Focusing On Organizational Change - Attributed
Focusing On Organizational Change - Attributed
Focusing On Organizational Change - Attributed
Dedication
To my father, William Q. Judge, Sr., who loved me well and provided me with my own capacity to learn, change, and grow
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Chapter 1
Strategic leaders [1] today are facing unrelenting pressures to deliver results. Indeed, whole books are being written based on the central premise that the purpose of leadership is to deliver resultson time and within budget. [2] In light of these withering pressures to deliver predictable short-term results, most leaders conclude that their only option is to react quickly to problems and opportunities as they arise and forget about long-term thinking. This pressure to change is real and increasing. Ed Lawler and Chris Worley note,
An analysis of the Fortune 1000 corporations shows that between 1973 and 1983, 35 percent of the companies in the top twenty were new. The number of new companies increases to 45 percent when the comparison is between 1983 and 1993. It increases even further, to 60 percent, when the comparison is between 1993 and 2003. Any bets as to where it will be between 2003 and 2013?
[3]
[1]
I
distinguish
between
strategic
leaders
in
this
book
who
are
in
senior
leadership
positions
at
the
strategic
apex
of
the
organization,
and
other
leaders
who
can
demonstrate
leadership
separate
and
distinct
from
their
authority
or
position
within
the
organization.
[2]
Ulrich,
Zenger,
&
Smallwood
(1999).
[3]
Lawler
and
Worley
(2006),
p.
1.
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Consequently, the new leadership mandate for the 21st century is delivering results in the short term while building change capacity for the long term. Capacity-building change initiatives take time, and short-term productivity sometimes suffers when the organization explores new organizational values, norms, systems, and routines. Capacity building requires trial, experimentation, and learning and these activities are not efficient in the short term. In general, learning is rarely efficient, but it is essential for organizations to be effective. Michael Beer and Nitin Nohria, both organizational scholars at the Harvard Business School, argue for a more balanced perspective of leadership as well. Essentially, they assert that the two leading theories of organization are Theory E, where the firm pursues short-term results in order to elevate the enterprise, and Theory O, where the firm seeks to build long-term organizational capacity. [4] Since much more is known about Theory E than Theory O approaches, this book will focus on the much newer and harder-to-execute theory. Consequently, strategic leaders today need to be ambidextrous in their approach to leadership. This balancing act is much more challenging than pushing hard for short-term results or nurturing the organization so that new ideas and capabilities emerge in the long term. Because current pressures usually shove long-term objectives to the side, leaders are proving to be much more practiced in reacting to putting out brush fires in todays organizations than in preparing the organization to be more change capable. Nonetheless, leaders must learn to fly the plane while rewiring it in flight [5] this is the mandate of the 21st century.
[1]
Covey
(1989),
p.
202.
[2]
Pelley
(2010).
[3]
Abrahamson
(2000).
[4]
Beer
and
Nohria
(2000).
[5]
Judge
and
Blocker
(2008).
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For example, CEOs are sometimes hired to move the organization from good to great. However, if the top management team or the board of directors or both are operating with a continuity mandate, the unofficial mandate clashes with the official one, and chaos often unfolds. When the official mandate is fundamentally different from the unofficial mandate, steps must be taken to bring
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them into alignment. Usually, this requires extraordinary conflict management skills and emotional maturity on the part of the leader. A third complication that can challenge this ambidextrous approach to leadership is when the environmental context doesnt allow the executive sufficient discretion to pursue short-term results while building organizational capacity for change. Some industries are in terminal decline, and the executive leader is not afforded the luxury of working for long-term survival. Some nations put employment ahead of productivity, and the executive leader is not allowed to challenge underperforming units. And some organizational cultures value stasis over excellence. All these constraints can conspire to limit executive discretion so that change capacity is not developed. Fourth, and perhaps most importantly, organizations are built to perform within an established order, not to change. Managers are often rewarded for predictable results so organizational bureaucracy often gravitates to exploitation over experimentation, efficiency over effectiveness, and leveraging previous learning over generating new insights. Hence, it is a rare organization that is built to change. [2]
[1]
Stybel
and
Peabody
(2006),
p.
11.
[2]
Lawler
and
Worley
(2006).
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book helps to explain exactly what OCC is and to provide insights as to how executive leaders can pursue it.
[1]
Prior,
Surroca,
&
Prior
(2008).
[2]
Welch
and
Welch
(2005).
[3]
Gerstner
(2002).
[4]
Collins
and
Porras
(1994).
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Chapter 5 "OCC Dimension 3: Capable Champions" explores the important role of capable
champions within change-capable organizations. Change champions are those individuals within the
senior executive group, the middle management ranks, or both who drive the change initiatives within an organization. These individuals are often mavericks and they dont normally fit in well in bureaucratic structures. However, their misfit nature is exactly what is needed in order to drive change successfully. Chapter 6 "OCC Dimension 4: Involved Midmanagement" examines the role that involved middle
managers play in making the organizational change capable. In many organizations, middle
management has been hollowed out, downsized, and replaced by computers. The remaining middle
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management group is often uninvolved with the strategy formation design initiatives. This is a mistake. Middle managers have a unique and important role to play in enhancing the change capability of the organization. When an organization comprises capable champions and involved midmanagement, then you have an opportunity for lateral leadership and effective influence without authoritya key ingredient for making your organization more agile. Chapter 7 "OCC Dimension 5: Systems Thinking" focuses on systems thinking within the organization. Organizations are complex living systems that are not properly understood by linear thinking and analysis. In this chapter, we explore how systems thinking gets cultivated so that organizational learning is accelerated. Then in Chapter 8 "OCC Dimension 6: Communication Systems", the importance of effective communication systems is investigated. When an organization combines systems thinking with high-functioning communication systems, systemic knowledge is created and dispersed throughout the organization. The final two chapters explore the role of organizational culture and change. Specifically, Chapter 9 "OCC Dimension 7: Accountable Culture" demonstrates the importance of having an accountable
culture where there are consequences for employees that fail or succeed. However, this cultural
attribute needs to be counterbalanced with an innovative culture, which is the focus of Chapter 10 "OCC Dimension 8: Innovative Culture". Together, these two dimensions of organizational change capacityaccountability and innovativenesshelp to ensure that the organization efficiently marshals scarce resources while creatively looking to the future. Chapter 11 "The Big Picture" provides a big picture perspective on organizational capacity for change, as well as guidance for assessing your organizations capacity for change. Specifically, it provides ideas and suggestions for utilizing the survey listed in Chapter 12 "Appendix A: OCC Survey Instrument" to collect data and the benchmark data listed in Chapter 13 "Appendix B: 8 Dimensions and Factor Loadings for OCC", Chapter 14 "Appendix C: OCC Benchmarking", and Chapter 15 "Appendix D: OCC Benchmarking" that can be used for comparisons between your organization and other organizations that have already been assessed. Chapter 17 "References" contains the references cited in this book, and Chapter 16 "Appendix E: Resources" contains some simulations, readings, and
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cases that can be used to further explore the organizational capacity for change framework. Chapter 16 "Appendix E: Resources" also contains additional resources for teaching, researching, and learning about organizational capacity for change.
[1]
Collins
and
Porras
(1994).
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Chapter 2
If the leaders new mandate is to prepare for change in the future while delivering results in the present, then what specific preparation is required? My central thesis is that the strategic leaders preparation for the future entails building organizations capacity for change, and that is the focus of the remainder of this book. In other words, this book is about helping executives fulfill the strategic leaders new mandate. [1] The business press is filled with many recent and ongoing stories of organizations that failed to adapt and change to an increasingly fluid and unpredictable environment. Indeed, a widely cited statistic is that more than 70% of all organizational change initiatives fail. [2] Nonetheless, one of the arguments why senior executives are worthy of the lofty compensation packages that they currently command is based on the widely-held view that effective leaders and change agents are rare, but essential to cope with the volatile and hypercompetitive environments that many organizations find themselves in today. [3] In response to this pressure to change, scholars and consultants are increasingly focusing on the nature and dynamics of organizational change in an effort to distill lessons learned from previous successes and failures, and provide guidance to change agents to improve their future success rate. Notably, in a recent online search of articles written on organizational change in the last 20 years, I discovered that there were more than 25,000 articles published in a prominent online search engine named Proquest. [4] This suggests to me that the topic is of great importance to those seeking to change organizations, but that much that is written about organizational change by organizational
Attributed
to
William
Q.
Judge
Jr.
Saylor
URL:
http://www.saylor.org/books/
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14
scholars is not improving our success rate. In sum, there is more to be learned about this important subject and this book attempts to fill that gap.
[1]
Bossidy
and
Charan
(2002).
[2]
Higgs
and
Rowland
(2005),
p.
121.
[3]
Kaplan
(2008),
p.
5.
[4]
ProQuest
Research
Library
(2010).
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throughout this hierarchy. While it is true that all organizations are hierarchical in some form and that organizational members are rational at times, this viewpoint is limited and not terribly realistic. Organizational change is not only a rational activity but also an emotional one that challenges deepseated human fears and inspires human hope. Indeed, John Kotter recently argued that change is predominantly about matters of the heart, not the head. [2] Organizations can operate in mechanical ways, but they also comprise living human beings who want meaningful work that allows them to have a life outside of work. As such, by assuming that all organizational change is rational and logical in nature where fear, political positioning, and turf wars rage, one wonders why any change initiative might work.
[1]
Judge
and
Blocker
(2008),
p.
915.
[2]
Kotter
and
Cohen
(2002).
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[1]
Christensen
(1997).
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organization to either effectively prepare for or respond to an increasingly unpredictable and volatile environmental context. This overall capability is multidimensional, and it comprises three ingredients: (a) human skill sets and resources, (b) formal systems and procedures, and (c) organizational culture, values, and norms. As such, OCC is a dynamic, multidimensional capability
that enables an organization to upgrade or revise existing organizational competencies, while cultivating new competencies that enable the organization to survive and prosper.
Peter Vaill argued that organizations increasingly operate in white water where executives have only partial control, yet effective navigation of a boat on the rapids requires everyone in the boat to react efficiently and effectively to the white water all around them. [1] While I like this metaphor, I would add that the navigator must also prepare the boat and the rest of the team for the oncoming white water. Robert Thames and Douglas Webster use a different metaphor to describe the context in which firms operate today, namelya hurricane or an earthquake. They state,
To many organizations, change comes like a hurricane season. Everyone knows its coming. It is the same every year. The only thing we dont know is Who will it hit this time?To other organizations change comes like the earthquake. We may never see it coming but have this nagging feeling that it is.
[2]
Whether your industry or national economy seems like white water rapids, an oncoming hurricane, or a potential earthquake, organizations must prepare in advance, not just react when the environmental jolt is experienced. That advance preparation is what I am calling organizational capacity for change. Organizations with relatively high change capacity can successfully shoot the rapids, weather the hurricane, or continue operating during and after a devastating earthquake. Organizations with relatively low change capacity are at the mercy of their environment and much more subject to luck and chance.
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I have been researching the nature of organizational capacity for change in hundreds of organizations in a wide variety of industries for over 10 years. In previous research I have found that the higher the aggregate organizational capacity for change is, the higher the subsequent environmental [3] and financial performance. [4] In other words, organizational capacity for change is positively correlated with, and is likely to lead to, superior financial and environmental performance. In addition, I have also found that the importance of organizational capacity for change increases with the volatility of environmental uncertainty. In other words, common sense and systematic empirical research show that the more your environment is changing, or is about to change, the more important your organizational capacity for change is. Finally, after reading literally hundreds of articles and dozens of books on organizational change, I have been able to distill the concept of organizational capacity to change down to eight separate and distinct dimensions. [5] These dimensions are briefly described in the sections that follow, but they will be more extensively discussed in later chapters.
[1]
Vaill
(1991),
p.
2.
[2]
Thames
and
Webster
(2009),
pp.
1112.
[3]
Judge
and
Elenkov
(2005).
[4]
Judge,
Naoumova,
Douglas,
&
Koutzevol
(2009).
[5]
Judge
and
Douglas
(2009).
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modicum of trust between its members. As a consequence, the first essential dimension for OCC is the extent to which an organization is perceived to be led by trustworthy leaders. A trustworthy leader is someone who is not only perceived to be competent in leading the organization but also perceived as someone who has the best interests of the organization as their priority. This is why Jim Collins found that organizations that were changing for the better tended to be led by senior executives who were perceived to be humble servants of the organization, but were also passionate about ensuring a bright future for the organization. [1]Organizational change is risky. In order for employees to change their perceptions and behaviors, they have to trust their leaders. As such, a proven record of trustworthiness on the part of the leaders is essential to bring about experimentation with a new order of things.
Trusting followers. Leaders are only half of the equation when it comes to organizational change; the
other half is the followers. I once worked with an executive at Alcoa who was perhaps one of the most trustworthy executives I ever met. He was honest to a fault, a first-rate engineer, who worked his way up through the executive ranks to a prominent leadership position. He had a deep and sound understanding as to where his business unit needed to change, but he had a problemhis plant was highly unionized and it had a long history of management missteps and labor union outrage. Interestingly, the union leaders did trust this particular plant manager, but they didnt expect him to stay there long and they did expect corporate headquarters to replace him with someone who was not trustworthy. As a result, this business unit had a leader who was perceived to be trustworthy, but the ubiquitous lack of trust on the part of the rest of the organization prevented any major change initiative from progressing. Psychologists tell us that all individuals have a disposition to trust others. [2]This disposition is influenced by such things as a persons genetic background, family norms, and work-related experiences. When an organization is filled with a critical mass of individuals who are hopeful, optimistic, and trusting, it will be well positioned to experiment with new ways of operating. When
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an organization is dominated with a critical mass of individuals who are cynical, pessimistic, and not trusting, it will not be well positioned to engage with organizational change initiatives. In sum, a second key dimension of organizational capacity for change is the overall level of trust held by the employees of the organization.
