Changing the way people think
and behave is, in our experience, often put in the ‘too difficult’ box. None
more so than when an organisation needs to undertake radical and deep reaching
change, something that’s top of mind in the public sector at the moment.
Changing the way people think
and behave is, in our experience, often put in the ‘too difficult’ box. None
more so than when an organisation needs to undertake radical and deep reaching
change, something that’s top of mind in the public sector at the moment.
For many leaders in the private
or public sector it's one thing to demonstrate a convincing rationale for
change, show the graphs and numbers that justify your proposed strategy, draw
up a new structure and win a mandate to make change. Yet this is only half the
job. The other - perhaps most challenging half – is implementing this new way
of working without your best people leaving, morale crashing, performance
falling through the floor and dissatisfaction erupting among your customers.
It isn’t just your staff who has
to change, of course. It’s your leaders too. Without leaders who show the way
by ‘being the change you wish to see’, people cannot follow. Moreover, when
changes are radical it’s almost certain that leaders will have to engage outside
of their organisations with stakeholders, partners, suppliers and customers or
end users, but this is only when they’re ready.
Starting the change journey
Implementing change requires a capability as well as the capacity to
manage the change effectively so you realise the investment and outcomes that
are desired. To start the journey to sustainable long-term change organisations
need to have the capability to plan at an organisational, departmental and
individual employee level.
It’s not all about capability. Without effective change capacity it’s like setting out to drive
from London to Manchester with an empty tank and dodgy wheel bearing. You
probably won’t make it. That’s why conversations about implementing change
should start with a fitness assessment for the journey. Without attention to
both change capability and change capacity organisations will fail to get the
predicted return.
Common causes of failure
The big difference between
success and failure is HOW change is managed, not the analysis of what changes
need to be made.
There are three main reasons for
failure. Firstly, front line people are not sufficiently involved in designing
the details of the change. As it’s often said the devil really is in the
detail. Secondly, the change programme
itself is not synchronised and integrated, with the result that in a large
complex organisation progress is slow and piecemeal.
The most common cause of all is
that people see the change primarily as a structural one, not holistically and
underpinned by a new mind set.
Changing the way people think and behave
Dealing with change is often
traumatic at a leadership, individual, and organisational level. Leaders need
to be the change they want to see. For this to be effective, means really
assessing personal reactions to change. What is being said, felt or left unsaid
and are these emotions being repeated or paralleled in the wider system.
It is also common for a leader
to be ahead in the change transition curve (developed from Kubler Ross,
Bridges). This shows how there can be a futile tightrope that leaders, having
initiated a change and moved through the process, invite others to cross.
It is far better to let people
go through the Transition Curve so that they can emerge stronger, more
productive and engaged as they emerge on the other side. The leader though must
maintain the vision of the future clearly and constantly with their people.
One aerospace company that we
worked with had identified an emotional blockage to radical changes it was undertaking
in its business. This blockage was keeping people in the ‘pit’ of the
curve. There was a need to deal with the loss so mechanisms were identified that could help people personally and
collectively express their grief. As people emerged in the upswing of the
transition curve, they were ready to be engaged.
Job restructuring
Change, especially in this
current climate, can involve organisational restructuring with resulting job
losses and redundancies. It is surprising how often organisations pay more
attention to enabling leavers to have a smooth exit than it is for the
survivors to be helped to take on their new responsibilities. In the private
sector it we have found that employers identify their best talent early on and
give priority to a dialogue which motivates and supports the managers who will
make or break the new structure. In the public sector at the moment people are
undergoing huge transitions and recognise the need for HR to take on a role in
supporting transition. Internal transition coaches whom we have trained in the
civil service are now finding themselves coaching people on how to support
those affected by change, rather than those new to the civil service but the
skills are equally valuable.
Our experience shows that
supporting senior leaders in their transition from one role to another has a
significant impact on the success of the change project. In a reorganisation of
the pan-African Sales approach for one organisation meant that Sales VPs had
new demanding roles and needed support.
Rather than support this
externally, HR professionals were trained as coaches with external coaching
supervision. This not only added great value to the business it also created a
new positive relationship between HR and business leaders.
Leaders using this approach
describe the benefits as:
•
Time
out to plan ahead
•
Save
time in future
•
Get
things right in new team start up phase
•
Pay
attention to change process
•
Send
signals about values /priorities
•
Opportunity
to unlearn
•
Emotional
resilience
Role of HR
The role HR professionals play
in transition is extremely valuable. However, they are often going through
transition themselves, potentially not knowing what their future roles are as
they support others through change. Having some support to focus on the bigger picture
can be very valuable to a team or a leader immersed in the day to day.
