Project Management Question 5P Model (A-plus Writer)

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basic_change_process_modelpptx.pptx

MHRM587

Foundational Model of Change

Managing change is a complex process. Change does not occur in one great swoop. Few organizations manage the process as well as they would like. In order to make change work, organizations need to follow a process to enhance the probability of success versus just “winging it.” The following model of change provides one useful way to think about creating and implementing organization-wide change.

Basic Change Process Model

Consideration

Stimulus Driving Forces

Pre-Change

Validate Need

Preparation

Commit

Do –Check – Act

Implementation

RESULT

New Normal

Change Active Conscious

Culture Passive Unconscious

Pre-Change Paradigm

This is the first stage of the change journey.

Without a paradigm that encourages “active searching,” organizations can ignore important early warning signs and wait until a crisis highlights the need for change (i.e., scenario planning)

Make sure you know what is important?

Who is important?

What do they want?

How are you doing?

What could be improved?

Stimulus (Driving Forces) & Assessment

What are the driving forces or antecedents to change—internal and external.

How do these driving forces influence the organization’s business model and force new requirements for success?

Is change really necessary? Deciding the status quo is preferable is a productive learning activity.

Caution #1: What must be guarded against is any denial that any driving forces or stimuli for change exist.

Caution #2: Or when it’s recognized that change is required, the “disconfirming data” may induce anxiety which can obviate the change as necessary

Sound analysis of driving forces is a prerequisite to good change strategy

Validate Need

Establish compelling need for change.

Create a sense of urgency

Begin to create psychological safety

Begin to address the inertia of the existing status quo (resistance to change)

Transformation Leadership key framework in leading change

Preparation

Caution: Avoid premature action without first developing an effective plan for the change

What is the change vision?

What will success look like?

What are the criteria for success?

What resources + administrative support systems will be needed?

What is the timeline for this change?

What kind of change is required? Incremental? Transformational?

Commitment to Act

Is the planned action the most effective and efficient way to deliver the required change?

Begin the “unfreeze” process in the change cycle

Do-Check-Act (Implementation)

Implementing change is the most challenging aspect of any change effort.

Once the momentum for change has been successfully launched, what is delivered must be effectively managed.

We will introduce several frameworks useful for this purpose during the course:

PDCA Cycle {Plan-Do-Act-Change} Lewin’s 3-Phase Change Model

Kotter’s 8-Step Model

Nadler’s Congruence Model

McKinsey 7-S Framework + STAR Model

Others

New Normal

As organizational leadership recognizes, rewards, and models the new behavior in order to embed it in the fabric of the organization, the change becomes the new normal or the ‘the way we do business here.’

Of course, as soon as it is established, the new normal becomes the pre-change paradigm for whatever emerges next—otherwise we become trapped within existing mindsets.