Change Management 101 - A Primer
written by Fred Nickols
with kind permission to reproduce this article on our site
Purpose & AudienceThe purpose of this paper is to provide a broad overview of the concept
of "change management." It was written primarily for people
who are coming to grips with change management problems for the first
time and for more experienced people who wish to reflect upon their
experience in a structured way.
Three Basic Definitions
In thinking about what is meant by "change management,"
at least three basic definitions come to mind:
1. The task of managing change
2. An area of professional practice
3. A body of knowledge
The Task of Managing Change
The first and most obvious definition of "change management"
is that the term refers to the task of managing change. The obvious
is not necessarily unambiguous. Managing change is itself a term
that has at least two meanings.
One meaning of managing change refers to the making of changes in
a planned and managed or systematic fashion. The aim is to more effectively
implement new methods and systems in an ongoing organization. The
changes to be managed lie within and are controlled by the organization.
However, these internal changes might have been triggered by events
originating outside the organization, in what is usually termed "the
environment." Hence, the second meaning of managing change, namely,
the response to changes over which the organization exercises little
or no control (e.g., legislation, social and political upheaval, the
actions of competitors, shifting economic tides and currents, and
so on). Researchers and practitioners alike typically distinguish
between a knee-jerk or reactive response and an anticipative or proactive
response.
An Area of Professional Practice
The second definition of change management is "an area of professional
practice."
There are dozens, if not hundreds, of independent consultants who
will quickly and proudly acknowledge that they are engaged in planned
change, that they are change agents, that they manage change for
their clients, and that their practices are change management practices.
There are numerous small consulting firms whose principals would
acknowledge these same statements about their firms. And most of
the major management consulting firms claim to have a change management
practice area.
Some of these change management experts claim to help clients manage
the changes they face, the changes happening to them. Others claim
to help clients make changes. Still others offer to help by taking
on the task of managing changes that must be made. In almost all cases,
the process of change is treated separately from the specifics of
the situation. It is the task of managing this general process of
change that is laid claim to by professional change agents.
A Body of Knowledge
Stemming from the view of change management as an area of professional
practice there arises yet a third definition of change management:
the content or subject matter of change management. This consists
chiefly of the models, methods and techniques, tools, skills, and
other forms of knowledge that go into making up any practice.
The content or subject matter of change management is drawn from
psychology, sociology, business administration, economics, industrial
engineering, systems engineering, and the study of human and organizational
behavior. For many practitioners, these component bodies of knowledge
are linked and integrated by a set of concepts and principles known
as General Systems Theory (GST). It is not clear whether this area
of professional practice should be termed a profession, a discipline,
an art, a set of techniques, or a technology. For now, suffice it
to say that there is a large, reasonably cohesive albeit somewhat
eclectic body of knowledge underlying the practice and on which
most practitioners would agree - even if their application of it
does exhibit a high degree of variance.
To recapitulate, there are at least three basic definitions of change
management:
1. The task of managing change (from a reactive or a proactive posture)
2. An area of professional practice (with considerable variation
among practitioners)
3. A body of knowledge (consisting of models, methods, techniques,
and other tools)
The Change Process as Problem Solving and Problem Finding
A very useful framework for thinking about the change process is
problem solving. Managing change is seen as a matter of moving from
one state to another, specifically, from the problem state to the
solved state. Diagnosis or problem analysis is generally acknowledged
as essential. Goals are set and achieved at various levels and in
various areas or functions. Ends and means are discussed and related
to one another. Careful planning is accompanied by efforts to obtain
buy-in, support, and commitment. The net effect is a transition
from one state to another, in a planned, orderly fashion. This is
the planned change model.
The word "problem" carries with it connotations that some
people prefer to avoid. They choose instead to use the word "opportunity."
For such people, a problem is seen as a bad situation, one that
shouldn't have been allowed to happen in the first place, and for
which someone is likely to be punished - if the guilty party (or
a suitable scapegoat) can be identified. For the purposes of this
paper, we will set aside any cultural or personal preferences regarding
the use of "problem" or "opportunity." From
a rational, analytical perspective, a problem is nothing more than
a situation requiring action but in which the required action is
not known. Hence, there is a requirement to search for a solution,
a course of action that will lead to the solved state. This search
activity is known as "problem solving."
