1 / 26

STRATEGIES IMPLEMENTATION & MANAGING CHANGE

STRATEGIES IMPLEMENTATION & MANAGING CHANGE. Prof.dr.dr.dr.h.c. Constantin Bratianu Faculty of Business Administration Academy of Economic Studies Bucharest. PLANNED CHANGE. The basic idea of this theory is that change can be planned and managed as a controlled process.

gavril
Télécharger la présentation

STRATEGIES IMPLEMENTATION & MANAGING 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. STRATEGIES IMPLEMENTATION & MANAGING CHANGE Prof.dr.dr.dr.h.c. Constantin Bratianu Faculty of Business Administration Academy of Economic Studies Bucharest

  2. PLANNED CHANGE • The basic idea of this theory is that change can be planned and managed as a controlled process. • Since change has been considered at the organization level, all research focused on Organizational Development (OD). • Kurt Lewin founded in 1945 the Research Centerfor Group Dynamics, with a huge influence.

  3. MODELS OF PLANNED CHANGE • The action research model • The three-steps model • The phases of planned change model

  4. THE ACTION RESEARCH MODEL • Action Research has been designed to solve social and organizational problems. • It is research on action to make that action more effective. Action refers to programs and interventions designed to solve a problem or improve a condition. • The main idea is that effective solving of organizational problems must involve a rational, and systematic analysis of the issues in question.

  5. THE ACTION RESEARCH (I) • The Action research comprises 3 components: - the organization (top management) - the subject (people where change is done) - the change agent • The 3 entities must agree to form a group, under mutually acceptable and constructed terms of reference.

  6. THE ACTION RESEARCH (II) • The main difficulty is to gain the commitment of both the organization and the subject of the change. • The strategy was to use top-down change implementation based on top managers authority. • This approach is not working well in large organizations and where the distance to power is relatively small.

  7. THE 3-STEP MODEL • The basic idea was that change toward a higher level of group performance is frequently short lived. After some time, group behaviour may revert to the previous pattern. • This indicates that it is not enough to define change as a target and to stop. It is important to include also the group performance in the new state of change.

  8. How can you transform an ice cube into a cylinder ?

  9. Kurt Lewin’s Change Model Proposed by K. Lewin (1958) for implementing change in an organization through 3 stages: Change Re-freezing Organizational culture Unfreezing Organizational culture

  10. PHASES OF PLANNED CHANGE • The concept of planned change implies that an organization exists in different states at different times and that planned movement can occur from one state to another. • For planned change it is important to understand not only the change but also the states through which the organization must pass.

  11. THE 4-PHASE MODEL • Bullock and Batten (1985) developed an integrated four-phase model for planned change: 1.Exploration phase 2.Planning phase 3.Action phase 4.Integration phase

  12. EXPLORATION PHASE • Becoming aware of the need for change • Searching for outside assistance (a consultant/ facilitator) to assist with planning and implementing the change • Establishing a contract with the consultant which defines each party’s responsibility

  13. PLANNING PHASE • Analysis and diagnosis of the problem to be solved • Establishing change goals and designing the appropriate actions to achieve these goals • Establishing priorities and sequence requirements for change implementation • Allocation of tangible and intangible resources for each change sequence

  14. ACTION PHASE • Identify all possible resistances to change and their nature • Evaluate the inertial forces of each resistance • Choose adequate approaches to overcome each resistance • Evaluate the progress of change implementation • Perform corrections to the initial plan if necessary

  15. INTEGRATION PHASE • This phase begins when the changes have been successfully implemented • It is concerned with consolidating and stabilising the changes • Reinforcing the new behaviours through feedback and reward systems • Diffusing the successful aspects of the change process through the organization • Train managers and employees to monitor the changes and seek to improve upon them

  16. LIMITATIONS (I) • The basic hypothesis that an organization exists in different states at different times and that planned change is a transition from one state to another • The dynamics of business environment imposes organizational change to be more a continuous and open-ended process, than a set of discrete and self-contained events

  17. LIMITATIONS (II) • Its emphasis on incremental change and its inability to incorporate radical, transformational change • It assumes that one type of approach to change is suitable for all organizations, all situations and all times • Turbulent times demand different responses in varied circumstance

  18. THE EMERGENT CHANGE APPROACH • It is a new approach which lacks agreed methods and techniques • This approach stresses the developing and unpredictable nature of change • Change is viewed as a process that unfolds through the interplay of multiple variables within the organization • There is no single prescription for managing organizational transitions successfully

  19. BOTTOM-UP APPROACH • Planned change is implemented more likely through a top-down approach • Emergent change is implemented more likely through a bottom-up approach • The bottom-up approach requires a major change in the role played by senior managers. Instead of planning, directing and controlling change they must create adequate conditions for supporting change

  20. IMPORTANT FEATURES • Though the concept of universally applicable rules for change are rejected, supporters of emergent change stress 4 necessary organizational features: - organizational structure - organizational culture - organizational learning - managerial behaviour

  21. ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE • This is seen as playing a crucial role in defining how people relate to each other and in influencing the momentum for change • The more flexible and flatter organizational structure to increase the responsiveness to change, by developing authority of all managers and responsibility • Organizational structure based on teams and networks

  22. ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE • If change is developing in concordance with the cultural values, organizational culture will support the change • If change is developing against the cultural values, organizational culture must be changed along with change implementation • Creating a culture for change means that change has to be part of the way we do things around here

  23. ORGANIZATIONAL LEARNING • Change is an excellent opportunity to learn new things and then to adapt the organization to the new external business environment requirements • Organizational learning is based on the double loop model (single loop model = solving problems in a programmed way) • Organizational learning creates a pro-active approach to change

  24. MANAGERIAL BEHAVIOUR(I) • The role of managers is not to plan and to control, but to create an internal environment able to accept and to support change • The key organizational elements are: - Information gathering - Communication - Learning

  25. MANAGERIAL BEHAVIOUR (II) • For supporters of the emergent approach, the essence of change is to move from the known to the unknown • In this situation, it is essential for managers to be able to tolerate risk and cope with ambiguity • Managers must develop the skills of making decisions in situations with high levels of uncertainty

  26. ENVIRONMENT Stable Turbulent Planned Emergent APPROACHES TO CHANGE

More Related