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15-1
Chapter 10
ORGANIZATIONAL
CHANGE AND
DEVELOPMENT
Organizational
Change
McGraw-Hill/Irwin
McShane/Von Glinow OB
5eCopyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights
reserved.
15-3
Umpqua
Bank’s
Umpqua Bank has
become the largest
regional community
bank in the Pacific
Northwest by
applying effective
organizational
change practices
Organizational
Change
15-4
Lewin’s Force Field Analysis Model
Developed by Kurt Lewin
Driving forces
• Push organizations toward change
• External forces or leader’s vision
Restraining forces
• Resistance to change -- employee
behaviors that block the change
process
DrivingForces
RestrainingForces
15-5
Desired
Conditions
Current
Conditions
Before
Change
After
Change
Force Field Analysis Model
During
Change
DrivingForces
RestrainingForces Driving
Forces
RestrainingForces
DrivingForces
RestrainingForces
15-6
Not Hoppy About Change
Mina Ishiwatari(front) wanted to
improve Hoppy drink’s brand image,
but most staff didn’t want to change.
“I tried to take a new marketing
approach to change the image of
Hoppy . . . but no one would listen to
me.” She improved Hoppy’s
popularity with limited support or
budget. Most employees who
opposed Ishiwatari’s changes have
since left the company.
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Restraining Forces (Resistance to Change)
Many forms of resistance
• e.g., complaints, absenteeism,
passive noncompliance
View resistance as a resource
1. Symptoms of deeper problems in
the change process
2. A form of constructive conflict --
may improve decisions in the
change process
3. A form of voice – helps procedural
justice
15-8
Why People Resist Change
1. Direct costs
• Losing something of value due to change
2. Saving face
• Accepting change acknowledges own imperfection,
past wrongdoing
3. Fear of the unknown
• Risk of personal loss
• Concern about being unable to adjust
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Why People Resist Change(con’t)
4. Breaking routines
• Organizational unlearning is part of change
process
• But past practices/habits are valued by employees
due to comfort, low cognitive effort
5. Incongruent organizational systems
• Systems/structures reinforce status quo
• Career, reward, power, communication systems
6. Incongruent team dynamics
• Norms contrary to desired change
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Creating an Urgency for Change
Inform employees about driving forces
Most difficult when organization is doing well
Customer-driven change
• Adverse consequences for firm
• Human element energizes employees
Sometimes need to create urgency to change
without external drivers
• Requires persuasive influence
• Use positive vision rather than threats
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Minimizing Resistance to Change
Highest priority and first strategy
for change
Improves urgency to change
Reduces uncertainty (fear of
unknown)
Problems -- time consuming and
costly
Communication
Learning
Involvement
Stress Mgt
Coercion
Negotiation
15-12
Minimizing Resistance to Change
Provides new knowledge/skills
Includes coaching and other
forms of learning
Helps break old routines and
adopt new roles
Problems -- potentially time
consuming and costly
Communication
Involvement
Stress Mgt
Coercion
Negotiation
Learning
15-13
Minimizing Resistance to Change
Employees participate in change
process
Helps saving face and reducing
fear of unknown
Includes task forces, future search
events
Problems -- time-consuming,
potential conflict
Learning
Involvement
Stress Mgt
Coercion
Negotiation
Involvement
Communication
15-14
Minimizing Resistance to Change
When communication, learning,
and involvement are not enough
to minimize stress
Potential benefits
• More motivation to change
• Less fear of unknown
• Fewer direct costs
Problems -- time-consuming,
expensive, doesn’t help everyone
Learning
Involvement
Coercion
Negotiation
Stress Mgt
Communication
15-15
Minimizing Resistance to Change
Influence by exchange -- reduces
direct costs
May be necessary when people
clearly lose something and won’t
otherwise support change
Problems
• Expensive
• Gains compliance, not commitment
Learning
Involvement
Stress Mgt
Coercion
Communication
Negotiation
15-16
Minimizing Resistance to Change
When all else fails
Assertive influence
Radical form of “unlearning”
Problems
• Reduces trust
• May create more subtle resistance
• Encourage politics to protect jobCoercion
Learning
Involvement
Communication
Stress Mgt
Negotiation
15-17
Refreezing the Desired Conditions
“When you are leading for
growth, you know you are
going to disrupt comfortable
routines and ask for new
behavior, new priorities, new
skills… Even when we want
to change, and do change,
we tend to relax and the
rubber band snaps us back
into our comfort zones.”