Capable champions. Individuals, and hence organizations, tend to be inertial. In other words, change
takes extra energy and it is much easier to keep doing things the way in which we are accustomed to. Consequently, organizations must identify, develop, and retain a cadre of capable change champions in order to lead the change initiative(s). Within small organizations, these champions are often the same as the head of the organization. Within medium and larger organizations, these champions are often drawn from the ranks of middle management. Rosabeth Moss Kanter first identified this new breed of managers and she called them change masters. She defined change masters as those peopleadept at the art of anticipating the need for, and of leading, productive change. [3]Professor Kanters central thesis is that if an organization is to change and innovate, power needs to be focused on or delegated to certain talented and energetic individuals, or both. These corporate entrepreneurs are experts in building formal and informal coalitions to makes changes and get things done within an established organization. They know how to directly and indirectly handle political opposition. They often lead a group of mavericks and bend the rules in order to bypass bureaucratic obstacles. They are often very goal directed and know how to deliver on their promises. In sum, these change champions are often sponsored by top management to spearhead change initiatives. If an organization does not have capable champions, change initiatives often stall.
Involved middle management. Middle managers are those who link top executives to frontline
workers. Department heads are classic examples of middle managers, but there are many other types of linkages. While it is undeniable that todays organizations are flatter hierarchies with fewer middle managers than in the past, their role in helping to bring about change is still important. While
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change champions often come from the middle management ranks, middle managers can passively or actively block change initiatives due to their unique position within an organization. Steven Floyd and Bill Wooldridge were among the first scholars to note the importance of middle managers when focusing on strategy formation and organization change. As they point out,
The capability-based model of competition puts managerial knowledge at the forefront of competitive advantage. The knowledge of middle managers may become crucial in recognizing an organizations shortcomings and in broadening its capacity for change [italics added]. Perhaps even more important, the middle managers centrality in the information network creates the potential for them to become a driving force in organizational learning. Realizing this potential, however, demands a new set of management expectations.
[4]
Whenever any new organizational change initiative is announced, one of the first things that employees consider is how will this affect me? While every organization is going to have doubters and naysayers, one of the keys to enhancing organizational change capacity is to get a critical mass of the organization excited about the potential change. Middle managers are pivotal figures in shaping the organizations response to potential change initiatives, so their involvement is crucial to organizational capacity for change.
Systems thinking. Organizational change capacity involves more than just the getting the right
people on the bus and the wrong people off the bus, however. It also depends on a proper organization infrastructure. One of the key infrastructure issues that influence or retard an organizational change initiative is what is called systems thinking. These are the rules, structural arrangements, and budgetary procedures that facilitate or hinder an organization-wideas opposed to a segmentalistapproach to organizational change. While segmentalism works quite well for routine procedures, it is anathema to the study of nonroutine events such as strategic decision making, organizational change, or both. [5] Peter Senge is a seminal author in this area. In his classic 1990 text, titled The Fifth Discipline, Senge wrote about how systems thinking can enhance an organizations ability to experiment, adapt, and
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learn new ways of operating. [6]Systems thinking, according to Senge, focuses on how the individual being studied interacts with the other constituents of the system. Rather than focusing on the individuals or organizational units within an organization, it prefers to look at a larger number of interactions within the organization and in between organizations as a whole. In sum, an organizational infrastructure that promotes systems thinking is another key dimension of organizational change capacity.
Communication systems. A second infrastructure dimension, and one that complements the systems
thinking dimension, is what is called communication systems. This dimension involves such things as e-mail networks, face-to-face meetings, telephone calls, and corporate announcements all being focused on the conveyance of the value for and the means for implementing a proposed organizational change. Organizational change requires reflection and action. Too often, there is a gap between thinking and doing. [7] Consequently, many observers of failed and successful organizational change initiatives emphasize the importance of communication in order to convert knowledge into action. For example, John Kotter argues that almost every change leader fails to accurately estimate the frequency, range, and amount of communication required to bring about change. [8] Malcolm Gladwell argues that in order for organizations to tip in a new direction, convincing and persuasive communication is essential. [9] And Ed Lawler and Chris Worley argue that effective formal and informal communication systems are essential to the creation of organizations that are built for change. [10] In sum, effectively designed and delivered two-way information about the change initiative is essential to building organizational capacity for change.
Accountable culture. A fourth and final infrastructure dimension is the degree to which an
organization holds its members accountable for results. In my observation, most organizations generally excel on this dimension. However, when the organizational culture gets focused on innovation, accountability often gets ignored. While individuals need autonomy in todays organizations to pursue innovative new ideas, they also need to be held accountable for delivering
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results on time and within budget. At the very least, they need to explain the failure to honor deadlines, resource constraints, or both. Another term for an accountable culture is a results-based culture. [11]Accountable cultures do not focus on how the work is done, but they do help to carefully monitor the outcomes of results produced. As a result, accountable cultures track whether a deadline was reached or whether the activities were executed under budget or not, and seek to discern what teams and individuals hindered or facilitated successful change. Of course, change is inherently unpredictable so there must be some executive judgment involved with the evaluation of results. However, fostering innovation and change does not mean that innovators and change agents are given a blank check with no deadlines. In sum, organizational capacity for change is also dependent on effective reward and control systems.
Innovative culture. Tom Peters and Bob Waterman wrote powerfully as to the importance of an
organizational culture in search of excellence in their classic text on Americas best-run companies. [12] Similarly, John Kotter and Jim Heskett demonstrated a powerful correlation between corporate culture changes and subsequent firm performance improvements over 4 to 10 years of time. [13] And Clayton Christensen showed how corporate cultures often work to thwart innovation and change, particularly when the organization is a market leader. [14] The culture of an organization defines appropriate behavior, and motivates individuals and offers solutions where there is ambiguity. It governs the way a company processes information, its internal relations, and its values. [15] Some organizational cultures value innovation and change, while many others value stability and equilibrium. In sum, an organizational culture that emphasizes the importance of organizational change and innovation is a third infrastructure dimension that is critical to organizational change capacity.
[1]
Collins
(2001).
[2]
Cook
(2001).
[3]
Kanter
(1983),
p.
13.
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[4] Floyd and Wooldridge (1996), p. 23. [5] Kanter (1983), pp. 2835. [6] Senge (1990). [7] Pfeffer and Sutton (2000). [8] Kotter (1996). [9] Gladwell (2002). [10] Lawler and Worley (2006). [11] Ulrich, Zenger, & Smallwood (1999). [12] Peters and Waterman (1982). [13] Kotter and Heskett (1992). [14] Christensen (1997). [15] Hampden-Turner (1992), p. 11.
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Chapter 3
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leadership involves the proper use of power. All knife-wielding leaders need to show that they know how to use a knife, and that they will not use that knife against their followers. Some argue that those in authority positions within an organizational pyramid are the leaders of the organization, and that all that is needed to lead is for the followers to respect the authority of the position. This conception worked in the past, but works less and less in todays organizations, as I will discuss later in this chapter. Indeed, many observers now argue that we are seeing the decline of authority and rise of trust as an organizing principle. [2] Clearly, to be effective today, strategic leaders need to combine trust with authority. Authority is helpful, but it is not enough to lead others effectively.
[1]
Kelley
(1992).
[2]
Hardy
(2007).
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Dynamic stability is the new normal; static states of equilibrium are becoming rarer in organizations.
Trustworthy leadership helps to reduce the pain associated with organizational change, [5] and it yields increased employee engagement. [6] Trustworthiness can lead to more creative work, and organizational innovation is impossible without trustworthy leadership. [7]
[1]
Barnard
(1938).
[2]
Bennis
(1999b).
[3]
Kydd
(2000).
[4]
Peus,
Frey,
Gerhardt,
Fischer,
&
Traut-Mattausch
(2009).
[5]
Abrahamson
(2000).
[6]
Dittmar,
Jennings,
&
Stahl-Wert
(2007).
[7]
Littlefield
(2004).
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[1]
Booher
(2002).
[2]
Hall
(2008).
[3]
Weber
and
Weber
(2001).
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A third common reason why it is getting harder to trust executives is because the shareholder value ethic is eroding the trust of the general public, especially in publicly held corporations. The consulting firm McKinsey notes that building trust among key stakeholders is a strategic concern for any corporation, and that generalized stakeholder trust is a major competitive advantage since it is so rare. [9] In sum, trustworthy leadership is not only valuable; it is also rare. The good news here is that when the strategic leader is viewed as trustworthy, a noteworthy competitive advantage is generated.
[1]
Barney
and
Hansen
(1994).
[2]
Burton,
Laurdisen,
&
Obel
(2004).
[3]
Roth
(2008).
[4]
Hurley
(2006).
[5]
Harris
(2010).
[6]
Pellet
(2009).
[7]
Kempner
(2009).
[8]
Williamson
(2008).
[9]
Bonini,
Hintz,
&
Mendonca
(2008).
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[1]
Yankelovich
(2007).
[2]
Bennis
(1999a).
[3]
Kuhl,
Schnelle,
&
Tillman
(2005).
Attributed
to
William
Q.
Judge
Jr.
Saylor
URL:
http://www.saylor.org/books/
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36
[4] Goldsmith (2008). [5] Henttonen and Blomqvist (2005). [6] Nancheria (2009).
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Hence, anything
that an organization can do to accelerate and enhance the leadership skills of its managers will yield longterm benefits in also enhancing the organizations capacity to change.
[3]
However, having a formal leadership development program is not enough to generate skillful leaders. In a recent review of these programs at eight major corporations, the differentiating factor that separated the successful programs from the unsuccessful programs was whether or not personal follow-up was part of the program or not. Personal follow-up involved such things as reminder notes to keep working on the development plan, one-on-one sessions with an executive coach or peer, and sufficient time and resources to work on important attitudes and behaviors unfolding in real time. In other words, leadership development is a contact sport.
[4]
Most change initiatives fail because they do not consider the emotional aspects associated with change, and trustworthy leadership that communicates well can be an important antidote to counteract that obstacle to change. Indeed, noted author and change guru John Kotter argues that it is important to understand what people are feeling and to speak more directly to their anxieties, confusion, anger, and distrust.
[5]
Interestingly, recent research reveals that the more communication that goes on between executives, the more trustworthy the communicators view each other to be. In a study of 50 senior managers within a multinational firm, it was reported that those executives who communicated more often were more likely to view others in the organization as more trustworthy.
[6]
forums such as town hall meetings, online blogs, and two-way video sessions are becoming staples of organizational life.
executives were able to build up more trust with their employees than executives at the other Detroit firms. Knowing your values and acting consistently with them is harder to do than one would think, but building trust in the absence of consistency between espoused and enacted values is virtually impossible.
employees know that the leaders of the organization are not just in the game for themselves. Pragmatically speaking, leaders must seek win-win options as much as possible and employees need to know that the leader is looking to create a win for them. In other words, followers want to know that you care about them before they are willing to trust you and follow you.
[9] [8]
Interestingly, organizations that went from being good to great were all led by relatively humble leaders who were more focused on building the organization than on their own well-being. Humility is not a traditional aspect used to describe effective leaders, but it is consistent with generating the organizational trust necessary to pursue a bold new vision, change initiative, or both. In sum, caring about the well-being of the entire organization and putting its well-being on a par with your own is essential for building organizational change capacity.
Part of authenticity is being candid and transparent. However, leaders should selectively reveal their weaknesses since too much disclosure can be inappropriate in certain times and places. it is possible to overdo this candor and undermine ones trustworthiness.
[11]
In other words,
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Of course, the consequences of driving a bicycle off the path are not as bad as driving an organization off the path, so my personal example is rather trivial compared with trusting others to step up within an organization. However, the principles are the same and the outcome is illustrative. Overall, having a balance between trust and control is essential for building organizational trust. contains a graphical summary of the first dimension of organizational capacity for change. Figure 3.1 The First Dimension of Organizational Capacity for Change: Trustworthy Leadership
[1]
Judge
(1999).
[2]
McCall,
Lombardo,
&
Morrison
(1988).
[3]
Tichy
and
Cohen
(1997).
[4]
Goldsmith
and
Morgan
(2003).
[5]
Kotter
and
Cohen
(2002).
[6]
Becerra
and
Gupta
(1999).
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[7] Drickhamer (2004). [8] Covey (1989). [9] Kouzes (2005). [10] Stamato (2008), p. 1. [11] Goffee and Jones (2000). [12] Chawla and Kelloway (2004).
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Chapter 4
Trust makes all change possible. Trust refers to a persons belief that others make sincere efforts to uphold commitments and do not take advantage of that person if given the opportunity. [1] As discussed in the previous chapter, trustworthy leadership is an important ingredient to engendering a trusting organizational environment in which change can take place. However, effective leadership is incomplete unless there is effective followership. [2] After all, leadership is a relationship, not a position. If the leaders partners, the followers, are not sufficiently trusting, then organizational change capability will be impaired. I came to this somewhat counterintuitive realization when working with a talented executive leader at Alcoa. This individual was a very strong and trustworthy leaderhe had strong technical and interpersonal skills, had succeeded in every previous managerial role within Alcoa, was confident but humble, and he genuinely cared about his followers. Because of his strong track record and his considerable future potential to join the executive ranks, he was given increasingly difficult managerial positions within the company. When he was made the plant manager of a large but troubled and underperforming plant within the Alcoa system, he realized that the employees were not inclined to trust him or his leadership team. They were unionized, which gave them the power to stand up to management, and had been used and abused for many years. Previous plant leaders had tried all sorts of Machiavellian tactics to break or bend the union into submission. The end result was pervasive mistrust among most employees and within the overall plant. During his 5 years at the
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plant, the union gradually came to trust him. However, they told him that he would soon be promoted and replaced by another untrustworthy jerk, which is exactly what happened. In general, it has been shown that there are three things that interact to build or tear down organizational trust. First, there is the trustworthiness of the leader or change agent. This was our focus in the previous chapter. Second, there is the propensity or disposition to trust those in authority positions. Finally, there is the risk associated with trusting. [3] The second and third determinants of organizational trust are the focus of this chapter.
