– In stillness death, in movement life
Surveys from McKinsey and Harvard suggest that +60% of change programs fail.
– In stillness death, in movement life
Surveys from McKinsey and Harvard suggest that +60% of change programs fail.
The pattern is clear, and diligent leaders often devote countless resources to planning out the perfect change management initiative… however, my experience suggests the place that leaders need to begin their transformation efforts is not their organisations: It’s themselves. (HBR 2016)
Lately, I have witnessed a couple of failed change processes, where the pitfalls were on the prioritisation of either strategy or culture:
The connections between people, culture and performance, become apparent to me when I started working with the leadership framework ‘Competing Values’ (by Jeff deGreaff), presented to me at a Henley MBA workshop with Learning Designer Lars Hoffmann.
The Competing Values Framework have many similarities to both the “Big Five” personality traits and “four psychological types” discovered by Jung, which are the foundation of more or less all personality test.
A simple resolution would, therefore, be to say that culture is the sum of an organisation´s employee’s. Knowing how hard it is to change personality the importance of prioritising culture in a change program becomes apparent.
Jeff deGreaff works with three layers of the model, people, practices and purpose, whereas culture is in the second layer practices
While we are at it, this is not to say that working with personality test is the answer to a successful change program. In my work with recruitment and change, I rarely include personality test in assessments as they tend to look at personality as a static thing and does not take context into consideration.
In other words, they tend to give a clear and non-complex answer to something that is nuanced and complex. You can come a long way with a proper interview and knowledge of the “Big Five” or the “four personality types”.
An observation from working with tech start-ups is that they tend to follow the change process from the Competitive Values circle from yellow to red:
What seems to be the issue on this journey is that companies often do not have proper awareness of the impact it has on their business when they are changing from area to area. Especially culture can be painfull when you do not have proper awareness of the changes and therefore have to change bigger parts of the organisation instead of preparing and training the employees to follow the development.
Often companies simply expect culture and people to follow along, but the fact is that in successful change management processes, culture and strategy go hand in hand.
I lately had the pleasure of working with Kotter’s 8 steps and playing the “Change Game” at a CBL workshop held by organisational psychologist Julie Grenaa at Henley, which made me think.
(CBL workshop interview 2016 (Danish))
Working with John Kotter, the grandfather of Change who developed the 8-step change model. A model that has been modified in many ways but still is the principal method to drive organisational change
Going through the steps you will notice culture in step 8, which could mislead you one to think that culture is something to be handled at the last phase of a change process.
This is also the phase of a change process where you often see management lose focus as they are on to what is next up (often a new change process). This is another common pain point in change processes, as this is the phase where you should cash in on the change.
As a modification of the 8 steps would be that they more or less should be driven parallel, not linear. The model above basically is a waterfall process (Waterfall is in IT the opposite to agile development), but shifting contexts require more agile approaches.
Kotter has also developed his perspective on this in his 2014 book Accelerate, one of the elements that he has updated is the need to shift from strictly linear approach to enabling change to happen on multiple fronts and continuously.
Please don’t hesitate to get in touch, share or comment on my personal stories.
Stay tuned for my next blog post which will come in 3-4 weeks. I expect it to be a post on people management as that is the next course of my MBA study.
Further readings: