No single methodology fits every company, but there is a set of
practices, tools, and techniques that can be adapted to a variety of
situations. What follows is a “Top 10” list of guiding principles for
change management. Using these as a systematic, comprehensive framework,
executives can understand what to expect, how to manage their own
personal change, and how to engage the entire organization in the
process.
1. Address the “human side” systematically. Any
significant transformation creates “people issues.” New leaders will be
asked to step up, jobs will be changed, new skills and capabilities must
be developed, and employees will be uncertain and resistant. Dealing
with these issues on a reactive, case-by-case basis puts speed, morale,
and results at risk. A formal approach for managing change — beginning
with the leadership team and then engaging key stakeholders and leaders —
should be developed early, and adapted often as change moves through
the organization. This demands as much data collection and analysis,
planning, and implementation discipline as does a redesign of strategy,
systems, or processes. The change-management approach should be fully
integrated into program design and decision making, both informing and
enabling strategic direction. It should be based on a realistic
assessment of the organization’s history, readiness, and capacity to
change.
2. Start at the top. Because change is inherently
unsettling for people at all levels of an organization, when it is on
the horizon, all eyes will turn to the CEO and the leadership team for
strength, support, and direction. The leaders themselves must embrace
the new approaches first, both to challenge and to motivate the rest of
the institution. They must speak with one voice and model the desired
behaviors. The executive team also needs to understand that, although
its public face may be one of unity, it, too, is composed of individuals
who are going through stressful times and need to be supported.
Executive teams that work well together are best positioned for
success. They are aligned and committed to the direction of change,
understand the culture and behaviors the changes intend to introduce,
and can model those changes themselves. At one large transportation
company, the senior team rolled out an initiative to improve the
efficiency and performance of its corporate and field staff before
addressing change issues at the officer level. The initiative realized
initial cost savings but stalled as employees began to question the
leadership team’s vision and commitment. Only after the leadership team
went through the process of aligning and committing to the change
initiative was the work force able to deliver downstream results.
3. Involve every layer. As transformation programs
progress from defining strategy and setting targets to design and
implementation, they affect different levels of the organization. Change
efforts must include plans for identifying leaders throughout the
company and pushing responsibility for design and implementation down,
so that change “cascades” through the organization. At each layer of the
organization, the leaders who are identified and trained must be
aligned to the company’s vision, equipped to execute their specific
mission, and motivated to make change happen.
A major multiline insurer with consistently flat earnings decided to
change performance and behavior in preparation for going public. The
company followed this “cascading leadership” methodology, training and
supporting teams at each stage. First, 10 officers set the strategy,
vision, and targets. Next, more than 60 senior executives and managers
designed the core of the change initiative. Then 500 leaders from the
field drove implementation. The structure remained in place throughout
the change program, which doubled the company’s earnings far ahead of
schedule. This approach is also a superb way for a company to identify
its next generation of leadership.
4. Make the formal case. Individuals are inherently
rational and will question to what extent change is needed, whether the
company is headed in the right direction, and whether they want to
commit personally to making change happen. They will look to the
leadership for answers. The articulation of a formal case for change and
the creation of a written vision statement are invaluable opportunities
to create or compel leadership-team alignment.
Three steps should be followed in developing the case: First, confront
reality and articulate a convincing need for change. Second, demonstrate
faith that the company has a viable future and the leadership to get
there. Finally, provide a road map to guide behavior and decision
making. Leaders must then customize this message for various internal
audiences, describing the pending change in terms that matter to the
individuals.
A consumer packaged-goods company experiencing years of steadily
declining earnings determined that it needed to significantly
restructure its operations — instituting, among other things, a 30
percent work force reduction — to remain competitive. In a series of
offsite meetings, the executive team built a brutally honest business
case that downsizing was the only way to keep the business viable, and
drew on the company’s proud heritage to craft a compelling vision to
lead the company forward. By confronting reality and helping employees
understand the necessity for change, leaders were able to motivate the
organization to follow the new direction in the midst of the largest
downsizing in the company’s history. Instead of being shell-shocked and
demoralized, those who stayed felt a renewed resolve to help the
enterprise advance.
5. Create ownership. Leaders of large change programs
must overperform during the transformation and be the zealots who create
a critical mass among the work force in favor of change. This requires
more than mere buy-in or passive agreement that the direction of change
is acceptable. It demands ownership by leaders willing to accept
responsibility for making change happen in all of the areas they
influence or control. Ownership is often best created by involving
people in identifying problems and crafting solutions. It is reinforced
by incentives and rewards. These can be tangible (for example, financial
compensation) or psychological (for example, camaraderie and a sense of
shared destiny).
At a large health-care organization that was moving to a
shared-services model for administrative support, the first department
to create detailed designs for the new organization was human resources.
Its personnel worked with advisors in cross-functional teams for more
than six months. But as the designs were being finalized, top
departmental executives began to resist the move to implementation.