[1]
Child
and
Rodrigues
(2004).
[2]
Kelley
(1992).
[3]
Mayer,
Davis,
&
Schoorman
(1995).
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perceived to be positive and worthy of support. [5] The key takeaway here is that the same overall corporate initiative was viewed differently according to the employees perception of executives sincerity.
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[1] Das and Tend (2004). [2] Currall and Epstein (2003). [3] Ramo (2004).
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[1] Jones (2001). [2] Ozag (2001). [3] Jelinek and Bean (2010). [4] Grey and Garsten (2001). [5] Pucetaite, Lms, & Novelskaite (2010). [6] Mishra (2009).
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stagnant industry manage to grow 25% per year for 10 years? The answer, made in a recent Inc. Magazine cover story, is, by taking its employees seriously and listening to them. Atlas Container makes cardboard boxes. They also practice open book management and engage in workplace democracy.
[2]
In
another instance, the Ford Motor Company turned its poorest-performing plant operating near Atlanta to one of its best, simply by engaging in dialogue with the entire 2,000-member unit.
[3]
Both of these
anecdotes illustrate that a tremendous amount of employee trust and energy is liberated simply by engaging in dialogue, rather than in the more traditional top-down communiqus that occur throughout the business world.
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valuable and rare organizational attribute. Engaging in constructive dissent takes courage and willingness to incur the wrath of the rest of the organization. In general, organizations do not react well to those who disrupt the social harmony.
[5]
Consequently, training and education as to how to respectfully disagree with a supervisor can
be helpful. However, nothing replaces the importance of demonstrated examples. For example, when human resource directors constructively disagree with CEOs, their advice and contributions are taken more seriously. your followers.
[6]
In sum, constructive dissent is essential if you want to create trusting partnerships with
with exceptional circumstances and a continually changing environment, they must take care to avoid showing favoritism to one individual or group to the exclusion of other individuals or groups. Once again, this is easier said than done. What do you do when your star salesperson cuts corners with expense accounts? How fairly is affirmative action handled in your corporation? How do you handle requests by legitimately hurting subordinates who ask for exemptions from standard operating procedures? Sometimes, the manner in which these issues are handled are just as important as what is decided. In any event, follower trust is not possible in a work environment that is not generally seen to be fair and consistent.
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While creating trust is typically a warm and squishy idea, there is a hard side to trust that
involves punishment and sanctions applied to those who are just not capable of creating trusting relationships, nor are they inclined to do so. The following is an excerpt by Jim Collins that explains why this is so important: When it comes to getting started, good-to-great leaders understand three simple truths. First, if you begin with who, you can more easily adapt to a fast-changing world. If people get on your bus because of where they think its going, youll be in trouble when you get 10 miles down the road and discover that you need to change direction because the world has changed. But if people board the bus principally because of all the other great people on the bus, youll be much faster and smarter in responding to changing conditions. Second, if you have the right people on your bus, you dont need to worry about motivating them. The right people are self-motivated: Nothing beats being part of a team that is expected to produce great results. And third, if you have the wrong people on the bus, nothing else matters. You may be headed in the right direction, but you still wont achieve greatness. Great vision with mediocre people still produces mediocre results.
[10]
Exceptional people build trust; mediocre people destroy trust. Avoid hiring and get rid of those who destroy trust in your organization. As Jack and Suzy Welch succinctly stated, Send the jerks packing.
[11]
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Interestingly, Microsoft Corporation has a relatively high level of organizational trust. For example, 9 out of 10 employees at Microsoft Netherlands said they could ask management any reasonable questions and get a straight answer. This is particularly noteworthy since the organizational unit recently underwent a downsizing experience.
[13]
The same can be said for labor unions, which is not easy to do in this day of
declining union strength. Clearly, straight talk and transparency are keys to enhancing organizational trust in all parts of the organization. In summary, organizational trust is essential to be change capable. This requires both trustworthy leaders and trusting followers. Figure 4.1 "The Second Dimension of Organizational Capacity for Change: Trusting Followers" contains a graphic that summarizes these first two dimensions of organizational capacity for change.
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Figure 4.1 The Second Dimension of Organizational Capacity for Change: Trusting Followers
[1] Brownell (2000). [2] Case (2005). Attributed to William Q. Judge Jr. Saylor URL: http://www.saylor.org/books/ Saylor.org 54
[3] Bunker and Alban (1997). [4] Thomas (2010). [5] Mercer (2010). [6] Stern (2009). [7] Brownell (2000), p. 11. [8] Kerr (1975). [9] Collins (2001b). [10] Collins (2001b), p. 42. [11] Welch and Welch, 2006. [12] Norman, Avolio, & Luthans, (2010). [13] Maitland (2008), p. 2.
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Chapter 5
To be a great champion you must believe you are the best. If youre not, pretend you are. - Muhammad Ali
Top executives increasingly create cross-functional task forces comprised of respected middle managers to serve as a guiding coalition for major change initiatives. However, even when the top management team personally leads a change initiative, such as in life-or-death turnaround situations, individual change champions within the middle management ranks must step up if the change is to be successful. Consequently, the vertical chain of command, addressed in the previous two chapters (the hierarchical leaderfollower relationship), is not enough to create a changecapable organization. Because organizations are removing layers of bureaucracy and because we are moving from an industrial economy to an information-based economy, lateral relationships and leadership are becoming more important. This chapter examines one essential part of that lateral relationship, namely, capable champions. A capable champion is a middle manager who is able to influence others in the organization to adopt a proposed change without the formal authority to do so. In a systematic study of change champions conducted by McKinsey and Company, they found that these middle managers are different from the typical manager. While traditional managers always seek to make their numbers; change champions seek to satisfy customers and coworkers. Traditional managers hold others accountable; change champions hold everyone accountable, including themselves. In addition, traditional managers are fearful of failure; change champions are not afraid of failure and understand that they have career options outside of this job. In sum, traditional managers analyze, leverage, optimize, delegate,
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organize, and control with the basic mind-set that I know best. In contrast, change champions basic mind-set is to do it, fix it, change it, and that no one person knows best. [1] Clearly, organizations need to be both managed well and led effectively if they are to be successful over time. However, most organizations are overmanaged and underled, [2] and capable change champions are one of the best antidotes to this organizational imbalance. As Rosabeth Moss Kanter states,
Senior executives can come up with the most brilliant strategy in history, but if the people who design products, talk to customers, and oversee operations dont foster innovation in their own realms, none of that brilliance will make a whit of difference.
[3]
[1] Katzenbach (1996). [2] Bennis and Nanus (1997). [3] Kanter (2004), p. 150.
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must be created or expanded in order to bring about change, neutralize resistance to change initiatives, or both. One of the key ways that change champions do this is by the creation of alliances through exchanges of currencies. Allan Cohen and David Bradford have written the seminal book on influence without authority, which is the ability to lead others when you do not have authority over them. These authors argue that many different currencies circulate within organizations, and that money is just one of those currencies. Those non-authority-related currencies include such things as inspiration-related currencies (e.g., vision, moral, or ethical correctness), task-related currencies (e.g., the pledge of new resources, organizational support, or information), relationship-related currencies (e.g., understanding, acceptance, or inclusion), and personal-related currencies (e.g., gratitude, comfort, or enhancement of self-concept). [3] In particular, they emphasize the role of negotiations in creating win-win intraorganizational alliances and partnerships. To do so, they argue that you as a change champion must (a) know and communicate what your goals and intentions are to your potential ally, (b) understand your potential allys world and what his or her goals and intentions are, and (c) make win-win exchanges that prevent organizational changes from proceeding. [4] Finally, change champions must influence frontline workers who are not under their direct supervision if the organization is to become change capable. Whenever change initiatives are launched, there are multiple narratives that flow through the organization because communication from the top is almost always inadequate, and listening from the bottom is often filtered. Change champions help to make sense of those often conflicting narratives so that frontline workers feel less threatened by the changes. [5] Similar to other middle managers, change champions, in order to get changes adopted, can also trade currencies with frontline workers over whom they have no authority. Since frontline workers often feel oppressed and ignored within many hierarchical organizations, the softer skillssuch as expressing sincere gratitude, including frontline workers in the change process, and understanding
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and accepting themare particularly important to change champions if these alliances are to be maintained.
[1] Kanter (2004), p. 153. [2] Arond-Thomas (2009). [3] Cohen and Bradford (2005). [4] Cohen and Bradford (2005). [5] Balogun and Johnson (2004).
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[1] Bellman (2001), p. 118. [2] Bellman (2001), p. 21. [3] Bellman (2001), pp. 110111.
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Illustrating their point, they argue that the organizations of the 21st century, what they call starfish organizations, are demonstrated by customer-enabled Internet firms such as eBay, Skype, Kazaa, Craigslist, and Wikipedia; leaderless nonprofit organizations like Alcoholics Anonymous and the Young Presidents Organization; and highly decentralized religious movements like the Quakers and al Qaeda. With respect to this chapter, their insights about champions are particularly interesting. A champion is someone who is consumed with an idea and has the talent to rally others behind that idea. Brafman and Beckstrom argue that the passion and enthusiasm of champions attracts followers, and their persistence enables the group to endure all the obstacles to change. Classic champions of the past include Thomas Clarkson, a Quaker driven to end slavery, and Leor Jacobi, a vegan driven to end meat-eating. In the end, this book argues that change champions are as much if not more important to the future survival of the organization than even the formal leaders of the organization.
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Practice
2:
Listen
to
Middle
Managers,
Especially
Those
Who
Deal
Directly
With
Customers
In the previous chapter, it was emphasized that senior leaders need to dialogue with and listen to their employees. This is especially true of change agents within the middle management ranks. For example, an organizational study of governmental agencies found that senior leaders of agencies that engaged in dialogue with the middle management ranks were much more successful in pursuing change than senior leaders of agencies that used a more top-down, one-way communication style. Change agents have unique and detailed perspectives on the entire organization as well as its customers. Senior leaders need two-way communication to tap this knowledge.
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First, look for early volunteers. These individuals often have the confidence and enthusiasm
to tackle the risky and ambiguous nature of change. They often feel constrained in their current duties, and are eager for more responsibility. Give it to them. Second, look for positive critics. Change-resistant managers constantly find reasons why a change proposal wont work, and they seldom, if ever, offer a counterproposal. In contrast, positive critics challenge existing proposals, suggest alternatives, and provide evidence to support their argument. Positive critics offer constructive criticism and positive criticism is essential to being a change champion. Third, look for people with informal power. They are often middle managers whose advice and help are highly sought after by people all around them. They often have excellent reputations and a lot of social capital. They typically operate at the center of large informal networks, and know how to work with that network successfully. Fourth, look for individuals who are versatile. Change champions need to be comfortable with change, and they often adapt more easily to previous organization change more readily and easily than others in the organization. Those who have endured in their career shifts, relocations, or both are more likely to be comfortable with change than those who have not undergone these professional changes. Finally, look for emotional intelligence in your middle management ranks. Individuals who are aware of their own emotions and those of others, and actively take steps to manage their feelings, are more likely to adapt to an envisioned change. Emotional intelligence is much more important than traditional logicalmathematical intelligence. Using the vernacular of the day, change champions need emotional bandwidth.
[2]
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In large organizations, a formal leadership development program is often created to identify and accelerate the development of change champions. In medium- and small-sized organizations, an informal leadership development program is often sufficient. Regardless of the formality of the program, the key notion here is the importance of contextualized training and development. Traditional training and development leads to new knowledge, but has little impact on organizational change. Training and development that is applied to actual work situations through such practices as action learning projects, leadership mentoring, and applied learning endeavors go hand-in-hand with organizational change.
[4]
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support and sponsorship by senior leader(s). Without effective sponsorship, change champions are highly unlikely to succeed. In sum, lateral relationships and influence without authority are as important to organizational change capacity as vertical relationships and authority are. This chapter discusses how creating a cadre of capable champions is essential for bringing about change. contains a graphical depiction of this third dimension of capacity for change. Figure 5.1 The Third Dimension of Organizational Capacity for Change: Capable Champions
[1] Huy (2001). [2] Davis (1997). Attributed to William Q. Judge Jr. Saylor URL: http://www.saylor.org/books/ Saylor.org 67
[3] Tichy and Cohen (1997). [4] McCall, Lombardo, & Morrison (1988). [5] Parker (2002).
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Chapter 6
The Trojans lost the war because they fell for a really dumb trick. Hey, theres a gigantic wooden horse outside and all the Greeks have left. Lets bring it inside! Not a formula for long-term survival. Now if they had formed a task force to study the Trojan Horse and report back to a committee, everyone wouldnt have been massacred. Who says middle management is useless? - Adam Engst
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While these trends and situations vary throughout the world, the overarching trend is for middle managers to be less secure in their jobs and less loyal to their employer. [4] While middle managers have always been torn and conflicted due to their key position in the organizational hierarchy, these feelings are particularly acute today. [5] One of the ways of coping with this new reality is to avoid taking risks and making mistakes, or becoming more passive and less proactive. Perhaps this is why senior managers frequently perceive middle managers as one of the biggest obstacles to change in their organizations. [6] As a result, middle managers are often not involved and engaged with the organization, or its substantive strategic reorientations. This clearly is problematic if the organization seeks to become change capable.
[1]
Stewart
(1995).
[2]
McCann,
Morris,
&
Hassard
(2008).
[3]
OReilly
and
Pfeffer
(2000).
[4]
Hallier
and
Lyon
(1996).
[5]
Hallier
and
James
(1997).
[6]
Buchen
(2005).
