Will it work for you or against you?

Change Management As A Culture



We cannot react to change because that's way too slow. At that point, the change has happened and is already eroding your efficiency
You know what happens:
A change happens
At first, your organisation ignores it and hopes that it will go away
But it doesn't. So, eventually your organisation wakes up and decides to change to fit the new reality.
So there are meetings and more meetings.
Everyone mulls over and worries over what is the best way forward.
Eventually, decisions are finally made to do some things differently – but not too much. Just the barest minimum to account for the change
Then the relevant people are re-trained in the new way of things and away you go
In the meantime, that change has been rampaging all over your efficiency, your productivity and, most importantly of all, your morale – growing and mutating as it went. But there's more bad news: someone else has reacted faster than you, taken advantage of early adaption and taken away some of your business.
And the worst thing of all, is by the time you adapt to the original change, it's already changed into something and your organisation is still playing catch-up.
And that's only on the presumption that you made the “right and best” changes that took full advantage of the new situation. If you didn't, then you really are in trouble.
And that's presuming that your organisation actually decided to change rather than just carry on with “business as usual”.

The answer to change is not change management. At best, change management can only react to change once it has happened and someone has noticed it and flagged it as needing attention. Does that mean that change management is bad? No! No! No! Change management is a whole lot better than No-Change management. The sad thing is that it will ultimately fail because it cannot adapt to the change fast enough – even with the best will in the world. At best, all it does is delay the inevitable.

What you need is an organisation that anticipates change and so is ready to respond when it actually happens. That means making an organisation that is flexible and adaptable so it can respond instantly.
If your organisational culture is “Well, that's the way we've always done it”, then you're just a dead man walking.
If your organisational culture is “Well, we'll change when we have to”, then you're just a dead man walking.
If your organisational culture is “Well, we'll change when everyone else does”, then you're just a dead man walking.
The culture has to be “Well, let's do this until something changes and makes it obsolete. And no one is going to get fired if they have to pivot to handle change”

Credit: The header image is available as wallpaper from Wall.Alphacoders.com
 
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