Change Management In Practice: Why Does Change Fail?
“Resistance to change may be active or passive, overt or
covert, individual or organised, aggressive or timid……… and on
occasions totally justified.”
Sadly most significant change fails to meet the expectations
and targets of the proposers. The failure is given the catchall
name “resistance”, yet resistance can be principled and creative
as well as from vested interest. Top management is frequently
unreasonable in its expectations and time scale, forgetting the
process it went through when it decided to make the change.
An effective change manager will prepare an organisation for
change in the early stages of project definition and
stakeholder review, by taking managers through a similar sales
process and responding to their apparent resistance: the
“creative conflict.”
This process is likely to improve the project definition and
buy in. It will also ensure that it is clear the moment
resistance becomes “vested interest.”
It is unrealistic to expect an independent change manager to
tackle vested interest resistance but the change director can
use his or her intervention as a signal to the organisation –
such interventions should be few but telling.
An independent change manager is a cross between a foil and a
lightning conductor – the foil ensuring that positive energy is
deflected to the right place, the lightening conductor removing
negative energy from the organisation.
Avoiding failure: managing resistance
Resistance is a key element in why change fails.
A recent informal UK survey of 120 government transformation
programmes identified that:
• 15% achieved their objectives
• A further 20% failed to achieve their objectives but were
nevertheless regarded as satisfactory
• 65% were unsatisfactory.
A subsequent discussion forum on ecademy.com identified 7 key
reasons why change fails. (The list is virtually identical to
one made by Kotter at Harvard 15 years ago).
1. The organisation had not been clear about the reasons for
the change and the overall objectives. This plays into the
hands of any vested interests.
2. They had failed to move from talking to action quickly
enough. This leads to mixed messages and gives resistance a
better opportunity to focus.
3. The leaders had not been prepared for the change of
management style required to manage a changed business or one
where change is the norm. “Change programmes" fail in that they
are seen as just that: "programmers". The mentality of "now
we're going to do change and then we'll get back to normal”
causes the failure. Change as the cliché goes is a constant; so
a one off programme, which presumably has a start and a finish,
doesn't address the long-term change in management style.
4. They had chosen a change methodology or approach that did
not suit the business. Or worse still had piled methodology
upon methodology, programme upon programme. One organisation
had 6 sigma, balanced scorecard and IIP methodology all at the
same time.
5. The organisation had not been prepared and the internal
culture had 'pushed back' against the change.
6. The business had 'ram raided' certain functions with little
regard to the overall business (i.e. they had changed one part
of the process and not considered the impact up or downstream)
In short they had panicked and were looking for a quick win or
to declare victory too soon.
7. They had set the strategic direction for the change and then
the leaders had remained remote from the change (sometimes
called 'Distance Transformation') leaving the actual change to
less motivated people. Success has many parents; failure is an
orphan.
Very few organisations will manage all 7! However any one in
isolation will make the change programme inconsistent and
aggravate resistance. Advance planning and stakeholder
management will avoid some of these pitfalls. Furthermore the
list is an invaluable diagnostic tool for identifying why (and
where) resistance is taking place, giving an opportunity to
defuse resistance by correcting the mistake.
Conclusion
• Resistance can be healthy (a pearl can result)
• Unknown, unanticipated, unquantified, unaddressed resistance
will always be dangerous.
• A badly thought out process and implementation will always
result in resistance
• An independent change manager can bring the independence,
experience, and objectivity to manage resistance.
• A successful change is essential in creating a change culture
About The Author: Jonathan Palmer MA MSc, Principal; The Bridge
Management Group writes for IMS Interim Executives, an
international S-Cat approved interim management provider. Visit
www.ims.uk.com for interim project and turnaround
management consultancy; for change management visit
www.ims.uk.com/change-management.asp
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