader
• Planning change
• Implementing change
• Evaluation
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The more important of these forces include:
• Human capital
• Economic and Global
• Technological
• Political-Legal
• Competitive Dynamics
• Environmental
Managing the change: driving forces
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Force Examples Human Capital • Changing demographics
• Diversity • Competency deficit • Labor crisis • Employment disputes • New CEO, boss or leader
Economic and Global • Change in interest rates • Economic downturn • Industry meltdown (e.g. tech sector, dot-coms) • Deregulation • Regulatory changes
Technological • Automation • Information technology
Political-Legal • Sarbanes-Oxley Act • Basel II, Basel III
Managing the change: driving forces
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Force Examples Competitive Dynamics • Mergers and acquisitions
• Turnaround • Downsizing • Bankruptcy • Competitive moves of rivals • Cost trends/inefficiencies • Improve work processes • Change in ownership
Environmental • Natural disaster • Increased security threats
Managing the change: driving forces
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If management is slow to respond to the human capital, competitive, economic, global and other forces, the organization will most likely fall behind rival firms and possibly impair overall organizational performance.
Sound analysis of the firm’s driving forces is therefore a prerequisite to good change strategy.
Managing the change: change assessment
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One of the key success factors in any change initiative is ensuring you have a visible project manager or champion
who takes ownership and can muster the resources and
provide the expertise and operational know-how necessary
to guide the change to success.
Managing the change: change agent
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Planning change relates to all the activities that must be covered and in alignment before a change is actually
implemented.
Thus, effectively managing change requires a good alignment
or fit beginning with a good strategy and then appropriately
aligning the remaining elements to support that strategy.
Managing the change: planning change
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Implementing change is the most challenging aspect of any change effort.
Among the others, a useful framework for managing any
change implementation effort is Lewin’s classic three-stage
sequence of unfreezing-change/movement-refreezing.
Managing the change: implementing change
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This dimension of the change process focuses on determining what progress is being made with the change effort.
However, change plans don’t always turn out the way they are intended.
Knowing how to lead and manage a change initiative is, in itself, a key core competence.
Managing the change: evaluation
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What to ask before launching a major organizational change
The big question Probing for the right answer
Is the practice better than what you are doing right now?
• Are you already doing it under another banner? • How often does it succeed elsewhere? • Can you test it in your organization first?
Is the change really worth the time, disruption, and money?
• Are your time line and budget realistic given what actually happens to other companies?
• Do the people who are selling you the solution have incentives for underestimating the costs?
Is it best to make only symbolic changes instead of core changes?
• Is this a core change that will actually hurt the organization’s performance?
• Are powerful groups inside or outside the organization clamoring for this change anyway?
• If you fail to make any changes, will it damage your organization’s reputation and key relationships?
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The big question Probing for the right answer
Do you have enough power to make the change happen?
• Do you have enough internal support and resources?
• Are your current allies powerful enough? • Do you have a strategy for strengthening supporters and weakening opponents?
Are people already overwhelmed by too many changes?
• Do people believe that this change will actually stick, or is it just a flavor of the month?
• Are people still trying to recover from the last major change? Are they still implementing it, or still so exhausted that they are not ready for the new change?
• Are so many other things being changed at once that people couldn’t possibly do everything well?
What to ask before launching a major organizational change
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The big question Probing for the right answer
Will people be able to learn and update as the change unfolds?
• Is the team showing that they can learn and improve the planned change in response to resistance, criticisms, and suggestions - or do they simply dismiss all concerns as stupid ideas from stupid people?
Will you be able to pull the plug? • How will you know it is failing? • How will you know when it is time to quit? • Who will judge it a failure and pull the plug?
Is doing the change good for you, but bad for the company?
• Will doing it increase your fame, prestige, or pay? • Will doing it mean that someone powerful owes you a favor?
• Will it make your job easier and everyone else’s harder?
What to ask before launching a major organizational change
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Influence and attitude to change: four profiles
Attitude to Change
Influence, power
Resistors (neutralize early)
Champions (get early support)
Bandwagon (mobilized using bandwagon effect)
Followers (mobilized by champions)
High
Low
Resistance Innovation
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Main elements to mitigate/overcome resistance to change
D x V x P(F) > R
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Preferred communication mean according to the information transmitted
1.00$
1.50$
2.00$
2.50$
3.00$
Perceived(im
portan
ce( Communica1on(tools(
Mee*ng$
Tele/Video$conferencing$
Email$
Internet$based$tools$
Evolved$tools$
Visiononstrategygoals
Roles & responsibilities
Work progress
Relevant information Bocconi, work-in-progress
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Error 1: Not Establishing a Great Enough Sense of Urgency
This first step is essential because just getting a transformation program started requires the aggressive cooperation of many individuals.
Without motivation, people won’t help, and the effort goes nowhere.
When is the urgency rate high enough?
The answer is when about 75% of a company’s management is honestly convinced that business as usual is totally unacceptable.
Anything less can produce very serious problems later on in the
process.
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Error 2: Not Creating a Powerful Enough Guiding Coalition
A high sense of urgency within the managerial ranks helps enormously in putting a guiding coalition together. But more is usually required.
Someone needs to get these people together, help them develop a shared assessment of their company’s problems and opportunities,
and create a minimum level of trust and communication.
Groups without strong line leadership never achieve the power that is required.