From the preceding, it follows that "problem finding" is
the search for situations requiring action. Whether we choose to call
these situations "problems" (because they are troublesome
or spell bad news), or whether we choose to call them "opportunities"
(either for reasons of political sensitivity or because the time is
ripe to exploit a situation) is immaterial. In both cases, the practical
matter is one of identifying and settling on a course of action that
will bring about some desired and predetermined change in the situation.
The Change Problem
At the heart of change management lies the change problem, that
is, some future state to be realized, some current state to be left
behind, and some structured, organized process for getting from
the one to the other. The change problem might be large or small
in scope and scale, and it might focus on individuals or groups,
on one or more divisions or departments, the entire organization,
or one or on more aspects of the organization's environment.
At a conceptual level, the change problem is a matter of moving
from one state (A) to another state (A'). Moving from A to A' is
typically accomplished as a result of setting up and achieving three
types of goals: transform, reduce, and apply. Transform goals are
concerned with identifying differences between the two states. Reduce
goals are concerned with determining ways of eliminating these differences.
Apply goals are concerned with putting into play operators that
actually effect the elimination of these differences (see Newell
& Simon).
As the preceding goal types suggest, the analysis of a change problem
will at various times focus on defining the outcomes of the change
effort, on identifying the changes necessary to produce these outcomes,
and on finding and implementing ways and means of making the required
changes. In simpler terms, the change problem can be treated as smaller
problems having to do with the how, what, and why of change.
Change as a "How" Problem
The change problem is often expressed, at least initially, in the
form of a "how" question. How do we get people to be more
open, to assume more responsibility, to be more creative? How do we
introduce self-managed teams in Department W? How do we change over
from System X to System Y in Division Z? How do we move from a mainframe-centered
computing environment to one that accommodates and integrates PCs?
How do we get this organization to be more innovative, competitive,
or productive? How do we raise more effective barriers to market entry
by our competitors? How might we more tightly bind our suppliers to
us? How do we reduce cycle times? In short, the initial formulation
of a change problem is means-centered, with the goal state more or
less implied. There is a reason why the initial statement of a problem
is so often means-centered and we will touch on it later. For now,
let's examine the other two ways in which the problem might be formulated
- as "what" or as "why" questions.
Change as a "What" Problem
As was pointed out in the preceding section, to frame the change
effort in the form of "how" questions is to focus the effort
on means. Diagnosis is assumed or not performed at all. Consequently,
the ends sought are not discussed. This might or might not be problematic.
To focus on ends requires the posing of "what" questions.
What are we trying to accomplish? What changes are necessary? What
indicators will signal success? What standards apply? What measures
of performance are we trying to affect?
Change as a "Why" Problem
Ends and means are relative notions, not absolutes; that is, something
is an end or a means only in relation to something else. Thus, chains
and networks of ends-means relationships often have to be traced
out before one finds the "true" ends of a change effort.
In this regard, "why" questions prove extremely useful.
Consider the following hypothetical dialogue with yourself as an
illustration of tracing out ends-means relationships.
1. Why do people need to be more creative?
2. I'll tell you why! Because we have to change the way we do things
and we need ideas about how to do that.
3. Why do we have to change the way we do things?
4. Because they cost too much and take too long.
5. Why do they cost too much?
6. Because we pay higher wages than any of our competitors.
7. Why do we pay higher wages than our competitors?
8. Because our productivity used to be higher, too, but now it's
not.
9. Eureka! The true aim is to improve productivity!
10. No it isn't; keep going.
11. Why does productivity need to be improved?
12. To increase profits.
13. Why do profits need to be increased?
14. To improve earnings per share.
15. Why do earnings per share need to be improved?
16. To attract additional capital.
17. Why is additional capital needed?
18. We need to fund research aimed at developing the next generation
of products.