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unsponsored middle managers must also sell change if the organization is to be change capable. The traditional selling of ideas is done from the middle manager to his or her subordinates and frontline employees, or downward selling. In most organizations, a major change initiative is announced by senior managers using lofty but vague visions and slogans. Unfortunately, the typical response of frontline employees is often hostility and fear. Rumors and disaster scenarios rush in to fill the gap. These negative reactions can only be challenged in private meetings between departmental managers after the formal announcement of a proposed change. If the middle manager can translate what the change initiative means to the unit as well as dispel myths and rumors, the organization becomes more change capable. If the middle managers are not sufficiently involved in the change design and objectives, however, this translation does not occur. [2] In addition to selling downward, middle managers also sell ideas upward to their senior managers. Organizational change begins with the focusing of organization attention, and not all focusing must come from the top of the organization. Indeed, middle managers with their direct contact with customers and unique perspective within the middle of the hierarchy are well positioned for this activity. As recent research has shown, middle managers make formal presentations to top managers as well as bundle new ideas with established strategic goals or issues. [3] Finally, middle managers also sell ideas laterally. Organizational change typically cuts across multiple organizational units, departments, divisions, or all three. To bring about that change,
Attributed
to
William
Q.
Judge
Jr.
Saylor
URL:
http://www.saylor.org/books/
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middle managers across different units must collaborate and work together, without the formal authority to do so. Consequently, the ability to sell ideas laterally and negotiate influence across organizational units is a key contribution by middle managers. [4] In sum, middle managers can be essential salespersons for change initiatives for all those that they come in contact with. Senior executives and change champions are not the only ones to sell the change.
Making sense of change initiatives. Sometimes middle managers are called upon not to sell a
proposed change, but just make sense of it. Organizational life can be confusing and hard to understand, and the emotional nature of change initiatives makes it that much more confusing and senseless, as Dilbert cartoons repeatedly remind us. Due to their integral role within organizations and the lofty perches of senior managers, middle managers can interpret messages and signals given by top executives to the rest of the organization, and this role can literally be the key factor that unlocks its potential so as to avoid unintended consequences. Indeed, this sense-making function on the part of middle managers has been shown to positively influence restructuring initiatives or an existing operation, [5] as well as the postacquisition integration process of merged operations. [6] When middle managers are sidelined or blocked from being involved, they themselves cant make sense of the change. This is true even in those instances when the middle managers have blind faith and trust in their senior leaders. Thus, it is harder if not impossible for them to make sense of proposed changes to others. Furthermore, even if they see the wisdom, logic, or both behind a change proposal, they will be less inclined to help others see the wisdom behind it if they have been uninvolved in the design and execution of a particular change.
Providing stability. As discussed previously, any successful change must preserve the core of the
organization while changing its periphery. This stabilizing role is best handled by middle managers who are intimately linked with the rest of the organization. Sometimes, middle managers oppose illconsidered changes that violate the organizations core values and norms. As such, not all resistance to change is bad, and middle managers can passively or actively preserve stability through resistance efforts.
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However, even when the change initiatives are appropriate and well timed, middle managers can provide a stabilizing influence on the rest of the organization by directly addressing others fears and simply by listening. Indeed, there is even research to suggest that an essential skill set of middle managers is to act somewhat like an organizational therapist who pays attention to change recipients emotions and provides healthy perspectives in response to highly emotional reactions. As such, middle managers can provide an emotional balancing between organizational continuity and radical changes, and this balancing effect has a short-term and long-term impact on the organizations health and survival. [7]
[1] Floyd and Wooldridge (1996). [2] Larkin and Larkin (1996). [3] Dutton, Ashford, ONeill, & Lawrence (2001). [4] Cohen and Bradford (2005). [5] Balogun and Johnson (2004). [6] Nordblom (2006). [7] Huy (2002).
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So while middle managers are often viewed by senior executives as bureaucrats who constantly obstruct change, they actually are well positioned to be a source of creative entrepreneurial work, especially when it comes to bringing about change.
Communicator. Successful change requires information-rich transmission, such as face-to-face
dialogue and observation of body language when discussing the change. Senior leaders simply dont have the time or the energy to communicate one-on-one with employees or in small groups. However, this is what middle managers do on almost a daily basis. When they are properly involved and engaged with the change process (even as change recipients), communication can be improved and clarified, particularly by relying on established formal and informal networks of influence. As they tap into their networks, middle managers use keen translation skills to communicate change initiatives throughout a work group or a company. [2]
Therapist. Middle managers do a host of things to make the workplace psychologically threatening or
safe for an established organization. When the organization confronts change, strong emotions are
Attributed
to
William
Q.
Judge
Jr.
Saylor
URL:
http://www.saylor.org/books/
Saylor.org
74
stirred within employees, which can depress morale, trigger anxiety, and lead to distraction, absenteeism, turnover, depression, workplace violence, and other organizational maladies. If the middle manager is psychologically skilled and aware, many of these painful outcomes can be avoided or minimized during change initiatives. Middle managers shoulder additional burdens during a period of profound change. Besides the already challenging daily tasks of operations and revenue generation, they provide far more hand holding, practical problem solving, and support than they usually do. [3] Clearly, if middle managers are involved and engaged with the change process, they are more likely to be able to fulfill this role.
Tightrope artist. Middle managers enable the organization to keep producing in the short term, while
the organization positions itself for the future. They can slow down the change process when it becomes overwhelming to their unit, and they can speed it up when progress is too slow. They can obtain extra resources for their unit when necessary, and they can trim resources that are being wasted. They can support those in their unit who understand the purpose of the change but need personal support, and they can challenge those who fight the change due to self-interested behavior. In sum, successful organizational change requires attention not only to employee moral but also to the balance between change and continuity. [4]
[1] Huy (2001), p. 73. [2] Huy (2001), p. 77. [3] Huy (2001), p. 78. [4] Huy (2001), p. 78.
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Practice
1:
Accept
the
Differences
Between
Middle
Managers
and
Change
Champions
In any organization, there are A, B, and C players. The A players are the ones who regularly exceed performance expectations and often step into leadership roles for change initiatives. They are the rising stars who have inordinate ambition, take risks, and like to push the envelope. The C players are those employees who are not meeting performance expectations. And then there are the B players. These are the employees who are meeting performance expectations, but they act in a supporting role to the rest of the organization. They assume a more ordinary and limited but critical role within the organization. Within the middle management ranks, A players are often given most if not all the attention by senior management because they are often similar in drive and impact to those in senior executive positions. Often, these players are the change champions within the organization. In contrast, B players are often ignored and taken for granted while C players are given remedial attention or removed from the organization. Ignoring B players is a mistake since they play such a vital complementary role within a corporation.
[1]
B players often place a higher value on worklife balance than do A players. B players may have secondrate educational backgrounds or technical skills compared with A players, but they compensate by developing extensive interpersonal skills or organizational memory. And B players often bring a depth of understanding to the organization and the unit in which they operate, since they have not progressed as quickly up the organizational ladder as have A players.
[2]
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Organizations need stars (i.e., A players) and a strong supporting cast (i.e., B players) if they want to be change capable. Senior executives need to recognize the differences between these two groups of employees and respect the differences in ambition, motivation, training, and so on. By understanding these differences, B players will feel more respected and involved and the organization will more likely benefit from their contributions.
career track, multiple career tracks should be considered since not all managers want the same careers and stress as do A players. In sum, recognize the differences between change champions and middle managers, and adjust your organizational systems to reward both types of management.
[4]
Again, traditional middle managers can play a major supporting role and sometimes even a
be as formal and expensive as an organization-wide strategy conference, or as informal as a hallway chat with middle managers about the organizations external threats and opportunities. Whatever form it takes, engaging middle managers in forming the strategy as well as executing it will enhance their knowledge and commitment to future change programs.
many in the organization as possible. This is especially true of middle managers who are not champions of change. Innovative organizations develop a teachable point of view on business ideas and values, and this can accelerate knowledge creation and transfer within the firm. Middle managers are not just doers, they also are thinkers. And if given the chance and the right circumstances, middle managers can also be leaders.
[7]
In other words, organizations must cultivate courage in the middle management ranks to speak
[9]
truth to hierarchy,
and senior leaders need to be focused more on the well-being of the organization
[10]
In sum, some of your middle managers need to be involved in helping to bring about change, even if they are not the change champions. Organization-wide change is complex and affects everyone. Middle managers can make a major contribution to actively bringing about change or passively assure its demise. Figure 6.1 "The Fourth Dimension of Organizational Capacity for Change: Involved Midmanagement" contains the fourth dimension of capacity for change.
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Figure 6.1 The Fourth Dimension of Organizational Capacity for Change: Involved
Midmanagement
[1] DeLong and Vijayaraghavan (2003). [2] DeLong and Vijayaraghavan (2003). [3] Krishnamurthy (2008). [4] DeLong and Vijayaraghavan (2003), p. 102. [5] Spreitzer and Quinn (1995). [6] Floyd and Wooldridge (1996). [7] Tichy and Cohen (1997). [8] Chaleff (2009), p. 13. [9] Chaleff (2009), chap. 7, pp. 179204. [10] Judge (1999).
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Chapter 7
No problem can ever be solved with the consciousness that created it. We must learn to see the world anew. - Albert Einstein
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A pile of sand is
technically not a system since the removal of a single component (i.e., a grain of sand) does not change the functioning of the collectivity (i.e., the pile). Furthermore, there is no aim designed into or emanating from the pile. In contrast, a car is a system that comprises thousands of parts that all work together to provide transportation to a driver. If you remove the gasoline tank, then the car fails to perform its aim properly. In this case, the aim is designed into the car by the automobile design team, so the car is a mechanical, not a living, system. Living systems are the most complex forms of systems. What makes them unique is that they interact with their environment and are self-organizing. As a result, the aim is not designed in but constantly evolving over time. Living systems can be something as simple as a cell, to something as complex as the European Union. Therefore, one of the ways of determining whether a collectivity is a system or not is (a) the interacting parts possess a central aim or purpose and (b) the removal of a component changes the functioning of the overall system.
[2]
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is skewed. In other words, close examination of a persons back will reveal the symptoms (i.e., back pain), but not the causes (i.e., leg length differences). In traditional thinking, diagnosis of back pain focuses exclusively on the pained area of the body. Systems thinkers tell us that there are two types of systemsclosed and open systems. Closed systems function as systems relatively independent of their environment; open systems are constantly exchanging material, energy, and information with their environment. An example of a closed system is the circulatory system of a fish versus mollusks. In fish (and other vertebrates), the blood circulates within vessels of different lengths and wall thicknesses, so its circulatory system is relatively closed to the rest of its body cavities. In mollusks (and most invertebrates), there are no vessels and the blood circulates within the tissues of the entire body cavity. The key notion for our purposes is the fact that system openness is a relative state, not an absolute state. Sometimes the components or elements of a system function as subsystems within a larger system. A subsystem is a collection of components or elements with a smaller aim within the larger system. Hence, there are various levels of systems that operate interdependently. A prime example here would be the financial subsystems impact on and relationship with the larger national economic system.
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systems insights from the study of quantum mechanics to better understand the proper functioning of organizational systems.
[3]
Systems thinking requires us to consider the subsystems and components within an organization, and the organization as a subsystem within its larger environment. Organizations vary in terms of their levels of openness to the environment, and systems thinking suggests that a balance must be struck between maintaining some boundaries with the environment and assuring that those boundaries are somewhat porous. A classic systems problem is that the organization is not listening enough to its current customers (it is too closed), or that it is listening too much to its current customers, or what Clayton Christensen calls the innovators dilemma.
[4]
Systems thinking also requires us to consider the aim of the system and to what degree the members of the organization, or larger society, align with the overarching aim. Chris Argyris eloquently describes how individuals often have both espoused aims and actual aims; and how the key to individual health and productivity involves minimizing the distance between what is espoused and what is actual.
[5]
The stakeholder versus stockholder perspective of organizations also deals with the aim of the organizational system. For some managers and theorists, maximizing shareholder wealth is the sole purpose of the corporation, and by doing so the overall economic system, of which the organization is a part, benefits. However, other managers and theorists suggest that there are multiple social actors inside and outside the organization with a stake in the functioning of the organization, and that no one stakeholder is more important than any other. Systems thinking enable managers to sort out this difficult, value-laden issue.
[1] Deming (1986), p. 32. [2] Miller (1978). [3] Wheatley (2006). [4] Christensen (1997). [5] Argyris (1993).
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Therefore, change-capable organizations are conscious of their shared mental models, and are adept in revising those mental models when they no longer work properly.
In many ways, our organizations change dramatically and well when the environment shifts in radical ways. Think of how individuals and organizations in New York City demonstrated magnificent performance in the advent of the 9/11 terrorist attack, which was violent and sudden and dramatic. Attributed to William Q. Judge Jr. Saylor URL: http://www.saylor.org/books/ Saylor.org 85
However, creeping problems like slowly eroding market share, insidious environmental pollution, steady quality declines, and turnover by some of the key employees of an organization are often not noticed. The environment is turning up the heat slowly but surely on many of our organizations, but it is happening so gradually that we do not notice or take action to correct this trend.
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[1] Senge (1990), p. 8. [2] Senge (1990), p. 23. [3] Senge (1990), p. 25. [4] Senge (1990), pp. 4243.
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advance we are more prepared to deal with the outcomes that may result. Furthermore, by trying to anticipate future unintended consequences, sponsors of the change and the change agents are more attentive to the unfolding nature of the change initiative and more likely to learn from the experience.
[2]
It
is important to remember, however, that cause and effect are often not closely related in time and space when trying to change a complex system. Consequently, analogies can be a useful tool for anticipating unintended consequences of change. Another tool for anticipating the effects of a change initiative are computerized simulations.
[3]
One systems thinking tool that can be instrumental in anticipating ripple effects are causal loop diagrams.
[4]
Diagrams help us to visualize how the change might unfold. Causal loops
remind us that there are feedback linkages within systems that can dampen or amplify the effects of initiatives. In sum, anticipating ripple effects is more art than science, but the effort will ensure that unintended side effects are avoided and will deepen the change sponsors understanding of the systemic nature of change.