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Error 3: Lacking a Vision
In every successful transformation effort, the guiding coalition develops a picture of the future that is relatively easy to communicate and
appeals to customers, stockholders, and employees.
A vision always goes beyond the numbers that are typically found in
five-year plans. A vision says something that helps clarify the direction in which an organization needs to move.
In failed transformations, you often find plenty of plans, directives, and
programs but no vision.
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Error 4: Undercommunicating the Vision by a Factor of Ten
Three patterns with respect to communication.
In the first, a group actually does develop a pretty good transformation vision and then proceeds to communicate it by holding a single meeting
or sending out a single communication.
In the second pattern, the head of the organization spends a considerable amount of time making speeches to employee groups, but
most people still don’t get it.
In the third pattern, much more effort goes into newsletters and
speeches, but some very visible senior executives still behave in ways that are antithetical to the vision. The net result is that cynicism among
the troops goes up, while belief in the communication goes down.
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Error 5: Not Removing Obstacles to the New Vision
The more people involved, the better the outcome.
Communication is never sufficient by itself. Renewal also requires the removal of obstacles.
Sometimes compensation or performance-appraisal systems make
people choose between the new vision and their own self-interest.
Perhaps worst of all are bosses who refuse to change and who make
demands that are inconsistent with the overall effort.
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Error 6: Not Systematically Planning for, and Creating, Short-Term Wins
Real transformation takes time, and a renewal effort risks losing momentum if there are no short-term goals to meet and celebrate.
Most people won’t go on the long march unless they see compelling evidence in 12 to 24 months that the journey is producing expected
results.
Creating short-term wins is different from hoping for short-term wins.
The latter is passive, the former active.
Commitments to produce short-term wins help keep the urgency level
up and force detailed analytical thinking that can clarify or revise visions.
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Error 7: Declaring Victory Too Soon
Until changes sink deeply into a company’s culture, a process that can take five to ten years, new approaches are fragile and subject to
regression.
Typically, the problems start early in the process: The urgency level is
not intense enough, the guiding coalition is not powerful enough, and the vision is not clear enough. But it is the premature victory celebration
that kills momentum. And then the powerful forces associated with
tradition take over.
Instead of declaring victory, leaders of successful efforts use the
credibility afforded by short-term wins to tackle even bigger problems.
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Error 8: Not Anchoring Changes in the Corporation’s Culture
Change sticks when it becomes “the way we do things around here”.
Until new behaviors are rooted in social norms and shared values, they are subject to degradation as soon as the pressure for change is
removed.
Poor succession decisions are possible when boards of directors are not an integral part of the renewal effort.
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The need for changing organization design and structure: case analysis
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The need for changing organization design and structure: case analysis
Q1: Based on the described situation, would you suggest to the company to adopt a radical change or a gradual one? 1=radical change, 2=gradual change
Radical'change'53%'
Gradual'change'47%'
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The need for changing organization design and structure: case analysis
Q2: Was there any sense of urgency for change? 1=yes, 2=no
Yes$94%$
No$6%$
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The need for changing organization design and structure: case analysis
Q3: Davesh’s proposal was: “Basically, we have to develop a detailed communication plan for designing and implementing the changes”. In general, according to you, is a communication plan important for the success of a change initiative? 1=not important at all, 5=very important
0%#
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The need for changing organization design and structure: case analysis
Q3b: Moreover, is it true that a communication plan should be defined since the very beginning of a change initiative? 1=yes, in most of the cases, 2=yes, in some cases, 3=yes, in a few cases, 4=no, it’s better to give communication once the change has been launched, 5=no, it’s better to keep it as confidential
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Yes,#in#most#of#the#cases# Yes,#in#some#cases# Yes,#in#a#few#cases# No,#it’s#be=er#to#give#communicaBon#once#the#change#has#been#
launched#
No,#it’s#be=er#to#keep#it#as#confidenBal#
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The need for changing organization design and structure: case analysis
Q4: Pankaj was pushing Devesh to implement the change program as soon as possible. According to you, was this request consistent with the type of change the company needed to adopt? 1=not at all…5=definitely yes
0%#
5%#
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1# 2# 3# 4# 5#
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The need for changing organization design and structure: case analysis
Yes$88%$
No$12%$
Q5: Considering the situation as described in the case, do you agree with the following Davesh’s statement? “Initially, the changes should be limited to our critical requirements”. 1=yes, 2=no
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Does Change management matter? Second round
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Change initiative: some management tips
Start with the analysis of individuals involved in the process Change process is not linear and has a curvilinear shape If you do not commit people at the beginning…it’s too late Change process has a rhythm You should guarantee coherence (internal; external) Don’t try to convince everybody in a single shot; do not start from high power-high resistance people Use the power of the network for getting people on board
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Your mandate
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Your mandate 1. Module evaluation will be based on a final individual written assignment
2. The assignment is about a real organizational challenge you are experiencing – or have experienced in the past –, to be analyzed through the approaches and frameworks presented and discussed during the module
3. The format of your final output is a .doc document, that should contain no more than 8000 characters – spaces included (+ 5% allowed).
4. The assignment will be evaluated according to the following three criteria:
1. Structure and format of the document
2. Clarity and linearity of the content
3. Appropriate use of the references, framework, and recommendations presented during the module
5. Your output has to be uploaded on the Learning Environment, within the “Organization” Module, by Nov 7 2015, 10pm (CET)