19. Why do we need a new generation of products?
20. Because our competitors are rolling them out faster than we
are and gobbling up market share.
21. Oh, so that's why we need to reduce cycle times.
22. Hmm. Why do things take so long?
To ask "why" questions is to get at the ultimate purposes
of functions and to open the door to finding new and better ways of
performing them. Why do we do what we do? Why do we do it the way
we do it? Asking "why" questions also gets at the ultimate
purposes of people, but that's a different matter altogether, a "political"
matter, and one we'll not go into in this paper.
The Approach to Change Management Mirrors Management's Mindset
The emphasis placed on the three types of questions just mentioned
reflects the management mindset, that is, the tendency to think
along certain lines depending on where one is situated in the organization.
A person's placement in the organization typically defines the scope
and scale of the kinds of changes with which he or she will become
involved, and the nature of the changes with which he or she will
be concerned. Thus, the systems people tend to be concerned with
technology and technological developments, the marketing people
with customer needs and competitive activity, the legal people with
legislative and other regulatory actions, and so on. Also, the higher
up a person is in the hierarchy, the longer the time perspective
and the wider-ranging the issues with which he or she must be concerned.
For the most part, changes and the change problems they present
are problems of adaptation, that is, they require of the organization
only that it adjust to an ever-changing set of circumstances. But,
either as a result of continued, cumulative compounding of adaptive
maneuvers that were nothing more than band-aids, or as the result
of sudden changes so significant as to call for a redefinition of
the organization, there are times when the changes that must be
made are deep and far-reaching. At such times, the design of the
organization itself is called into question.
Organizations frequently survive the people who establish them.
AT&T and IBM are two ready examples. At some point it becomes
the case that such organizations have been designed by one group
of people but are being operated or run by another. (It has been
said of the United States Navy, for instance, that "It was
designed by geniuses to be run by idiots.") Successful organizations
resolve early on the issue of structure, that is, the definition,
placement and coordination of functions and people. Other people
then have to live with this design and these other people are chiefly
concerned with means.
Some organizations are designed to buffer their core operations
from turbulence in the environment. In such organizations all units
fit into one of three categories: core, buffer, and perimeter. In
core units (e.g., systems and operations), coordination is achieved
through standardization, that is, adherence to routine. In buffer
units (e.g., upper management and staff or support functions), coordination
is achieved through planning. In perimeter units (e.g., sales, marketing,
and customer service), coordination is achieved through mutual adjustment
(see Thompson). People in core units, buffered as they are from
environmental turbulence and with a history of relying on adherence
to standardized procedures, typically focus on "how" questions.
People in buffer units, responsible for performance through planning,
often ask "what" questions. People in the perimeter units
are as accountable for performance as anyone else and frequently
for performance of a financial nature. They can be heard asking
"what" and "how" questions. "Why"
questions are generally asked by people with no direct responsibility
for day-to-day operations or results. The group most able to take
this long-term or strategic view is that cadre of senior executives
responsible for the continued well-being of the firm: top management.
If the design of the firm is to be called into question or, more
significantly, if it is actually to be altered, these are the people
who must make the decision to do so.
Finally, when organizational redefinition and redesign prove necessary,
all people in all units must concern themselves with all three sets
of questions or the changes made will not stand the test of time.
To summarize: · Problems may be formulated in terms
of "how," "what" and "why" questions.
· Which formulation is used depends on where in the organization
the person posing the question or formulating the problem is situated,
and where the organization is situated in its own life cycle.
1. "How" questions tend to cluster in core units.
2. "What" questions tend to cluster in buffer units.
3. People in perimeter units tend to ask "what" and "how"
questions.
4. "Why" questions are typically the responsibility of
top management.
5. In turbulent times, everyone must be concerned with everything.
Content and Process
Organizations are highly specialized systems and there are many
different schemes for grouping and classifying them. Some are said
to be in the retail business, others are in manufacturing, and still
others confine their activities to distribution. Some are profit-oriented
and some are not for profit. Some are in the public sector and some
are in the private sector. Some are members of the financial services
industry, which encompasses banking, insurance, and brokerage houses.