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Practice
2:
Small
Changes
Can
Produce
Big
Results;
Search
for
Optimal
Levers
There are no simple rules for finding high-leverage changes, but there are ways of thinking that make it more likely. Learning to see underlying structures rather than events is a starting pointThinking in terms of processes of change rather than snapshots is another.
[5]
Malcolm Gladwell wrote a best-selling book on this very topic and it was given the graphic term tipping points. Gladwell argues that the world may seem like an immovable, implacable place. It is not. With the slightest pushin just the right placeit can be tipped.
[6]
Gladwell also asserts that ideas, products, messages, and behaviors can spread just like viruses do. Similar to how the flu attacks kids in schools each winter, the small changes that tip the system must be contagious; they should multiply rapidly; and the contagion should spread relatively quickly through a population within a particular system. Learning how your system has tipped in the past, and understanding who or what was involved can be an invaluable insight into thinking systemically about your organization.
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As Peter Senge notes, When there is a genuine vision (as opposed to the all-too-familiar
[9]
vision statement), people excel and learn, not because they are told to, but because they want to. Jim Collins and Gerry Porras point out that a visionary company doesnt simply balance between idealism and profitability; it seeks to be highly idealistic and highly profitable.
[10]
And
In sum, a compelling
and well communicated vision is key to bringing about change within an organizational system, and this principle is central to systems thinking.
Barry Oshry writes poetically about the dance of the blind reflex. This reflex is a generalization of the mental models of various parts of the organizational system. Oshry argues that top executives generally feel burdened by the unmanageable complexity for which they are responsible. Meanwhile, frontline workers at the bottom of the organizational hierarchy feel oppressed by insensitive higher-ups. Furthermore, middle managers feel torn and fractionated as they attempt to link the tops to the bottoms. Furthermore, customers feel righteously done-to (i.e., screwed) by an unresponsive system. Interestingly, Attributed to William Q. Judge Jr. Saylor URL: http://www.saylor.org/books/ Saylor.org 90
none of the four groups of players mentioned see their part in creating any of the dance described here.
[12]
We sometimes see the dance in others when they dont see it in themselves; just as they see the dance in us when we are still blind to it. Each of us has the power to turn on the lights for others.
[13]
Peter Vaill uses the metaphor of permanent white water as an analogy for the learning environment that most organizations currently find themselves in. He argues that learning to reflect on our own learning is a fundamental skill that is required for simple survival. Vaill argues that learning about oneself in interaction with the surrounding world is the key to changing our mental models. He further suggests that the personal attributes that make this all possible are the willingness to risk, to experiment, to learn from feedback, and above all, to enjoy the adventure.
[14]
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Intrasystemic openness occurs when two departments agree to collaborate on a project that contains mutual benefits to each. Open door policies are clearly a step in the right direction. Even a simple act of going to lunch with someone you have never dined with before can reduce system entropy. Extrasystemic openness occurs when new employees are hired, when external consultants are engaged, and when individuals attend trade association meetings or external training sessions. The human tendency to stick with the known and familiar and maintain routine must be challenged by the continual creation of new connections. In sum, a systemic perspective is essential for making your organization change capable. Systems thinking is an infrastructure within which all change takes place. Figure 7.1 "The Fifth Dimension of Organizational Capacity for Change: Systems Thinking" contains a graphic summarizing this fifth dimension of organizational capacity for change.
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Figure 7.1 The Fifth Dimension of Organizational Capacity for Change: Systems Thinking
[1]
Schwartz
(1991).
[2]
Schriefer
and
Sales
(2006).
[3]
Ziegenfuss
and
Bentley
(2000).
[4]
Hebel
(2007).
[5]
Senge
(1990),
p.
65.
[6]
Gladwell
(2002),
p.
259.
[7]
Oshry
(1996),
p.
27.
[8]
Kouzes
and
Posner
(2003).
[9]
Senge
(1990),
p.
9.
[10]
Collins
and
Porras
(1994),
p.
44.
[11]
Gharajedaghi,
2007.
[12]
Oshry
(1996),
p.
54.
[13]
Oshry
(1996),
p.
123.
[14]
Vaill
(1996),
p.
156.
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Chapter 8
Good communication is as stimulating as black coffee, and just as hard to sleep after. - Anne Morrow Lindbergh
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Information
Overload
Every organization must solve the problem of what pattern of communication shall be instituted, and what information shall be directed to what offices. One issue in establishing such a pattern is information overload. There are limits to the amount of communication that can be received, coded, and effectively handled by any one individual.
[2]
John Kotter has an interesting anecdote that illustrates this problem. He asserts that the typical employee receives approximately 2,300,000 words or numbers communicated to him or her in a 3-month period. He estimates that the typical communication of a change vision over 3 months is one 30-minute speech, one hour-long meeting, one 600-word article in the firms newspaper, and one 2,000-word memo, which amounts to about 13,400 words. Consequently, roughly one-half of one percent of all the words or facts that an employee receives over 3 months will be focused on the change vision. Clearly, routine information can easily overwhelm change messages.
[3]
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Because change initiatives can arouse strong and passionate emotions within an organization, these marvelous information and communication technologies are often not up to the task. Since visual cues are so important in all human communication, non-visual mediums disconnected from context, such as email, just dont communicate well. Since human relationship is so important to communication, mediums that do not add to the relationship, such as electronic bulletin boards, can convey different messages to different receivers. And since impersonal digital communication is relatively fast and easier to do than more personal communication forms, senders are often not as practiced or as skilled in the more personal modes. In sum, electronic communication systems are invaluable to todays organizations, but they have considerable limitations when it comes to bringing about change.
[1] Barnard (1938). [2] Katz and Kahn (1966), p. 257. [3] Kotter (1996), p. 89.
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Also, many change consultants point out how pervasive rumor and innuendo are within organizations today due to the ineffective communication at work. For example, Jeannie Duck states, In the absence of communication from the leaders, the organization will seek information from other sources, whether those sources know what they are talking about or not. Your silence does not stop conversation; it just means you are not participating in it. [6] Unfortunately, many if not most of the communication prescriptions made tend to be overly simplistic or overly complex. On the simplistic side, some observers argue that all change communications simply need to be face-to-face, frequent, and informal. [7] While these practices have
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merit, they do not consider such contextual factors as the organizations size and geographic diversity, the urgency of the change initiative, or the availability of communications technology. On the other hand, some change communication prescriptions are overly complex. For example, one change consultant recommends that a formal change communication action plan be developed for every change initiative. These action plans were recommended to include (a) careful consideration of change targets, (b) deliberate change messages, (c) prespecification of change messages, (d) timing and frequency of the message(s), (e) establishment of ownership for the communication, and (f) measurements planned for the change. Of course, then the change leaders are supposed to execute this plan and iterate as necessary. [8] One wonders if the change leaders will have any time to do anything other than communicate to the rest of the organization!
[1] Kotter (1996). [2] Larkin and Larkin (1994). [3] Goffee and Jones (2006). [4] Taylor (1998). [5] Kotter (1995), p. 60. [6] Duck (2001), p. 143. [7] Anastasiou (1998). [8] Bennett (2000).
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Related to the notion of authenticity is the ability of the change leader to listen well. Warren Bennis and Bert Nanus state, A leader must be a superb listener, particularly to those advocating new or different
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images of the emerging reality. Many leaders establish both formal and informal channels of communication to gain access to these ideas.
[4]
A third and final characteristic of the change leader is his or her credibility with the rest of the organization. As we discussed in the trustworthy leadership dimension, credibility brings trust. What we add in this chapter is that this credibility-induced trust also facilitates communication and information sharing.
Another way to think about the employees readiness to change is to consider all change proposals as a diffusion-of-innovation problem. Everett Rogers devoted his lifetime to understanding how innovations diffused within social systems, and he discovered a very interesting fact: When confronted with a particular change, individuals tend to sort themselves out into a normal distribution in terms of readiness to change. In other words, roughly 16% of all employees will be early adopters of proposed changes; 34% will then follow the early adopters. Next, another 34% of employees will be late adopters. And finally, 16% of the employees will resist the proposed change as long as possible. In sum, when attempting to communicate to an entire organization, it is very helpful to know something about the nature of the change targets before, during, and after a change initiative is launched.
[6]
Feedback
Loops
Most systems have feedback loops, and communication systems are no exception. Just because a change message is issued is no guarantee that the message is heard. Furthermore, even if the message is heard at the time that it is issued, it may not be remembered later on. And even if the message is remembered, it Attributed
to
William
Q.
Judge
Jr.
Saylor
URL:
http://www.saylor.org/books/
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100
may not lead to new behavior. Hence, feedback loops are essential for uncovering what was heard, what was remembered, and what new behaviors, if any, have resulted. In addition to message assessment, feedback loops are also helpful in improving the change initiative, for a variety of reasons. First, the change designers may not see the entire situation, and feedback loops help them to broaden or refine their perspective. Second, some change initiatives are just wrong-headed, and the communication system should enable the rest of the organization to weigh in on its overall worth and efficacy. Finally, new things are learned as change initiatives are rolled out, and these lessons need to be distributed to the rest of the organization so that the lessons can be leveraged. Barry Oshry points out that most feedback loops within organizations are filtered so that the established reality perceived by senior management, middle managers, or frontline workers goes unchallenged. Furthermore, in complex social systems, such as an organization, feedback loops often provide conflicting information. When this happens, most social systems tend to ignore the information because sorting out the discrepancies can be difficult, upsetting, and time consuming.
[7]
have many feedback loops, and the information conveyed as feedback is weighed and considered.
Channels
of
Communication
There are a wide variety of communication channels possible within organizations. Communication channels involve both formal and informal mediums of information exchange. Formal mediums include such things as town hall meetings, newsletters, workshops, videos, email, bulletin boards, manuals, roadshows, and progress reports.
[8]
things as hallway discussions, one-on-one meetings, departmental briefings, and having senior leaders walking the talk. In both cases, the invisible social network within the organization plays a powerful role in interpreting the message.
[9]
While most organizations tend to prefer using certain communication channels in all situations, the selection of the channel should be based on the specific change context. The reason for this is that communication channels vary in their efficiency and information richness. Rich communication channels are typically interactive and face-to-face, and they provide an abundance of contextualized information.
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Some channels, such as e-mail, are extremely efficient but not information rich at all. Other channels, such as one-on-one private meetings, are not efficient at all, but extremely information rich. In general, the more complicated and emotionally charged the change initiative, the more communication channels will be needed, and they need to be information rich, particularly in the beginning of the change program.
[1] Katz and Kahn (1966). [2] Kotter (1996). [3] Goffee and Jones (2006). [4] Bennis and Nanus (1997), p. 96. [5] Armenakis, Harris, & Mossholder (1993). [6] Rogers (1983). [7] Oshry (1993). [8] Balogun and Hailey (2008), p. 195. [9] Farmer, 2008.
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Clearly, one of
the reasons why communication skills are so important is that these skills are essential for facilitating organizational change. A less obvious reason why good communicators are essential is that these individuals understand how to design and enhance the communication systems within an organization so that information flows more effectively. For example, Rob Goffee and Gareth Jones argue that effective leaders communicate with care. Communicating with care means that the leaders choose their channels of communication strategically, tailor their message to the aims of the change initiative, authentically disclose intimate details when appropriate, and are very sensitive to the pace and timing of their communications.
[2]
Clearly, any
employee with this subtle set of skills is a rare and valuable human resource, and the organization does well to enhance this skill set in as many individuals as possible, since their skill can be leveraged into improved communication systems for the entire organization.
reasons for this high level of investmentthe clear benefits of productivity gains due to improved Attributed to William Q. Judge Jr. Saylor URL: http://www.saylor.org/books/ Saylor.org 103
information, the transition from an industrial to an information-based economy, and the declining cost of information technologies coupled with increasing capabilities. However, information sharing is the essence of communication, and so effective information technologies are an essential ingredient to making an organization change capable. Information is being shared more extensively with not only senior executives but also with the entire organization. Examining trends in information sharing in trying to understand organizations that were built to change, Ed Lawler and Chris Worley reported that of the five common types of information within an organization, all were being shared with a wider range of employees. The five typical types of information being shared were (a) corporate operating results, (b) unit operating results, (c) new technologies, (d) business plans and goals, and (e) competitors performance. Interestingly, more than half of all employees in all organizations received regular information in these five areas in 2005; whereas in 1987, only corporate and unit operating results were reported to half of the employee base.
[4]
Effective information systems do the following six things for an organization to make it more change capable. First, they provide comprehensive data on key processes. Second, these systems integrate data across departmental boundaries. Third, they monitor organizational capabilities as well as performance. Fourth, they are linked to goal setting and reward systems, which are central to organizational change. Fifth, they include information on customer and competitors. And finally, effective information systems make measurements visible throughout the organization.
[5]
occur without good information, and effective information technologies are a necessary ingredient to make that happen.
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This process begins with the chief executive of the firm modeling the behavior being sought by the change vision. Next, it requires the top management team to police themselves to act congruently with the change vision. And if there are sponsored change agents by the senior executive team, these individuals clearly need to walk the talk as well. Change leaders are in a fish bowl, and they must be as if not more willing than the rest of the organization to change their behaviors. As Mahatma Gandhi stated, Be the change you wish to see in the world.
However, figurative communication in the form of verbal pictures or graphic depictions is also essential for building confidence in the change program. Stories are pithy narratives with plots, characters, and twists that are full of meaning. Leaders are discovering that the telling of actual success stories can often be the catalyst for momentum behind a change initiative.
[8]
techniques to transfer the meaning of something that is known to another thing that is unknown. For example, Plato compared our perception of reality to shadows on the wall of a cave. Darwin used diagrams of trees to help explain his theory of evolution. And Shakespeare saw the world as a stage.
[9]
Organizational change, by definition, requires employees to try something new and move into the
unknown. Communication systems that rely on stories, metaphors, and analogies can make the unknown future state more attractive and understandable.