While agreeing that the work was top-notch, the executives realized they
hadn’t invested enough individual time in the design process to feel
the ownership required to begin implementation. On the basis of their
feedback, the process was modified to include a “deep dive.” The
departmental executives worked with the design teams to learn more, and
get further exposure to changes that would occur. This was the turning
point; the transition then happened quickly. It also created a forum for
top executives to work as a team, creating a sense of alignment and
unity that the group hadn’t felt before.
6. Communicate the message. Too often, change leaders
make the mistake of believing that others understand the issues, feel
the need to change, and see the new direction as clearly as they do. The
best change programs reinforce core messages through regular, timely
advice that is both inspirational and practicable. Communications flow
in from the bottom and out from the top, and are targeted to provide
employees the right information at the right time and to solicit their
input and feedback. Often this will require overcommunication through
multiple, redundant channels.
In the late 1990s, the commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service,
Charles O. Rossotti, had a vision: The IRS could treat taxpayers as
customers and turn a feared bureaucracy into a world-class service
organization. Getting more than 100,000 employees to think and act
differently required more than just systems redesign and process change.
IRS leadership designed and executed an ambitious communications
program including daily voice mails from the commissioner and his top
staff, training sessions, videotapes, newsletters, and town hall
meetings that continued through the transformation. Timely, constant,
practical communication was at the heart of the program, which brought
the IRS’s customer ratings from the lowest in various surveys to its
current ranking above the likes of McDonald’s and most airlines.
7. Assess the cultural landscape. Successful change
programs pick up speed and intensity as they cascade down, making it
critically important that leaders understand and account for culture and
behaviors at each level of the organization. Companies often make the
mistake of assessing culture either too late or not at all. Thorough
cultural diagnostics can assess organizational readiness to change,
bring major problems to the surface, identify conflicts, and define
factors that can recognize and influence sources of leadership and
resistance. These diagnostics identify the core values, beliefs,
behaviors, and perceptions that must be taken into account for
successful change to occur. They serve as the common baseline for
designing essential change elements, such as the new corporate vision,
and building the infrastructure and programs needed to drive change.
8. Address culture explicitly. Once the culture is
understood, it should be addressed as thoroughly as any other area in a
change program. Leaders should be explicit about the culture and
underlying behaviors that will best support the new way of doing
business, and find opportunities to model and reward those behaviors.
This requires developing a baseline, defining an explicit end-state or
desired culture, and devising detailed plans to make the transition.
Company culture is an amalgam of shared history, explicit values and
beliefs, and common attitudes and behaviors. Change programs can involve
creating a culture (in new companies or those built through multiple
acquisitions), combining cultures (in mergers or acquisitions of large
companies), or reinforcing cultures (in, say, long-established consumer
goods or manufacturing companies). Understanding that all companies have
a cultural center — the locus of thought, activity, influence, or
personal identification — is often an effective way to jump-start
culture change.
A consumer goods company with a suite of premium brands determined that
business realities demanded a greater focus on profitability and
bottom-line accountability. In addition to redesigning metrics and
incentives, it developed a plan to systematically change the company’s
culture, beginning with marketing, the company’s historical center. It
brought the marketing staff into the process early to create enthusiasts
for the new philosophy who adapted marketing campaigns, spending plans,
and incentive programs to be more accountable. Seeing these culture
leaders grab onto the new program, the rest of the company quickly fell
in line.
9. Prepare for the unexpected. No change program goes
completely according to plan. People react in unexpected ways; areas of
anticipated resistance fall away; and the external environment shifts.
Effectively managing change requires continual reassessment of its
impact and the organization’s willingness and ability to adopt the next
wave of transformation. Fed by real data from the field and supported by
information and solid decision-making processes, change leaders can
then make the adjustments necessary to maintain momentum and drive
results.
A leading U.S. health-care company was facing competitive and financial
pressures from its inability to react to changes in the marketplace. A
diagnosis revealed shortcomings in its organizational structure and
governance, and the company decided to implement a new operating model.
In the midst of detailed design, a new CEO and leadership team took
over. The new team was initially skeptical, but was ultimately convinced
that a solid case for change, grounded in facts and supported by the
organization at large, existed. Some adjustments were made to the speed
and sequence of implementation, but the fundamentals of the new
operating model remained unchanged.
10. Speak to the individual. Change is both an
institutional journey and a very personal one. People spend many hours
each week at work; many think of their colleagues as a second family.
Individuals (or teams of individuals) need to know how their work will
change, what is expected of them during and after the change program,
how they will be measured, and what success or failure will mean for
them and those around them. Team leaders should be as honest and
explicit as possible. People will react to what they see and hear around
them, and need to be involved in the change process. Highly visible
rewards, such as promotion, recognition, and bonuses, should be provided
as dramatic reinforcement for embracing change. Sanction or removal of
people standing in the way of change will reinforce the institution’s
commitment.
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