Others belong to the automobile industry, where they can be classified
as original equipment manufacturers (OEM) or after-market providers.
Some belong to the health care industry, as providers, as insureds,
or as insurers. Many are regulated, some are not. Some face stiff
competition, some do not. Some are foreign-owned and some are foreign-based.
Some are corporations, some are partnerships, and some are sole
proprietorships. Some are publicly held and some are privately held.
Some have been around a long time and some are newcomers. Some have
been built up over the years while others have been pieced together
through mergers and acquisitions. No two are exactly alike.
The preceding paragraph points out that the problems found in organizations,
especially the change problems, have both a content and a process
dimension. It is one thing, for instance, to introduce a new claims
processing system in a functionally organized health insurer. It is
quite another to introduce a similar system in a health insurer that
is organized along product lines and market segments. It is yet a
different thing altogether to introduce a system of equal size and
significance in an educational establishment that relies on a matrix
structure. The languages spoken differ. The values differ. The cultures
differ. And, at a detailed level, the problems differ. However, the
overall processes of change and change management remain pretty much
the same, and it is this fundamental similarity of the change processes
across organizations, industries, and structures that makes change
management a task, a process, and a practice.
The Change Process as "Unfreezing, Changing and Refreezing"
The process of change has been characterized as having three basic
stages: unfreezing, changing, and re-freezing. This view draws heavily
on Kurt Lewin's adoption of the systems concept of homeostasis or
dynamic stability.
What is useful about this framework is that it gives rise to thinking
about a staged approach to changing things. Looking before you leap
is usually sound practice.
What is not useful about this framework is that it does not allow
for change efforts that begin with the organization in extremis
(i.e., already "unfrozen"), nor does it allow for organizations
faced with the prospect of having to "hang loose" for
extended periods of time (i.e., staying "unfrozen").
In other words, the beginning and ending point of the unfreeze-change-refreeze
model is stability - which, for some people and some organizations,
is a luxury. For others, internal stability spells disaster. Even
the fastest of hares, if standing still, can be overtaken by a tortoise
on the move.
Change Management: The Skill Requirements
Managing the kinds of changes encountered by and instituted within
organizations requires an unusually broad and finely-honed set of
skills, chief among which are the following.
Political Skills. Organizations are first and foremost social
systems. Without people there can be no organization. Lose sight of
this fact and any would-be change agent will likely lose his or her
head. Organizations are hotly and intensely political. And, as one
wag pointed out, the lower the stakes, the more intense the politics.
Change agents dare not join in this game but they had better understand
it. This is one area where you must make your own judgments and keep
your own counsel; no one can do it for you.
Analytical Skills. Make no mistake about it, those who would
be change agents had better be very good at something, and that
something better be analysis. Guessing won't do. Insight is nice,
even useful, and sometimes shines with brilliance, but it is darned
difficult to sell and almost impossible to defend. A lucid, rational,
well-argued analysis can be ignored and even suppressed, but not
successfully contested and, in most cases, will carry the day. If
not, then the political issues haven't been adequately addressed.
Two particular sets of skills are very important here: workflow
operations or systems analysis, and financial analysis. Change agents
must learn to take apart and reassemble operations and systems in
novel ways, and then determine the financial and political impacts
of what they have done. Conversely, they must be able to start with
some financial measure or indicator or goal, and make their way
quickly to those operations and systems that, if reconfigured a
certain way, would have the desired financial impact. Those who
master these two techniques have learned a trade that will be in
demand for the foreseeable future. (This trade, by the way, has
a name. It is called "Solution Engineering.")
People Skills. As stated earlier, people are the sine qua
non of organization. Moreover, they come characterized by all manner
of sizes, shapes, colors, intelligence and ability levels, gender,
sexual preferences, national origins, first and second languages,
religious beliefs, attitudes toward life and work, personalities,
and priorities - and these are just a few of the dimensions along
which people vary. We have to deal with them all.