Practice
5:
Repeat
the
Message
Many
Times
in
Many
Forums,
but
Keep
It
Fresh
It is common for change leaders to announce a new change program and pull out all the stops to communicate it to the rest of the organization in the early part of the change initiative, only to move onto other pressing issues after it has been launched. This is a mistake, and it leads to the change cynicism that
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pervades many organizations today. Furthermore, organizational changes take time to adopt, often years, and this requires focused attention on the part of the rest of the organization. Consequently, the change message must be repeated many ways in many different contexts using multiple communication channels.
[10]
However, this does not mean that daily e-mails with the same message need
to be sent out to the entire organization. It does mean that creative and different versions of the same message need to be distributed periodically in various channels. For example, the change vision could be communicated to large and small groups in formal and informal ways at the launch of a major change program. Furthermore, forums for listening to the employees reactions to the change need to be set up, and sometimes the change initiative needs to be adjusted. Furthermore, progress reports on implementing the change program can be circulated electronically or visually. Paycheck stuffers might provide factoids that related to the proposed change. And town hall meetings can be used to discuss the change initiative to those who have complaints to voice, are curious, or both. As Marshall MacLuhan noted, the medium is the message,
[11]
so repeated, pervasive, and fresh change messages help to gain the attention, interest,
In addition to emotionally charged undiscussables, there are also logical inconsistencies that need to be addressed by the communication system. Organizational change is complicated and there are often inconsistencies when moving from one organizational state to another. If the communication system does
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not address these inconsistencies, then the credibility of the entire change initiative is called into question.
[13]
[14]
There are a wide variety of ways to successfully discuss the undiscussables, but it all starts with having an attitude of seeing everyone as being in partnership around the success of the overall system.
[15]
Therefore,
blaming leaders or employees is usually not constructive, but structuring in debate and conflicting viewpoints is. Being defensive is rarely helpful, but being curious is. Avoiding discussions of delicate issues will hold back progress, but playful and humorous treatments of tricky issues can help. Emphasizing individual responsibility to the exclusion of collective responsibility clearly leads to an imbalance. Sometimes enabling anonymous discussion of undiscussables using Web-based technologies can shine a light on the elephant in the room.
[16]
Social networks and capital exist inside and outside of the organization, but the
internal organizational networks can be most powerful in dealing with organizational issues. Informal social networks consisting of simple things like friendships outside of work or regular lunch gatherings during work can have a major influence on change implementation success. Unlike the formal organizational structure, the informal social network is nonhierarchical, constantly evolving, and essentially based on trust, reciprocity, and common values. The informal social network complements the formal organizational structure of an organization. It is a mistake to communicate only through the formal organizational structure. Indeed, Peter Drucker observed that in more than 600 years, no society has ever had as many competing centers of power as today. In addition, he noted that as we move to a more knowledge-based economy, informal social networks are increasingly important to organizational success and survival.
[18]
Informal social networks in the form of ad hoc peer groups can spur collaboration and unlock value as well as thwart collaboration and destroy value. If internal social networks are ignored, they can be a
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source of role conflict, rumor mongering, resistance to change, and conformity of thought and action. If they are successfully leveraged, they can complement the formal organization, be more fluid and responsive, and magnify the impact of advocates of change. Consequently, in order to leverage the social network, the first order of business is to be aware of it, and the second priority is the attempt to influence it so that the organization can more effectively enhance its communication system. In sum, effective communication systems are an essential element of any change capable organization. These systems complement the systemic thinking dimension in such a way that the knowing-doing gap is bridged.
[19]
Figure 8.1 "The Sixth Dimension of Organizational Capacity for Change: Communication
Systems" contains a graphical summary of this sixth dimension of OCC. Figure 8.1 The Sixth Dimension of Organizational Capacity for Change: Communication Systems
Attributed
to
William
Q.
Judge
Jr.
Saylor
URL:
http://www.saylor.org/books/
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[1] Bennett (2000), p. 73. [2] Goffee and Jones (2006). [3] Anonymous (2010). [4] Lawler and Worley (2006), p. 123. [5] Lawler and Worley (2006), pp. 125126. [6] Kotter (1996), p. 90. [7] Kotter (1996), p. 90. [8] Denning (2007). [9] Wormeli (2009). [10] Kotter (1996), p. 90. [11] McLuhan (1964). [12] Hammond and Mayfield (2004). [13] Kotter (1996), p. 90. [14] OToole and Bennis (2009). [15] Oshry (1996). [16] Hammond and Mayfield (2004). [17] Carpenter (2009), pp. 56. [18] Drucker (1992). [19] Pfeffer and Sutton (2000).
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Chapter 9
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person accepts responsibility, that person is committed to generating positive results, what some people call taking ownership. Sometimes responsibility is obligated by assuming a specific role within an organization. For example, the chief financial officer of a corporation is obligated for knowing about and protecting the financial well-being of the firm. However, lots of work gets done within organizations for which the person is not obligated. For example, that same chief financial officer might demonstrate concern for the natural environment even though he or she is not formally responsible for it. When individuals are accountable, they understand and accept the consequences of their actions for the areas in which they assume responsibility. When roles are clear and people are held accountable, work gets done efficiently and effectively. Furthermore, constructive change and learning is possible when accountability is the norm. When roles are not clear and people are not held accountable, work does not get done properly, and learning is not possible. In highly litigious societies, such as the United States, accountability is often hard to assign or constructive to assume since there is a lot of societal downside to being responsible and not much upside. This is particularly true for organizational actions whereby an individual does not have full control over the outcomes. For example, individuals are often eager to serve on a board of directors as it is a prestigious position that can lead to new learning and an expanded network with other elites. However, board members are often quick to disavow responsibility for many organizational dysfunctions when class action lawsuits get filed. Avoidance of accountability is not only bad for society; but it is also devastating for organizations. And since accountability can be the container in which organizations change occurs, it is essential to organizational capacity for change.
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Schein argued that there are three levels of culture in any organization. The most visible level of culture is where observable organizational artifactssuch as technology, art, dress, pictures, architecture, and audible behavior occur. A cultural artifact is a term used to refer to any observable item or action created by humans that gives information about the collectivity of the creators, the users, or both. The intermediate level of organizational culture is the values and beliefs about what the purpose of the organization is, and what gives meaning to its existence. Usually, there is a social consensus as to what values and beliefs matter most within an organization. And finally, at the deepest unconscious level within an organization, there are assumptions about human nature, human relations, time, and the organizational and environmental interface. Schein argued that these assumptions serve as the foundation for the values, norms, and beliefs within all organizations, and are hardest to change.
[2]
Some observers argue that organizational culture can be a social control mechanism that is more efficient and effective than more formal and traditional control mechanisms due to its fluid
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pervasiveness.
[3]
However, a more common view is that organizational culture is the social glue that
[4]
In recent years, organizational culture has emerged as a key source of competitive advantage for many firms. Since resources can be easily obtained by new entrants, technology can be easily copied by competitors, and employees are now highly mobile, traditional ways of generating competitive advantage through industry positioning are less relevant today. Furthermore, it has been increasingly observed that a strong set of core values and beliefs often leads to competitive advantages and superior performance for many firms. Since performance above industry norms is a common indicator of competitive advantage, organizational culture is getting more attention by strategists. Finally, since culture is relatively hard to imitate, the competitive advantage is often sustainable.
[5]
There are many explanations for these negative habits. One is that senior executives consciously or unconsciously neglect their responsibility for executing the strategy well. Forming a brand new strategy is exciting, garners attention from external stakeholders, and happens rather quickly. In contrast, executing an existing strategy requires attention to detail, is often not noticed outside of an organization, and takes a long time to manifest an effect. Hence, making an organization accountable is often not sexy to senior leaders.
[7]
Another reason why organizational cultures do not hold members accountable is what is known as the smart talk trap. This phenomenon refers to organizational cultures that emphasize talk over action, looking good over getting results, and sounding intelligent rather than delivering results. Managers sometimes let talk substitute for action because that is what they have been trained to do. In addition, there is a human propensity to assume intelligence for those who talk with complex words and focus on
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hard-to-understand concepts. Unfortunately, complex words and concepts are often difficult to execute. And finally, studies have shown that individuals who criticize ideas are often judged to be smarter than individuals who attempt to be helpful and constructive. While critical thinking is clearly needed in organizations, it often does not lead to constructive action.
[8]
Whatever the reason for lack of accountability within an organization, organizational cultures are central to making the organization change capable. Indeed, there is a hard side to change management and it centers on keeping people accountable and getting organizationally important results. Prescribing desired results, clarifying responsibility, measuring performance, rewarding those who meet or exceed expectations, and challenging those who do not are all integral to an organizations norms, values, and assumptions about the way things get done. Accountability is a cultural mind-set, and accountable behaviors emerge from organizational cultures that value it.
[1] Schein (1985), p. 9. [2] Schein (1985), p. 14. [3] Ouchi (1980). [4] Alvesson (2002), p. 32. [5] Barney (1986). [6] Prosen (2006). [7] Bossidy and Charan (2002). [8] Pfeffer and Sutton (1999).
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Bossidy goes on to say, Organizations dont execute unless the right people, individually and collectively, focus on the right details at the right time. [2]Since Bossidy led Honeywell through a very successful and dramatic turnaround, his words carry special weight. The second major book devoted to creating accountability was written by three change consultants David Ulrich, Jack Zenger, and Norm Smallwood. They argue that many leaders and leadership training courses neglect the fact that leadership is about getting desired results. In their own words,
Results-based leaders define their roles in terms of practical action. They articulate what they want to accomplish and thus make their agendas clear and meaningful to others. Employees willingly follow leaders who know both who they are and what they are doing. Such leaders instill confidence and inspire trust in others because they are direct, focused, and consistent.
[3]
Furthermore, they argue that accountability is the primary means for achieving those results. They state,
Organizations may learn, change, and remove boundaries, but if they lack accountability and discipline, success will elude them over time. Accountability comes from discipline, processes, and
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ownership. Discipline requires getting work done with rigor and consistency, meeting scheduled commitments, and following through on plans and programs to deliver promises. Process accountability may require reengineering how work gets done, reducing redundant efforts, and driving down costs at every level. With accountability comes ownership, as individuals feel responsible for accomplishing work. Leaders who foster accountability continuously improve how work gets done, deliver high-quality products and services, and ensure commitment from all employees.
[4]
In sum, change-capable organizations benefit from cultures of accountability. In the next section, I provide some ideas for making your culture more accountable.
[1] Bossidy and Charan (2002), p. 1. [2] Bossidy and Charan (2002), p. 33. [3] Ulrich, Zenger, & Smallwood (1999), p. 21. [4] Ulrich, Zenger, & Smallwood (1999), p. 97.
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Accompanying this clarity on results is the clarity of the goals being sought. Sometimes, organizational goals are ambiguous and unenforceable, what some call resolutions. While resolutions may sound good, the actions required are often not clear and the results being sought can be up to interpretation. Clear goals, on the other hand, specify what is desired and by when. And when individuals commit to clear goals, positive outcomes emerge.
[2]
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In your attempt to be clear about responsibility, effective communication is essential. Sometimes leaders know exactly what they want, but they dont communicate clearly what is desired. Sometimes leaders have a vague idea of what is wanted and dialogue needs to be conducted with subordinates to help clarify matters. When the dialogue is open, candid, and informal, clarity ensues and accountability results.
[4]
Practice
3:
Leaders
Should
Demonstrate
the
Behaviors
That
Align
With
the
Proposed
Change
Culture change starts and gains momentum with changed behavior on the part of the leaders of that organization or organizational unit. Nothing kills a change initiative faster than leaders who espouse certain behaviors and attitudes, but demonstrate different ones. For example, if a leader announces the importance of controlling costs more carefully, but then he or she arranges for a lavish executive retreat or decorates his or her office in excessive ways, the rest of the organization takes notice. Hence, leaders need to exercise care in the behaviors they exhibit.
[5]
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In addition, leaders need to be careful as to behaviors that they tolerate. If results are being stressed and their subordinate does not deliver results, then there needs to be demonstrable consequences. This applies to both meeting the numbers and behaving consistently with the organizations values. Indeed, it has been observed that if a nonperformer gets high enough in the organizational hierarchy and is not held accountable, that person can literally destroy the organization.
[6]
Clearly, performance measures need to be balanced or else the organization risks becoming unbalanced. Consequently, this suggests that multiple performance standards are required. However, if the performance standards are too numerous, then assessing performance is no longer possible. Overall, focusing on a relatively few, balanced performance standards works best for making the organization more accountable.
[8]
When designing performance standards, it is sometimes helpful to distinguish between ends and means standards. When the strategic goals are established and measureable, then metrics that focus on the end result are most appropriate. However, when the strategic goals are changing and not easily measured, then metrics that focus on the means for bringing about the change are most appropriate. In either case, however, measurements can and should be applied.
[9]
Finally, most people assume that utilizing performance standards implies a bureaucratic organization; however, this does not have to be the case. Accountability can be achieved in nonhierarchical organizational structures when it comes from within the employee or is reviewed in nonbureaucratic ways.
[10]
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One cultural artifact surrounding accountability is who gets celebrated and who gets ignored. Clearly, celebrating and promoting individuals who deliver results on time and within budget is one way to support movement to more accountable culture. Also, individuals who dont deliver results on time or within budget need to be privately confronted, coached, and sometimes removed from the organization.
[12]
The transformation of Continental Airlines is a prime example of how important changing artifacts are to making a culture more accountable. To change behavioral norms that had been associated with low productivity, the leaders instituted a bonus system that rewarded high levels of productivity. In order to align the culture with the new business strategy, the leaders next act was to reduce the corporate policy manual from 800 pages to just 80 pages and then conduct a ritual where the former manuals were burned by the employees. In addition, the catch phrase from worst to first was used to focus employees attention on the desired results. Whenever key milestones were achieved, corporate celebrations were arranged. And executives were required to work on holidays so that we are all in this together in Continentals effort to become more accountable and productive. And the repainting of the jets, renovating of the gateways, and purchasing of state-of-the-art information technology all contributed to the turnaround initiative.
