1 / 45

Managing Organizational Change

Managing Organizational Change. Achieving Sustained Competitive Advantage. 1. Adapting to change in external trends, internal capabilities and resources. 2. Effectively formulating, implementing & evaluating strategies. Adapting to Change – Key Strategic Management Questions.

dbarra
Download Presentation

Managing Organizational Change

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Managing Organizational Change

  2. Achieving Sustained Competitive Advantage 1. Adapting to change in external trends, internal capabilities and resources 2. Effectively formulating, implementing & evaluating strategies

  3. Adapting to Change – Key Strategic Management Questions • What kind of business should we become? • Are we in the right fields • Are there new competitors • What strategies should we pursue? • How are our customers changing?

  4. Contingency Approaches Huy’s Contingency Approach categorizes change into 4 ideal types: The commanding intervention Short-term and rapid senior executives Downsizing, outsourcing, divesting The engineering intervention Medium-term and relatively fast Analysts Changing work design and operational systems The teaching intervention Long-term and gradual Consultants Work practices and behaviours The socializing intervention Long-term and gradual Participative experiential learning, self-monitoring Democratic organizational practices 8-6

  5. Contingency Approaches Contingency approaches remain less common than change management approaches. Suggested reasons include: Achieving “fit” may be difficult due to differing perceptions of the conditions in which the fit is sought Contingency approaches require greater analysis and decisions by managers; the prescriptiveness of change management models may be attractive to managers Contingency approaches focus on leadership style rather than a specific set of actions The use of different change styles at different times may raises questions in the minds of staff as to the credibility of senior management. There is a question about “what” is contingent to managing change 8-7

  6. Why Organizations Change External forces for change e.g. new technology e.g. geopolitical environment Internal Forces for change e.g. a new CEO e.g. growth cycle Forces for stability Think: Do we really need this change? what are the likely returns (economic, other) of this change? 1-8

  7. What Changes in Organizations Common types of changes: Mergers and acquisitions Downsizing Technological changes Proactive Vs. reactive changes Scale of change Incremental transformational 1-9

  8. Diagnosis for Change Organization models to assess where changes are needed in an organization Strategy Structure Operations Culture Management behaviours and mindsets Employee behaviours and mindsets Communication Reward mechanisms Modes of interaction Component analysis tools to assess the changes needed in each part of the organization E.g. force-field (strategy), PESTEL (environment), cultural web (culture) Assessing readiness to change 1-10

  9. Resistance to Change Why do people resist to change Experiences with past change Discomfort with uncertainty Lack of conviction that change is needed Perceived negative effect on interests Lack of clarity as to what is expected Belief that the timing is wrong Managing resistance The resistance cycle The power of resistance 1-11

  10. Implementing Change Implementation method is important: A good idea for change may be badly managed and fail. How much do we involve people When things will be done Two main approaches: Organization development (OD) Appreciative Inquiry Change Management Contingency approaches 1-12

  11. Linking Vision and Change Content of meaningful visions Process by which visions are emerged Three dilemmas: Does vision drive change or emerge during change? Visions help or hinder change? Vision belongs to organizations or to leaders? 1-13

  12. Sustaining Change Actions to sustain change: Redesign roles and reward systems Measure progress Celebrate Fine-tune 1-14

  13. 1-15

  14. MCKINSEY’S 7S FRAMEWORK

  15. Strategy • Structure • Systems • Style • Staff • Skills • Superordinate goals McKinsey 7-S Model

  16. Strategy • Structure • Systems • Style • Staff • Skills • Superordinate goals The Hard S’s The hard elements are factual and easy to identify. They can be found in strategy statements, corporate plans, organization charts, and other documentation McKinsey 7-S Model

  17. Strategy • Structure • Systems • Style • Staff • Skills • Superordinate goals The Soft S’s The soft elements are difficult to describe since they are continuously developing and changing. They are highly determined by the people at work in the organization. McKinsey 7-S Model

  18. Strategy • Structure • Systems • Style • Staff • Skills • Superordinate goals • Strategy • Actions a company plans in response to or in anticipation of changes in its external environment • Structure • Basis for specialization and coordination, influenced primarily by strategy and by organization size and diversity • Systems • Formal and informal procedures that support the strategy and structure (Systems are more powerful than they are given credit) 7-S Model – The Hard S’s

  19. Strategy Formulation Vision & Mission External Opportunities & Threats Internal Strengths & Weaknesses Long-Term Objectives Alternative Strategies Strategy Selection

  20. Strategy • Structure • Systems • Style • Staff • Skills • Superordinate goals • Organization Chart • formal reporting relationships • levels in hierarchy • spans of control • departmentalization • Systems to facilitate: • coordination • communication • integration Organizational Structure

  21. Strategy • Structure • Systems • Style • Staff • Skills • Superordinate goals Structural Designs • Functional Structure • Can adapt functional structure with horizontal linkages • Divisional Structure • Geographical Structure • Matrix Structure • Horizontal Structure /Product Line Structure • Hybrid Structure

  22. Strategy • Structure • Systems • Style • Staff • Skills • Superordinate goals • Joint Ventures • Licensing agreements • Strategic Alliances • Consortia • Virtual organizations • Global (transnational) Work Teams Other Organizational Forms

  23. Strategy • Structure • Systems • Style • Staff • Skills • Superordinate goals • Virtual Teams are characterized by: • Distributed locations of team members • Use of information technology to accomplish tasks • Effective when: • Communication & collaboration skills are high. • Trust among team members is high • Organizations are increasing their use of virtual teams • Potential for improvement in virtual team management is huge Virtual Teams