The skills most needed in this area are those that typically fall
under the heading of communication or interpersonal skills. To be
effective, we must be able to listen and listen actively, to restate,
to reflect, to clarify without interrogating, to draw out the speaker,
to lead or channel a discussion, to plant ideas, and to develop
them. All these and more are needed. Not all of us will have to
learn Russian, French, or Spanish, but most of us will have to learn
to speak Systems, Marketing, Manufacturing, Finance, Personnel,
Legal, and a host of other organizational dialects.
More important, we have to learn to see things through the eyes
of these other inhabitants of the organizational world. A situation
viewed from a marketing frame of reference is an entirely different
situation when seen through the eyes of a systems person. Part of
the job of a change agent is to reconcile and resolve the conflict
between and among disparate (and sometimes desperate) points of
view. Charm is great if you have it. Courtesy is even better. A
well-paid compliment can buy gratitude. A sincere "Thank you"
can earn respect.
System Skills. There's much more to this than learning about
computers, although most people employed in today's world of work
do need to learn about computer-based information systems. For now,
let's just say that a system is an arrangement of resources and
routines intended to produce specified results. To organize is to
arrange. A system reflects organization and, by the same token,
an organization is a system.
A word processing operator and the word processing equipment operated
form a system. So do computers and the larger, information processing
systems in which computers are so often embedded. These are generally
known as "hard" systems. There are "soft" systems
as well: compensation systems, appraisal systems, promotion systems,
and reward and incentive systems.
There are two sets of systems skills to be mastered. The first
is the set most people associate with computers and it is exemplified
by "systems analysis." This set of skills, by the way,
actually predates the computer and is known elsewhere (particularly
in the United States Air Force and the aerospace industry) as "systems
engineering." For the most part, the kind of system with which
this skill set concerns itself is a "closed" system which,
for now, we can say is simply a mechanistic or contrived system
with no purpose of its own and incapable of altering its own structure.
In other words, it cannot learn and it cannot change of its own
volition.
The second set of system skills is the set associated with a body
of knowledge generally referred to as General Systems Theory (GST).
This set deals with people, organizations, industries, economies,
and even nations as socio-technical systems - as "open,"
purposive systems, carrying out transactions with other systems
and bent on survival, continuance, prosperity, dominance, plus a
host of other goals and objectives.
Business Skills. Simply put, you'd better understand how
a business works. In particular, you'd better understand how the
business in which and on which you're working works. This entails
an understanding of money - where it comes from, where it goes,
how to get it, and how to keep it. It also calls into play knowledge
of markets and marketing, products and product development, customers,
sales, selling, buying, hiring, firing, EEO, AAP, and just about
anything else you might think of.
see the Bennis, Benne and Chin reference)
People are rational and will follow their self-interest -
once it is revealed to them. Change is based on the communication
of information and the proffering of incentives.
|
People are social beings and will adhere to cultural norms
and values. Change is based on redefining and reinterpreting
existing norms and values, and developing commitments to new
ones.
|
People are basically compliant and will generally do what
they are told or can be made to do. Change is based on the
exercise of authority and the imposition of sanctions.
|
People oppose loss and disruption but they adapt readily
to new circumstances. Change is based on building a new organization
and gradually transferring people from the old one to the
new one.
|
Note: The fourth and last strategy above is not one of those
presented by Bennis, Benne and Chin. It is instead the product of
the author's own experiences during some 30 years of making and
adapting to changes in, to, and on behalf of organizations. An excellent
example of this strategy in action, albeit on an accelerated basis,
is provided by the way in which Rupert Murdoch handled the printers
of Fleet Street. He quietly set about building an entirely new operation
in Wapping, some distance away. When it was ready to be occupied
and made operational, he informed the employees in the old operation
that he had some bad news and some good news. The bad news was that
the existing operation was being shut down. Everyone was being fired.
The good news was that the new operation had jobs for all of them-but
on very different terms That there are also elements of the rational-empirical
and power-coercive strategies at play here serves to make the point
that successful change efforts inevitably involve some mix of these
basic change strategies, a point that is elaborated on below.