[13]
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an organization, this is not an easy task. However, change-capable organizations are adept at naming the assumptions underlying organizational actions and changing those assumptions when they no longer serve the organization. Surfacing and debating assumptions is the means by which cultural change is achieved, and paying attention to assumptions around accountability is a key way to make your organization more change capable. Larry Bossidy and Ram Charan note, Debate on assumptions is one of the most critical parts of any operating reviewnot just the bigpicture assumptions but assumptions specifically linked with their effects on the business, segment by segment, item by item. Thats a key part of whats missing in the standard budget review. You cannot set realistic goals until youve debated the assumptions behind them.
[14]
Many organizations do a good job celebrating and recognizing good performance. Very few organizations deal with nonperformers well even though this is a key process for any organization that takes accountability seriously. Most employees like knowing where they stand in terms of performance, and the performance evaluation system is central to making an organization accountable. It is particularly important that the performance evaluation system is based on hitting predefined targets and standards as much as possible. However, care must be exercised in selecting the right standards, not just those that are easiest to measure.
[16]
In the absence of rigorously defined standards, performance evaluation becomes more focused on nonperformance criteria. Since each organization is unique, customized reward and recognition systems are becoming the norm for organizations seeking greater accountability.
[17]
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In sum, creating and maintaining a culture of accountability is essential to bring about a change-capable organization. This does not mean that organizations need to measure everything and become more mechanical. If thoughtfully developed, however, measurements and responsibility assignments can aid in organizational learning and adaptability. This dimension, and the previous dimensions discussed, is graphically depicted in . Figure 9.1 The Seventh Dimension of Organizational Capacity for Change: Accountable Culture
[1] Ulrich, Zenger, & Smallwood (1999), p. 21. [2] Heath and Heath (2008). [3] Wines and Hamilton (2009). Attributed to William Q. Judge Jr. Saylor URL: http://www.saylor.org/books/ Saylor.org 122
[4] Bossidy and Charan (2002), p. 102. [5] Bossidy and Charan (2002), p. 105. [6] Bossidy and Charan (2002), p. 115. [7] Osborne (1993). [8] Ulrich, Zenger, & Smallwood (1999). [9] Melnyk, Hanson, & Calantone (2010). [10] Ulrich, Zenger, & Smallwood (1999), p. 97. [11] Shrivastava (1985). [12] Bossidy and Charan (2002). [13] Higgins and McAllaster (2004). [14] Bossidy and Charan (2002), p. 236. [15] Kerr and Slocum (2005). [16] Kerr (1975). [17] Heneman, Fisher, & Dixon (2001).
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Chapter 10
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they do not automatically lead to innovations. However, if diversity of thought is welcomed in an organizational culture, creativity and innovation are more likely. [3] A third aspect of organizational culture that can facilitate innovation is the ubiquity of weak ties. Strong ties are relationships we have with family members, close friends, and longtime neighbors or coworkers. They tend to be ties of long duration, marked by trust and reciprocity in multiple areas of life. In contrast, weak ties are those relationships that are more on the surfacepeople we are acquainted with but not deeply connected to. Research has shown that creative individuals have many weak ties inside and outside their work organizations. [4] Consequently, organizational cultures that encourage flexible working conditions and external networking make innovation more likely. Hence, there is a spontaneous and serendipitous aspect to innovative cultures. A fourth aspect of organizational culture that nurtures creativity and innovation is an organizationwide ability to look long term. Todays organizations are very lean and short-term focused. They are so busy exploiting existing markets, they dont have the time or resources or capacity to explore new markets. However, organizational cultures that enable the organization to both exploit and explore markets make it possible for its leaders to fly the plan while rewiring it. [5] A fifth aspect of organizational culture that makes creativity and innovation possible is the tolerance of ambiguity and failure. As Woody Allen states, If you are not failing every now and again, its a sign youre not doing anything very innovative. Clearly, not all new ideas will work out as hoped, so ideas that lead to dead-ends are an inevitable part of the innovation process. Unfortunately, most organizational cultures seek to blame individuals who fail, rather than accepting occasional failures and attempting to learn from the experience. A sixth aspect of organizational culture stems from the reality that most innovations come from collaboration within and across teams, not the genius or perseverance of a single individual. For example, in a scientific study of R&D units in the biotechnology industry, Judge and associates found that the most innovative units operated more like goal-directed communities than as a collection of big-name scientists. [6] Nonetheless, many organizations seek to hire employees who are extremely
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intelligent, come from prestigious universities, or both, and these are often the individuals who have the most problems collaborating with others.
[1] Florida (2002), p. 22. [2] Shames (2009). [3] Basset-Jones (2005). [4] Granovetter (1973). [5] Judge and Blocker (2008). [6] Judge, Fryxzell, & Dooley (1997).
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Clearly, the more open the culture is to new ideas and connections, the more likely that it will be innovative and capable of change. In 2004, Fast Company magazine nominated W. L. Gore and Associates as pound for pound, the most innovative company in America. They argued that their impressive string of innovations were a direct result of their culture, which was designed specifically to be innovative. What is striking is how nonhierarchical Gores culture is. For example, they emphasize the power of small, interdisciplinary teams over formal organizational structure. There are no ranks, no titles, and no bosses to report to. The firm takes the long view as much as possible; and it emphasizes the importance of face-to-face communication. Associates are encouraged to spend up to 10% of their time pursuing speculative new ideas. And the culture celebrates failure in order to encourage risk taking. [5]
[1] Garvin (2004). [2] Drucker (1993). [3] Cameron and Quinn (1999). [4] Wheatley (2006), p. 113. [5] Deutschman (2004).
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While these two groups of people are essential, this emphasis will
[2]
According to Peter Drucker, innovation and entrepreneurship are capable of being presented as a discipline. In other words, it can be learned and practiced. Most important for us in this chapter, Drucker asserts that it can be fostered and encouraged throughout an entire organization.
[4]
appears to be to create a collaborative, information-rich environment in which all employees are invited to contribute.
[5]
Commenting on the success of the Sundance Film Festival, Robert Redford stated, If you
create an atmosphere of freedom, where people arent afraid someone will steal their ideas, they will engage with each other, they will help one another, and they will do some amazingly creative things together.
[6]
However, creative individuals arent the only ones required to cultivate a more innovative culture. Other individuals, such as knowledge brokers, are also essential. Knowledge brokers are individuals who constantly collect ideas and combine them in unique and valuable ways. They often are not the originators
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of the ideas, but they have a skill at keeping new ideas alive and seeing where they lead.
[8]
Sometimes
older workers lose their creative spark but serve as knowledge brokers to keep the spark alive. Most organizations are uncomfortable with mavericks who shake up the status quo and display irreverence for accepted wisdom. However, mavericks play a vital role in making an organization more innovative, especially larger organizations.
[9]
led General Electric through a very innovative period, stated, Here at GE, we reward failure.
Indeed,
there is scientific research that demonstrates that when the reward system recognizes and retains creative employees, the organization behaves more innovatively.
[11]
Perhaps this is why IBMs Thomas Watson, Sr., once said, The fastest
[13]
However, fast and cheap are not enough; the innovative organization also needs to learn from the experience in order to make the failure pay off. This is where testing comes in. Hence, a key ingredient to becoming more culturally innovative is the importance of designing relatively small-scale, but rigorous tests or experiments. For example, Capital One, a highly successful retail bank, was founded on experimental design where new ideas were constantly tested. Tests are most reliable when many roughly equivalent settings can be observedsome containing the new idea and some not.
[14]
Similarly, IDEO,
perhaps the most innovative design firm in the world, is a staunch proponent of encouraging experimenters who prototype ideas quickly and cheaply. cheap and learn from their failures.
[15]
Unfortunately, failure is an integral part of innovation, so innovative cultures need to create the psychological safety whereby failure in certain circumstances is acceptable.
[16]
Some mistakes are more lethal than others, so mistakes that do not jeopardize the survival of the organization need to be accepted, even welcomed by leaders. Relatedly, it is more important to focus on the ideas rather than the individuals behind the ideas so that failure is not personalized. And failuretolerant leaders emphasize that a good idea is a good idea, whether it comes from Peter Drucker, Readers Digest, or an obnoxious coworker.
[17]
Once again, the human resources system can be instrumental in helping to create the psychological safety to enable innovation. In this case, the system can be designed to permit and even celebrate failure.
[18]
Clearly, this involves a balancing act between rewarding success and tolerating failure.
Consequently, the key is to create sufficient psychological safety within a culture so that the organization can dance on the borderline between success and failure.
[19]
Similarly, too many large organizations try to rely solely on their research and
development units for innovation, which greatly constrains the idea production and development process.
[21]
Innovation is clearly a team sport, one that should pervade the entire organization. As a result, ad hoc interdisciplinary teams appear to be the proper structural approach to fostering innovation. Today, IDEO is one of the most innovative firms in the world, and their approach to business is centered around
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interdisciplinary teams.
[22]
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any culture-change initiative. Perhaps this is why Gary Hamel and C. K. Prahalad note that true strategy is the result of deep, innovative thinking.
[24]
[25]
Whatever the term that is used, organizational members need to think deeply about
where their culture limits innovation, and to identify what cultural assumptions are the limiting factor. This requires a collective perspective; very rarely can a single leader come to this realization. Since most organizations have a bias for action, this reflection can be especially difficult. However, organizational learning often requires unlearning old and harmful assumptions and this is especially true for cultivating innovativeness.
[27]
In conclusion, the eighth and final dimension of organizational capacity for change is an innovative culture that fosters and celebrates creativity and innovation. This dimension is an essential counterbalance to accountability systems. Together, these two dimensions complete our understanding of how to make your organization more change capable.
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Figure 10.1 The Eighth Dimension of Organizational Capacity for Change: Innovative Culture
[1] Hargadon and Sutton (2000). [2] Hamel and Prahalad (1994). [3] Hammer (2004). [4] Drucker (1996). [5] Kanter (2006). [6] Zades (2003), p. 67. [7] Mumford (2000). [8] Hargadon and Sutton (2000). Attributed to William Q. Judge Jr. Saylor URL: http://www.saylor.org/books/ Saylor.org 136
[9] Stringer (2000). [10] Farson and Keyes (2002). [11] Chandler, Keller, & Lyon (2000). [12] Hall (2007). [13] Edmondson (2002), p. 64. [14] Davenport (2009). [15] Kelley and Littman (2005). [16] Edmondson (2008). [17] Farson and Keyes (2002), p. 70. [18] Bowen and Ostroff (2004). [19] Wylie (2001). [20] Hanna (2010). [21] Stringer (2000). [22] Kelley and Littman (2005). [23] Shook (2010). [24] Hamel and Prahalad (1994), p. 56. [25] Edmondson (2008). [26] Hammer (2004). [27] Senge (1990).
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Chapter 11
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Since organizations are so central to our lives and since they are so important to the fate of humanity, it is imperative that they function well. However, the organizations of the 21st century are not agile enough to deal with the unpredictable and increasingly volatile nature of the environments that they occupy. We need organizations that are more capable of change. This book is dedicated to that premise.
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The second two dimensions, capable champions and involved midmanagement, are oriented toward unleashing the power of lateral leadership. Lateral leadership is concerned with getting things done across organizational units and functional areas of expertise.
[2]
us, but the power of hierarchical authority is diminishing. In its place is the power of influence without authority, in other words, lateral leadership. Crisis situations demonstrate this power quite clearly. When a crisis occurs, people often self-organize into social groups that do amazing things in inexplicably short amounts of time. The trick here is to enable the organization to self organize. In this book, I have emphasized the importance of creating change champions and involving middle management in the change process so that lateral leadership can occur. Figure 11.1 "The Human Capital Required for Organizational Capacity for Change" contains a graphical depiction of the two organizational attributes dealing with human capital in change capable organizations.
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Figure 11.1 The Human Capital Required for Organizational Capacity for Change
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The fourth and final organizational attribute that is fundamental to change capability is cultural ambidexterity. Many observers note the powerful role that organizational culture plays in facilitating or thwarting organizational change. What is often missed, however, is that change-capable organizations balance accountability with innovation. If the organization overemphasizes accountability, innovation suffers. And if innovation is the sole focus, accountability is ignored. Change-capable organizations optimize on both of these seemingly contradictory cultural virtues.
[4]
Hence, the
organization needs to become ambidextrous culturally, using the right-handed accountability norms in balance with the left-handed innovation norms.
[5]
[1] Gilbert (2005). [2] Fisher and Sharp (2004). [3] Oshry (1996). [4] Quinn (1991). [5] Judge and Blocker (2008).
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Once you have collected the data from tops, middles, and frontline workers, it is useful to aggregate that data by the three levels and for the overall organization. If you are graphically minded, it can be helpful to construct a radar chart depicting the eight dimensions of organizational capacity for change by adding up the mean score for the four items in each dimension. Since a minimum score would be 4 across the four items and a maximum score would be 40, your organizational score will be somewhere between these two extremes. As can be seen in , descriptive statistics are provided for each of the eight dimensions for the over 200 strategic business units that have been previously assessed using the instrument in . Notably, Communication Systems is often the lowest evaluated dimension of the eight, and Trustworthy Leadership is typically the highest evaluated dimension. This suggests that improving your communication before, during, and after change initiatives offers the biggest opportunity for improvement. In addition, it is interesting to point out that the coefficient of variation is highest for systems thinking and communication systems, which suggests that strategic business units vary the most on these two dimensions. contains the mean values across the three hierarchical subgroups of employees required to assess organizational capacity for change. As might be expected, senior executives consistently rate the organizational capacity for change the highest, and frontline workers consistently rate it the lowest. In all cases except for accountable culture, middle managers rate the dimensions of organizational capacity for change in between these two subgroups. Overall, this benchmark data can be used to compare your organization to a wide variety of organizations operating in a wide variety of industries throughout the world. A final worthwhile assessment is to track your organizational capacity for change over time. This can be done by administering the instrument at one point in time, and collecting data at a later point in time. Some organizational leaders choose to do this at regular intervals (e.g., every year, every quarter); other organizational leaders choose to do this after a major intervention event (e.g., following a postacquisition integration program or a major training program). Armed with longitudinal data, you get a perspective as to whether your organization is improving in its overall capacity for change.
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[1] This survey instrument can also be used as an interview protocol for qualitative interviews. [2] Sometimes organizations are so large, and comprise so many organizational units, that it does not make sense to assess capacity for change for the entire organization. Hence, meaningful assessments are made at the strategic business unit level. A strategic business unit is an organizational subunit with profit and loss responsibility, or a cost center within an organization. For smaller, single-business organizations, the strategic business unit is the entire organization. [3] Judge and Douglas (2009).
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[1]
Abrahamson
(2000).
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Chapter 12
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Item # 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32
Question generally know how change will help the business unit? generally view top management as trustworthy? Do employees throughout the organizational unit experience consequences for outcomes of their actions? meet deadlines and honor resource commitments? accept responsibility for getting work done? have clear roles for who has to do what? Do change champions recognize the interdependent systems implications of change? importance of institutionalizing change? need to realign incentives with desired changes? value of addressing causes rather than symptoms? Do we have change champion(s) who command the respect of the members in the unit? possess good interpersonal skills? are willing and able to challenge the status quo? have the will and creativity to bring about change?
1 1 1 1
2 2 2 2
3 3 3 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1 1 1 1
2 2 2 2
3 3 3 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1 1 1 1
2 2 2 2
3 3 3 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
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Chapter 13
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Item # 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32
Question generally know how change will help the business unit? generally view top management as trustworthy? Do employees throughout the organizational unit experience consequences for outcomes of their actions? meet deadlines and honor resource commitments? accept responsibility for getting work done? have clear roles for who has to do what? Do change champions recognize the interdependent systems implications of change? importance of institutionalizing change? need to realign incentives with desired changes? value of addressing causes rather than symptoms? Do we have change champion(s) who command the respect of the members in the unit? possess good interpersonal skills? are willing and able to challenge the status quo? have the will and creativity to bring about change?
Factor loadings 0.712 0.535 Factor 6: Accountable culture 0.697 0.717 0.780 0.668 Factor 7: Systems thinking 0.676 0.790 0.806 0.639 Factor 8: Capable champions 0.776 0.804 0.797 0.667
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Chapter 14
OCC dimension 1. Trustworthy leadership 2. Trusting followers 3. Capable champions 4. Involved midmanagement 5. Systems thinking 6. Communications systems 7. Accountable culture 8. Innovative culture Overall organization Aggregate scores:
Mean value Standard deviation Coefficient of variation 27.1 24.7 26.1 26.2 25.9 23.4 26.0 24.6 4.7 4.3 4.9 4.5 4.1 4.8 4.3 4.6 0.17 0.17 0.19 0.17 0.21 0.21 0.17 0.19
204.0
Source: These data represent the descriptive statistics on organizational capacity for change across the eight dimensions for 5,124 employees assessing their organizational capacity for change within 205 strategic business units for firms operating in North America, Europe, and Asia during 1999 to 2006. The coefficient of variation is the standard deviation divided by the mean value. The higher the coefficient of variation, the more variation or volatility is experienced with this particular organizational attribute.
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Chapter 15
OCC dimension 1. Trustworthy leadership 2. Trusting followers 3. Capable champions 4. Involved midmanagement 5. Systems thinking 6. Communications systems 7. Accountable culture 8. Innovative culture Overall organization Aggregate scores:
Senior executives Midmanagers Frontline workers 29.2 25.6 27.8 27.6 27.1 25.8 26.8 27.0 27.9 25.0 26.7 27.0 26.2 24.2 26.2 26.0 26.4 24.7 26.0 25.8 25.6 22.6 26.5 25.0
216.8
209.2
202.6
Source: These data represent the descriptive statistics on organizational capacity for change across the eight dimensions for 5,124 employees assessing their organizational capacity for change within 205 strategic business units for firms operating in North America, Europe, and Asia during 1999 to 2006.
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Chapter 16
Appendix
E:
Resources
16.1
Simulations
on
Building
Organizational
Capacity
and
Leading
Change
Judge, W., & Hill, L. (2010). Change management: Power and influence. Retrieved from http://hbr.org/product/change-management-harvard-managementor- onlinemodu/an/6789E-HTM-ENG?Ntt= change%2520management%2520power%2520and%2520influence In this single-player simulation produced by Harvard Business Publishing in Boston, students play one of two roles at a sunglass manufacturing firm and face the challenges associated with implementing an organization-wide environmental sustainability initiative. The initiative seeks to change raw material inputs in order to make the companys products more green and also to address environmental waste issues. The simulation includes up to four scenarios with different combinations of two important factors for creating change: the relative power of the change agent and the relative urgency associated with the change initiative. In each scenario, students choose among different change levers in an attempt to persuade key members of the organization to adopt the change initiative. Students are assessed on their ability to achieve the greatest percentage of adopters within the company while simultaneously using the fewest resources. Appropriate for use in undergraduate, graduate, and executive business programs. ExperiencePoint. (2010). Experience change simulations. Retrieved fromhttp://www.experiencepoint.com/ In this single-player simulation produced by ExperiencePoint in Toronto, students play the role of a change agent in four different organizational contexts. For the GlobalTech simulation, players lead change in a siloed organization that needs to be more customer focused. For the SkyTechsimulation, players lead a corporate social responsibility initiative in a global corporation. For the Lakeview simulation, players implement lean practices to reduce patient wait times in a hospital
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emergency department. For the Central-Valley view simulation, players balance the needs of internal and external stakeholders as they lead the merger of two hospitals.
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16.2
Other
Books
and
Articles
on
Aspects
of
Organizational
Capacity
for
Change
Beer, M., & Eisenstadt, R. (1994). Developing an organization capable of implementing strategy and learning. Human Relations, 49, 597620. Bennett, J. L. (2000). Leading the edge of change: Building individual and organizational capacity for
the evolving nature of change. Mooresville, NC: Paw Print Press.
Bethune, G. (1998). From worst to first: Behind the scenes of Continentals remarkable comeback. New York, NY: Wiley. Bishop, C. (2000). Making change happen one person at a time: Assessing change capacity within your
organization. New York, NY: AMACON.
Collins, J., & Porras, J. (1994). Built to last: Successful habits of visionary companies. New York, NY: HarperBusiness. Dell, M. (2000). Direct from Dell: Strategies that revolutionized an industry. New York, NY: HarperBusiness. Fullan, M. (2008). The six secrets of change: What the best leaders do to help their organizations
survive and thrive. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Gardner, H. (2004). Changing minds: The art and science of changing our own and other peoples
minds. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press.
Gerstner, L. (2002). Who says elephants cant dance? New York, NY: HarperBusiness. Hock, D. (2005). One from many: VISA and the rise of chaordic organization. San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler. Judge, W., & Blocker, C. (2008). Organizational capacity for change and strategic ambidexterity: Flying the plane while rewiring it. European Journal of Marketing, 42(9/10), 915926. Judge, W., & Douglas, T. (2009). The evolution of the organizational capacity for change construct. Journal of Organizational Change Management, 22(6),635649. Judge, W., & Elenkov, D. (2005). Organizational capacity for change and environmental performance: An empirical assessment of Bulgarian firms.Journal of Business Research, 58, 894901.
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Judge, W., Naoumova, I., Douglas, T., & Kouzevol, N. (2009). Organizational capacity for change and firm performance in Russia. International Journal of Human Resource Management, 20(8), 1737 1752. Lawler, E., & Worley, C. (2006). Built to change: How to achieve sustained organizational
effectiveness. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Lengnick-Hall, C., & Beck, T. (2005). Adaptive fit versus robust transformation: How organizations respond to environmental change. Journal of Management, 31(5), 738757. Price Waterhouse. (1996). The paradox principles: How high performance companies manage chaos,
complexity, and contradiction to achieve superior results. Chicago, IL: Irwin.
Seidman, D. (2007). How: Why how we do anything means everything in business (and in
life). Hoboken, NJ: Wiley
Staber, U., & Sydow, J. (2002). Organizational adaptive capacity: A structuration perspective. Journal of Management Inquiry, 11, 408424. Thames, R., & Webster, D. (2009). Chasing change: Building organizational capacity in a turbulent
environment. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.
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16.3
Fourteen
Teaching
Cases
That
Illustrate
the
Organizational
Capacity
for
Change
Framework
Cisco Systems
Case ID: HBS 409061 Trustworthy leadership: John Chambers Capable champions: Customer champions Systems thinking: IT systems Accountable culture: Customer focus
Citigroup (A)
Case ID: HBS 308001 Trustworthy leadership: Chuck Prince Systems thinking: Merger challenge Communication systems: Problem area Accountable culture: Problem area Innovative culture: Problem area
Digital
Chocolate
Case ID: HBS 401049 Attributed
to
William
Q.
Judge
Jr.
Saylor
URL:
http://www.saylor.org/books/
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157
Trustworthy leadership: Trip Hawkins Capable champions: Problem area Involved midmanagement: Problem area Systems thinking: E-mail, meetings Communication systems: Venture burn rate Accountable culture: Growth potential
EBay
Case ID: HBS 401024 Trustworthy leadership: Meg Whitman Involved midmanagement: Fully engaged Systems thinking: Acquire Krause? Accountable culture: Problem Area Innovative culture: Customer focus
Hindustan
Lever
Case ID: HBS 410002
Trustworthy leadership: Biswaranjan Sen Trusting followers: Union turmoil Capable champions: Suchita Prasan Systems thinking: Problem area Communication systems: Problem area Accountable culture: Extreme downsizing Innovative culture: British hierarchy
Merck (A)
Case ID: HBS 499054 Trustworthy leadership: Ray Gilmartin Capable champions: Mgt. committee Involved midmanagement: Functional silos Attributed to William Q. Judge Jr. Saylor URL: http://www.saylor.org/books/ Saylor.org 158
Systems thinking: Merger challenge Communication systems: Problem area Accountable culture: Problem area Innovative culture: Drug creation
Northwest
Airlines
Case ID: HBS 491036 Trustworthy leadership: Steve Rothmeir Trusting followers: Union turmoil Capable champions: Dr. Ken Myers Involved midmanagement: Merger integration Systems thinking: Merger challenge Communication systems: Problem area Accountable culture: Problem area Innovative culture: Problem area
Oticon
Case ID: IMD 079 Trustworthy leadership: Lars Kolind Trusting followers: Relocation Resistance Capable champions: Sten Davidsen Involved midmanagement: Problem area Accountable culture: Problem area Innovative culture: Problem area
Trustworthy leadership: A. G. Lafley Trusting followers: Problem area Involved midmanagement: Walk the talk Attributed to William Q. Judge Jr. Saylor URL: http://www.saylor.org/books/ Saylor.org 159
Communication systems: Problem area Accountable culture: Global integration Innovative culture: Problem area
Renault-Nissan
Case ID: TB 0047
Trustworthy leadership: Louis Schweitzer Trusting followers: Downsizing Capable champions: Carlos Ghosn Involved midmanagement: Cultural differences Systems thinking: Merger challenge Communication systems: Problem area Accountable culture: Problem area Innovative culture: Mavericks elevated
Siemens
Nixdorf
Case ID: HBS 396203
Trustworthy leadership: Gerhard Schulmeyer Capable champions: Mark Maletz Involved midmanagement: Problem area Innovative culture: Global expansion
Wyeth
Pharmaceutical
Case ID: SGBS L-15 Trustworthy leadership: Micahel Kamarck Capable champions: Guiding coalition Systems thinking: Learning teams Communication systems: Multichannel Accountable culture: Cut costs 25% in 1 year
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Chapter 17
References
Abrahamson, E. (2000, July/August). Change without pain. Harvard Business Review, 83(4), 7579. Alvesson, M. (2002). Understanding organizational culture. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. Anastasiou, S. (1998). Communicating change. New Zealand Management, 45(9), 86. Anonymous. (2010). Information technology investments in the United States. Retrieved August 20, 2010, fromhttp://www.brainmass.com/library/viewposting.php?posting_id=169315 Argyris, C. (1993). Knowledge for action. A guide to overcoming barriers to organizational change. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. Armenakis, A., Harris, S., & Mossholder, K. (1993). Creating readiness for organizational change. Human Relations, 46(6), 681703. Arond-Thomas, M. (2009). Do you have CEO disease? Physician Executive, 35(2), 7881. Balogun, J., & Hailey, V. (2008). Exploring strategic change (3rd ed.). London, England: PrenticeHall. Balogun, J., & Johnson, G. (2004). Organizational restructuring and middle manager sensemaking. Academy of Management Journal, 47, 523549. Barnard, C. (1938). The functions of the executive. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Barney, J. (1986). Organizational culture: Can it be a source of sustained competitive advantage? Academy of Management Review, 11(3), 656666. Barney, J., & Hansen, M. (1994). Trustworthiness as a source of competitive advantage. Strategic
Management Journal, 15,175190.
Basset-Jones, N. (2005). The paradox of diversity management, creativity and innovation. Creativity
and Innovation Management, 14(2),169175.
Becera, M., & Gupta, A. (1999). Perceived trustworthiness within the organization: The moderating impact of communication frequency on trustor and trustee effects. Organization Science,
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Beer, M., & Nohria, N. (Eds.). (2000). Breaking the code of change. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press.
Attributed
to
William
Q.
Judge
Jr.
Saylor
URL:
http://www.saylor.org/books/
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162
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