  24. Strategy • Structure • Systems • Style • Staff • Skills • Superordinate goals • Vertical Information Linkages • Hierarchy • Rules and plans (i.e. budget) • Horizontal Information Linkages • Information systems • Liaison role • Task force • Integrator role (i.e. Project manager) • Cross-functional teams Information Linkages

  25. Strategy • Structure • Systems • Style • Staff • Skills • Superordinate goals • Communications practice and system • Management reporting system • Approval process • Planning/budgeting system • Rewards system including appraisal • “Rules” Systems – various elements

  26. Strategy • Structure • Systems • Style • Staff • Skills • Superordinate goals • Tasks define jobs • Jobs define skills required • Skills (and other considerations) define staff • Over time skills change as staff gains knowledge and experience, and as technology and corporate infrastructure mature • Collection of jobs basis for structure From Tasks to Structure

  27. Strategy • Structure • Systems • Style • Staff • Skills • Superordinate goals • Do they have the necessary skills and knowledge to fulfill proposed / expanded job requirements? • What are the needs of the incumbent or the rest of your workforce in general? • Monetary • Growth • Socialization Job design considerations

  28. Skills: the capabilities and competencies that exist within the company. What it does best. Shared values: the values and beliefs of the company. Ultimately they guide employees towards 'valued' behavior. Staff: the company's people resources and how the are developed, trained and motivated. Style: the leadership approach of top management and the company's overall operating approach. THE SOFT S’s

  29. Style / CultureThe culture of the organization, consisting of Organizational culture: the dominant values, beliefs and norms which develop over time and become relatively enduring features of organization life Management style: what managers do rather than what they say (where they spend their time and attention, what they allow, what they reward, etc) Staff Skills Shared values / Superordinate goals • Strategy • Structure • Systems • Style • Staff • Skills • Superordinate goals 7-S Model – The Soft S’s - 1

  30. Style / Culture Staff The people/human resource management – ways of shaping basic management values, processes used to develop managers, ways of introducing new employees and managing careers, socialization processes Skills Distinctive competencies – what the company does best, ways of developing or shifting competencies Shared values / Superordinate goals Guiding concepts, fundamental ideas around which a business is built – simple, usually stated at abstract level, have great meaning inside the organization, although outsiders may not see or understand them • Strategy • Structure • Systems • Style • Staff • Skills • Superordinate goals 7-S Model – The Soft S’s - 2

  31. Strategy • Structure • Systems • Style • Staff • Skills • Superordinate goals Organizational Culture • Culture is to organizations what personality is to individuals • All companies have cultures • Culture by default • Culture by design – thoughtful choices based on values and core beliefs • How does a company consciously create its culture?

  32. From Gray & Larson “Project Management: The Managerial Process”

  33. Strategy • Structure • Systems • Style • Staff • Skills • Superordinate goals Types of Organizational Cultures • Control cultures – Drive for predictability and order • Collaboration cultures – Pursue close relationship with customers • Competence cultures – Pursue excellence and innovation • Cultivation cultures – Pursue life enrichment for customers and employees

  34. Strategy • Structure • Systems • Style • Staff • Skills • Superordinate goals Organizational Culture • Observable Evidence: • Symbols • Ceremonies • Stories • Behaviors • Language • Dress • Underlying Roots: • Values, Assumptions, Beliefs, Attitudes, Feelings

  35. Strategy • Structure • Systems • Style • Staff • Skills • Superordinate goals • Conflict management • Relationship or interpersonal conflict • Task / process conflict • Functional vs. dysfunctional conflict • Factors: goal incompatibility, limited resources, differences • Power – the capacity to influence behavior • Positional power: rewards/consequences, control of resources, information and decision control • Personal power: expert, referent (based on identification and admiration) • Politics – the use of power to influence decisions Culture in practice

  36. Management vs. Leadership Planning & vs. Setting the budgeting direction Organizing & vs. Aligning people staffing Controlling & vs. Motivating people problem solving Management is about coping with complexity Leadership is about coping with change

  37. Strategy Structure Systems Style Staff Skills Superordinate goals Effective organizations achieve a harmony between these seven elements; if one element changes, then this will affect all the others McKinsey 7-S Model

  38. The 7-S Model can be a valuable tool to initiate change processes and to give them direction; i.e. determine current state and ideal state of each element, and develop action plans to close the gaps Strategy Structure Systems Style Staff Skills Superordinate goals McKinsey 7-S Model

  39. In change processes, many organizations focus their efforts on the hard S’s; however, the soft factors can make or break a successful change process. All factors must be accounted for. Strategy Structure Systems Style Staff Skills Superordinate goals McKinsey 7-S Model

  40. Interrelated Equilibrium Foundation of corporate culture Levers available to management Strategy Structure Systems Style Staff Skills Superordinate goals McKinsey 7-S Model

  41. Strategic Intent Substance Scale Scope/Breadth Speed Sequence Style Style Scope Substance StrategicIntent Speed Scale Sequence Executing Change – Seven Key Considerations

  42. Strategic Intent Substance Scale Scope/Breadth Speed Sequence Style Style Substance Scope StrategicIntent Speed Scale Sequence Precise Broad Soft S’s Hard S’s Small Large Isolated Organization-wide Slow Fast Hard – Soft Soft – Hard Top Down Bottom Up

More Related