Ray Davis, CEO, Umpqua Bank
15-18
Refreezing the Desired Conditions
Realigning organizational systems and team
dynamics with the desired changes
• Alter rewards to reinforce new behaviors
• Change career paths
• Revise information systems
15-19
Change Agents
Change agent -- anyone who possesses
enough knowledge and power to guide and
facilitate the change effort
Engage in transformational leadership
• Develop the change vision
• Communicate the vision
• Act consistently with the vision
• Build commitment to the vision
15-20
Strategic Vision & Change
Need a vision of the desired future state
Identifies critical success factors for change
Minimizes employee fear of the unknown
Clarifies role perceptions
15-21
Diffusion of Change
Begin change as pilot projects
Effective diffusion considers MARS model
• Motivation – pilot project is successful, reward diffusion of pilot project
• Ability – Train employees to adopt pilot project
• Role perceptions –Translate pilot project to new situations
• Situational factors – Provide resources to implement pilot project elsewhere
15-22
Action Research Approach
Action orientation and research orientation
• Action – to achieve the goal of change
• Research – testing application of concepts
Action research principles
1. Open systems perspective
2. Highly participative process
3. Data-driven, problem-oriented process
15-23
Formclient-
consultantrelations
Disengageconsultant’s
services
Action Research Process
Diagnose
need for
change
Introduce
intervention
Evaluate/
stabilize
change
15-24
BBC Takes the Appreciative Journey
To become a more creative
organization, the British
Broadcasting Company
sponsored an appreciative
inquiry process of employee
consultation, called Just
Imagine. “It gave me a
powerful mandate for
change,” said BBC’s chief
executive at the time.
15-25
Appreciative Inquiry Approach
Frames change around
positive and possible
future, rather than
traditional problem focus.
Application of positive
organizational behavior
15-26
Four-D Model of Appreciative Inquiry
Designing
Engaging in
dialogue
about “what
should be”
Dreaming
Forming
ideas about
“what might
be”
Discovery
Discovering
the best of
“what is
Delivering
Developing
objectives
about “what
will be”
15-27
Large Group Interventions
Future search, open space, and other
interventions that involve “the whole system”
• Large group sessions
• May last a few days
• High involvement with minimal structure
Limitations of large group interventions
• Limited opportunity to contribute
• Risk that a few people will dominate
• Focus on common ground may hide differences
• Generates high expectations about ideal future
15-28
Parallel Learning Structure Approach
Highly participative social structures
Members representative across the formal
hierarchy
Sufficiently free from firm’s constraints
Develop solutions for organizational change
which are then applied back into the larger
organization
15-29
OrganizationParallel
Structure
Parallel Learning Structures
15-30
Cross-Cultural and Ethical Concerns
Cross-Cultural Concerns
• Linear and open conflict assumptions different from
values in some cultures
Ethical Concerns
• Privacy rights of individuals
• Management power
• Individuals’ self-esteem
15-31
Organizations are About People
“Take away my people, but leave
my factories, and soon grass will
grow on the factory floors. Take
away my factories, but leave my
people, and soon we will have a
new and better factory.”
Andrew Carnegie (1835-1919)
Source: Library of Congress
Discussion of
Activity 15.3
Strategic Change
Incidents
McGraw-Hill/Irwin
McShane/Von Glinow OB
5e
Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights
reserved.
15-33
Scenario #1: “Greener Telco”
Scenario #1 refers to Bell
Canada’s Zero Waste
program, which successfully
changed employee
behaviorby altering the
causes of thosebehaviors.
Pilot project in Toronto – 12
floor building of 1000 staff
reduced waste from 1800 lb
per day to just 75 lb per day
within 3 years.
Courtesy of Bell Canada
15-34
Bell Canada’s Change Strategy
Relied on the MARS model to
alter behavior:
Motivation -- employee
involvement, respected
steering committee (photo)
Ability -- taught paper
reduction, email, food disposal
Role perceptions – learned
importance of reducing waste
Situation -- created barriers to
wasteful behavior, eg. removed
garbage bins
Courtesy of Bell Canada
15-35
Scenario #2: “Go Forward Airline”
Scenario #2 refers to
Continental Airline’s “Go
Forward” change strategy,
which catapulted the
company “from worst to first”
within a couple of years.
15-36
Continental Airlines’ Change Strategy
Communicate, communicate, communicate
Introduced 15 performance measures
Established stretch goals (repainting planes in 6 months)
Replaced 50 of 61 executives
Rewarded new goals (on-time arrival, stock price)
Customers as drivers of change
Organizational
Change
McGraw-Hill/Irwin
McShane/Von Glinow OB
5e
Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights
reserved.