The Pace of Organizational Change
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 4,087 legacy views
At a recent conference, participants wanted to know:
- What is the pace of change? When is too much, too much?
- Is change better if done quickly, or more slowly?
Surveys indicate too much change is the cause of project failure. Initiative overload can be the reason your project may fail. So, the pace of change is a complicated issue. There are two components to making organizational change work; one is the successful implementation of the course of action and the other is its acceptance by those involved. There can be a great difference between the pace of implementation and the pace of acceptance. Implementation is mostly about the mechanics of change and its pace is managed by a systematic approach that can be scheduled. However, acceptance of the change is about people and their readiness for change. This is more complex because it deals with emotions and you cannot schedule that.
You can however influence the speed of acceptance by providing an on-going dialogue to:
• Hear and address people’s conce
s as they happen (and get ahead of the rumor mill).
• Alleviate their fears when you can or confirm things that they need to know to make informed choices about their life and future.
• Give information about the business reasons for the changes and how you plan to deal with them.
• Answer their questions the best you can (sometimes, several times) and let them know if you don’t have an answer to a question. Get back to them when you know.
• Teach people skills to deal with the uncertainties of change and give them tools to mange change at a personal level.
• Involve them in the process of change as much as you can. People can work through change better when they feel they can have some impact on its direction.
The more you invest in genuine and authentic communication with your people and involve them in finding solutions, the more you can shape the direction of change. This will encourage people to buy-in to the changes that have to be made, which in turn can speed up the pace of change.
However, the most effective and long term approach is to have a change-ready organization where employees perceive change as an ongoing part of the business and are equipped to deal with it.
In short, a change-ready organization consists of teams that:
- Understand the business of the organization beyond just the viewpoint of their personal jobs.
- Are clear about the organization’s challenges and opportunities.
- Know their interdependencies with other people and groups within and outside the organization.
- Recognize their role and importance in the effectiveness of their organization.
- Are trained in social and interaction team skills so they can support each other through emotional challenges that are presented by change.
- Are taught the technical team skills that help them shift their paradigms, solve problems and find the opportunities offered by change.
- Feel and act as mini-business owners within the context of the organization.
The leadership team in a change-ready organization not only practices these team skills but also sets the tone for the culture of openness and caring that is the cradle for the organization’s effectiveness. They value the inherent worth in every employee and allow that belief to guide their actions and policies. Through genuinely caring behaviors, they connect to their employees at the human level and prove that they are worthy of their trust. They are aware that a great deal of fear disappears when trust appears. The leadership of these organizations understands that their greatest opponent in managing change is “fear”, which manifests itself in a variety of behaviors labeled as resistance. They know how to lower the resistance by lowering the fears.
Finally, change-ready organizations pay attention to their supporting systems (such as accountability, performance, empowerment, compensation, etc.) to ensure they provide enough flexibility to facilitate quick and effective communications, decisions, and actions which are required for successful change.
By: Afsaneh Noori
Tampa, FL n© Socio-Tech Systems Inc. 2009 All Rights reserved.
Article author
About the Author
Further reading
Further Reading
Article
What Would My Soul Do?
Most of the time when we are faced with choices and decisions, we anguish over them because of all of the baggage that we have built up over the years. Our decisions are made more difficult because of fears, anxieties, past memories and other emotions that press in from all corners. We allow our ...
Related piece
Article
Why Doesn't My Life Work
How often have you heard someone say “Why doesn’t my life work?” Or “Nothing Ever goes right for me.” Or thought to yourself: “What’s wrong with my life?” It’s so easy to think that you are a victim of diabolical forces that have conspired to hand you a fistful of misery. But Quantum Physics is ...
Related piece
Article
Happy Holidays To Earth, Goodwill To Men
As we embark on the holidays this year, it is a happy time of the year for many of us. We celebrate the themes peace on Earth, goodwill to men, generosity, kindness and compassion. For most of us that means giving gifts to our friends and family, the camaraderie of the office Christmas party, ...
Related piece
Article
How to Stay Positive…With a Negative Vibration Spouse or Partner
People who are making the change to a conscious and spiritually-driven life often discover that they are yoked to someone who is not prepared to come along on that jou ey. The partner is mired in his or her own negative thoughts and emotions, and meets any topic of spiritual enlightenment, ...
Related piece