A boss during a meeting with some of his staff. PHOTO | FILE
By Scott Bellows
In Summary
Choosing a firm's change initiatives
- Judge the organisation’s characteristics against those of the change intervention
- Assess the intervention’s characteristics. How specific are the goals of the intervention?
- Consider the institutionalisation process for the change intervention.
- Sense and calibrate directing deviations from desired intervention behaviours and take corrective action when outcomes do not match intended results.
Jepkemoi sat back in her chair and peered out the
window of her executive office. As Friday afternoon neared its end, she
prepared to leave the office.
As the CEO of a Kenyan cement company, Jepkemoi engaged
three different consulting firms to assess how to make changes and
improve her company.
Each consultancy spent three weeks at the firm and gave presentations to the management team on problem diagnosis and change intervention recommendations.
Each consultancy spent three weeks at the firm and gave presentations to the management team on problem diagnosis and change intervention recommendations.
Jepkemoi decided to fly down to Zanzibar for the
weekend to review the three different change proposals from three
different consulting companies. She endeavoured to choose the change
interventions that would yield the most positive change for the company.
How should Jepkemoi choose her firm’s change initiatives?
First, she should judge the organisation’s characteristics
against those of the change intervention. The change initiative should
not disrupt the managerial philosophy, strategy, structure, or
environment unless those were specific change targets. If Jepkemoi
chooses a change initiative in congruence with her firm, the more likely
that the likely change initiative would get institutionalised.
Further, the degree to which an organisation’s
environment and technology change frequently may affect the success of
implementing a change initiative.
In a hyper-change environment from external forces,
executives must buffer any change scheme from other changes taking
place. Also, if a firm is unionised or if it operates in a heavily
regulated industry, then diffusions of change interventions becomes more
difficult.
Second, Jepkemoi must assess the intervention’s characteristics.
How specific are the goals of the intervention? Specificity of goals
helps direct socialising activities to particular behaviours required to
implement the intervention, including training and orienting new
members.
It also helps operationalise new behaviours so that
rewards can be linked clearly to them. An intervention aimed only at
increasing product quality is likely to be more focused and readily put
into operation than a change for employees.
Also, the intervention’s programmability whereby
its degree to which the changes can be programmed or the extent to which
the different intervention characteristics can be specified clearly in
advance to enable socialisation, commitment, and reward allocation. The
change programme can be planned and designed to promote specific
features.
Additionally, the level of the change target also
proves important. If you intend to change an individual versus a group
or a department the whole organisation will impact the success. If you
intend to change an area of the firm less than the whole organisation,
then the diffusion of that group into the general institution may prove
difficult.
If the group change does not match the trends in
the firm at large, then the likelihood of the change sticking in the
group becomes less likely.
Why? Because other forces within the firm not
experiencing the change may push back substantially. Others may not
appreciate a subculture or may feel jealous or disdain as a specific
group’s initiative “may not have been invented by them”.
Further, internal support entails the degree to
which there is a system within to guide the change process. Internal
support can gain commitment for the changes and help organisation
members implement them.
Jepkemoi must decide whether her internal support
system might any of the three consultant proposals. An internal support
system may be supported by consultants, but really needs internal
sponsorship.
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