A challenge to a recent group of
HR professionals from their own leader was, “Are we as HR creating enough time
with leaders to stop and focus on the key issues?”
Focusing on the details of a
reorganisation can become a case of not seeing the wood for the trees. During
this period HR can assert themselves as a major player by helping leaders,
teams and individuals focus on how the actual transition is managed. HR can
hold up the mirror, call a 'time out' and help the whole organisation to slow
down to speed up.
Case Study
In the Department of Work and
Pensions (DWP), Bath Consultancy Group worked alongside the internal
Organisational Change Centre of Excellence as partners on their change journey.
Building transformational change capacity
post Capability Review
The first phase of the
departmental Capability Reviews led to a programme of transformational change
at DWP with the goals of improving customer experience, improving value for
money for tax payers and improving staff engagement.
A team of consultants from Bath
Consultancy Group worked in the Department from March 2007 to April 2008. There
were three aspects to the work (as summarised below) but these initiatives were
integrated so that insights from each part of the programme served to inform
work and learning in other areas.
1. Providing “Team Coaching” to the DWP
Executive Team and Board, adding value in four spaces: working together;
working apart; managing the current business; and leading transformational
change. This was linked the effectiveness of the Executive Team with the Change
Agenda.
2. Working in partnership with the
internal DWP team in Organisation and People Development (OPD) to enhance their
capability to provide first class OD consultancy to the Department. This
included working alongside them consulting on:
·
The
structural review and re-organisation of Organisational Capability Centre of
Expertise,
·
Arrangements
for reducing headcount,
·
Advice
on succession planning, transition support, talent management, and role
assessments,
·
Coaching
leaders to manage change in their teams
·
Assisting
with transition support to the new Director of OPD
·
Delivering
three Organisation Systems workshops to the Change Team (using the Barry Oshry
Systems approach) and providing supporting methodology.
3. Providing OD coaching and consultancy
to the DWP Change Directorate, particularly to those involved in the Culture
Change workstream, working in partnership with internal OD consultants to
change the culture and improve the customer experience and also worked with key
leaders in the Change Directorate to help them recognise that how they
personally led change would also model the new culture for the organisation.
This included design and facilitation of key workshops, and Senior Civil
Service (SCS) conferences.
Skills transfer was a key
element. Bath Consultancy Group worked with the internal change team through an
explicit ‘outside-inside’ partnering on all pieces of work. At times, they were
front of stage working directly with DWP leaders (e.g. designing and delivering
a high impact and engaging Senior Civil Service conference) and in other
circumstances, were coaching, co-ordinating and advising internal consultants
to lead. This built the internal capacity to address change and identify
cultural patterns blocking change. Feedback from the internal consultants about
what they valued about the work included:
·
“Seeing
the whole system in all aspects of work, even in one to one transition
coaching.”
·
“Diversity
in the consultants, real people with different strengths and weaknesses, not
clones.”
·
“Willingness
to think together”.
·
“Strong
relationships with the consulting team – of trust, respect and understanding -
and commitment to see things through, however difficult they became”
Challenges and lessons learnt
include the importance of working across the team boundary to improve the
relationship between the Executive Team and its key stakeholders, in particular
the Change team. The benefits of integrating different elements of the Bath
Consultancy Group work and the wider programme were also clear. Finally, in order to work effectively with
DWP top management Bath Consultancy Group needed to field highly credible
consultants with technical, intellectual and inter-personal skills of the
highest order, who had access to the top quality intellectual property.
The benefits
realised from the assignment were tangible and appreciated by DWP. At the annual and two-year Capability Review
it was noted by the reviewers that the effectiveness of the Executive team had
improved significantly. Internal
consultants became more capable and productive as a result, and were more
effective as consultants to the Change Director of the multi-million pound
Change Programme.
Jerry
Arnott, Director, Organisation and People Development, DWP said: “I was
extremely impressed with the way in which Bath Consultancy Group consultants
were able to slide alongside our senior leaders and create real positive impact
so quickly. Their approach is testament to their expertise i.e. a fine balance
of theoretical knowledge of organisational development and change coupled with
quality skills in consulting and coaching. They helped lay the foundation for
our ongoing transformation across DWP and, within my own functional area,
‘Organisation and People Development’, provided a real benchmark of excellence
in developing and embedding internal OD and Change consulting skills. Their
pedigree is strong, as a group of practitioners who bring enormous experience
from across numerous sectors, both in corporate and consulting roles.”
David
Jarrett and Fiona Ellis
Published by Training Journal,
December 2010
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