Change Factory Logo
blank    Search:
Making change happen.


Article Library

Search our growing library of over 200 articles

Business ethics, logic and governance
Business humour
Business planning
Business process management
Customer service
Goal setting
Leadership
Management Communication
Managing Change
Managing People
Performance management
Project management
Resource management
Risk management
Sales management
Small business management
Strategic management
Teamwork
Time management
Top ten, top seven
Training effectiveness

 

Seventy percent of all change management projects are considered to be failures.

The critical factors for change management success or failure are fairly simple.

The first factor is to have a group of people at leadership level believe that change is required. More than that, they must believe that “change management” is required. If these factors are not evident then failure is assured.

Understanding that major change is required is not enough. Developing a project plan which includes changes to processes, policies and infrastructure that does not include a plan to manage the change at a people level is not enough.

The second requirement is that the people undergoing change must have a reason to believe the change is necessary. They need the big picture painted for them to understand what benefits the organisation will gain from what many people will consider as the shared pain of change.

The big picture must be compelling, giving as many people in the organisation the desire to embrace the change even if it is difficult. Organisational change for organisational change's sake is likely to fail to deliver change.

The third requirement is that individuals must know how the change will affect them as individuals. Never forget the greatest motivational tool is to be able to respond to the question, “What's in it for ME?”

For most individuals in most organisations, motivation is about achievement, recognition, the work itself, responsibility, advancement and personal growth. So be sure that the change message addresses as best it can the motivational opportunities for people.

The fourth requirement is to “tell them early, tell them often”. Do not be surprised how many times the message needs to be repeated to the same people. Human beings filter information based on their emotional state, their previous experiences and their thinking styles. In a time of significant change people are often in emotional turmoil and will filter severely whatever they are told.

Tell people the compelling reason for the change, the plan for change, the progress of the plan for change including any early wins and their role in change, again and again as the project is implemented.

The fifth requirement is to be honest about the change. Sugar coating change is seen as being untrustworthy and will adversely impact the ability to communicate with the very people who have to embrace and implement the change.

If there is any bad news say so. If jobs are going to be lost, say so. If there are going to be challenges with the change, say so. If people have to re-skill, say so. If the targets are going to become much tougher, say so. Do not dress mutton as lamb. If an insignificant advantage will accrue to people, do not make it seem more significant than it is.

If you are honest about change and you don't know about some of the implications, you may have a significant number of people actually believe you. When you ask for help in making the change work, you may get a positive response. Be dishonest and even your best workers will smell a rat and treat you like one.

The sixth requirement is to utilise project management processes and skills. For those involved in change management who do not use project management processes and skills the simple advice is, “If I were you, I would not have started there”.

Project management processes and outputs play a big part in both planning and communicating the changes anticipated. They assist in risk management, contingency planning, change control, resource management, prioritisation and post implementation review of the change.

Far too many organisations embark on change in manner best described in the vernacular language, as flying by the seat of their pants. They do not plan change. They do not estimate the resources required by change. They do not plan the precursors to events required to make the change happen. They do not understand the risks and plan the contingencies. They usually reap the rewards with a failed change project.

Managing change is not easy. However, it is not as difficult as a seventy percent failure rate would make it seem. It needs to be taken as seriously as managing the finances of an organisation or the safety of an organisation.

Managing change requires a leadership team with project management, communication and analytical skills with a high degree of results orientation. The latter is important as when a journey of change is embarked upon, the environment in which the change is being implemented immediately changes. A changing environment often calls for changed tactics to achieve the same result.

More than that it requires the leadership team to have a vision for what the change can bring to the organisation and to individuals and a passion to make that change happen.

We welcome your comments: you can contact Kevin by email at





 

Subscribe to 'Winds of Change'

Join "Winds of Change" and receive our popular newsletter for managing change which includes a new article each week. Just enter your email address below.

Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon Winds of Change Sign Up
For Email Marketing you can trust

Take our HR Priorities Survey

EQ Survey

Develop good KPIS to drive performance

Generating and Selecting KPI Sets

Identify document and analyse business processes

Generating and Selecting KPI Sets

Control my business and limit my number of nasty surprises.

Selecting and Implementing Internal Controls

Create Service Level Agreements that work!

Implementation Guide for Service Level Agreemnts

Design a good website

Good Practice for Commercial Website Design

Increase my retail sales conversion rate

Measure my people's emotional intelligence

Communicate my strategy on one page

Measure my people's competence

Buy change management books

Kick start my sales kick-off meeting

Achieve more in less time
With the "Make Time For Success!" self-study program. 39 tips from the pros on managing time, effort, and others. Order the142-page ebook to reduce your stress and free up time.

Click here to get time on your side >

Create Vision. Motivate Others. Lead Effectively.
It's all in the "How to Lead" self-study leadership course.

More >>

Send Page To a Friend

Stumble It!

AddThis Social Bookmark Button AddThis Feed Button