Factors in Selecting A Change Strategy
Generally speaking, there is no single change strategy. You can
adopt a general or what is called a "grand strategy" but,
for any given initiative, you are best served by some mix of strategies.
Which of the preceding strategies to use in your mix of strategies
is a decision affected by a number of factors. Some of the more
important ones follow.
Degree of Resistance. Strong resistance argues for a coupling
of power-coercive and environmental-adaptive strategies. Weak resistance
or concurrence argues for a combination of rational-empirical and
normative-reeducative strategies.
Target Population. Large populations argue for a mix of all
four strategies, something for everyone so to speak.
The Stakes. High stakes argue for a mix of all four strategies.
When the stakes are high, nothing can be left to chance.
The Time Frame. Short time frames argue for a power-coercive
strategy. Longer time frames argue for a mix of rational-empirical,
normative-reeducative, and environmental-adaptive strategies.
Expertise. Having available adequate expertise at making
change argues for some mix of the strategies outlined above. Not
having it available argues for reliance on the power-coercive strategy.
Dependency. This is a classic double-edged sword. If the organization
is dependent on its people, management's ability to command or demand
is limited. Conversely, if people are dependent upon the organization,
their ability to oppose or resist is limited. (Mutual dependency almost
always signals a requirement for some level of negotiation.)
One More Time: How do you manage change?
The honest answer is that you manage it pretty much the same way
you'd manage anything else of a turbulent, messy, chaotic nature,
that is, you don't really manage it, you grapple with it. It's more
a matter of leadership ability than management skill. The first
thing to do is jump in. You can't do anything about it from the
outside.
A clear sense of mission or purpose is essential. The simpler the
mission statement the better. "Kick ass in the marketplace"
is a whole lot more meaningful than "Respond to market needs
with a range of products and services that have been carefully designed
and developed to compare so favorably in our customers' eyes with
the products and services offered by our competitors that the majority
of buying decisions will be made in our favor."
Build a team. "Lone wolves" have their uses, but managing
change isn't one of them. On the other hand, the right kind of lone
wolf makes an excellent temporary team leader.
Maintain a flat organizational team structure and rely on minimal
and informal reporting requirements.
Pick people with relevant skills and high energy levels. You'll
need both.
Toss out the rule book. Change, by definition, calls for a configured
response, not adherence to prefigured routines.
Shift to an action-feedback model. Plan and act in short intervals.
Do your analysis on the fly. No lengthy up-front studies, please.
Remember the hare and the tortoise.
Set flexible priorities. You must have the ability to drop what
you're doing and tend to something more important.
Treat everything as a temporary measure. Don't "lock in"
until the last minute, and then insist on the right to change your
mind.
Ask for volunteers. You'll be surprised at who shows up. You'll
be pleasantly surprised by what they can do.
Find a good "straw boss" or team leader and stay out of
his or her way.
Give the team members whatever they ask for - except authority.
They'll generally ask only for what they really need in the way
of resources. If they start asking for authority, that's a signal
they're headed toward some kind of power-based confrontation and
that spells trouble. Nip it in the bud!
Concentrate dispersed knowledge. Start and maintain an issues logbook.
Let anyone go anywhere and talk to anyone about anything. Keep the
communications barriers low, widely spaced, and easily hurdled.
Initially, if things look chaotic, relax - they are.
Remember, the task of change management is to bring order to a messy
situation, not pretend that it's already well-organized and disciplined.
Selected Sources
The Planning of Change (2nd Edition). Warren G. Bennis, Kenneth
D. Benne, and Robert Chin (Eds). Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New
York: 1969.
Human Problem Solving. Allen Newell and Herbert A. Simon.
Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs: 1972.
Organizations in Action. James D. Thompson. McGraw-Hill, New
York: 1967.
Contact the Author
Fred Nickols may be reached by phone at (740) 397-2363 and by e-mail
at [email protected]. Should you
contact Fred, please mention that you read this article on the Corporate
Chameleon website, thank-you.

|