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Making the Change – Learning from Post-MBA Transitions

November 20, 2011 by robertsrobson 2 Comments
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Research recently published in the Academy of Management Learning and Education journal, by Beth Benjamin and Charles O’Reilly of Stanford University, shares the experiences of MBA graduates as they transition into the business leadership roles that they have been working towards.Academy of Management

The research indicates a high degree of personal change is required to make this transition successfully and that programmes could do more to help their candidates prepare for life after an MBA.

The themes themselves are pretty consistent with the leadership transitions literature such as the Leadership Pipeline (Charan et al.) and ‘maturity’ themed leadership development models such as Torbert’s Leadership Development Framework; such as changing mind-set to value and skills to deal with the social dimension, managing people with a broader range of interests and motivations than ‘business excellence’ and being concerned with stewardship of something greater over one’s own personal achievement.

The implication of this is that perhaps MBAs might need to focus less on the intellectual and technical ‘what’ of business management and do more to prepare candidates for ‘how’ of business leadership.

 

Benjamin, B., & O’Reilly, C. (2011). Becoming a Leader: Early Career Challenges Faced by MBA Graduates The Academy of Management Learning and Education, 10 (3), 452-472

Charam, R., Drotter, S., and Noel, J. (2001). The Leadership Pipeline: How to Build the Leadership Powered Company. Jossey-Bass.

Torbert, W. (2004). ACTION INQUIRY The Secret of Timely and Transforming Leadership. Berrett-Koehler Publishers

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Filed Under: Business Psychology and Change Books, Leadership, Organisational Development Tagged With: change, charan, Development, leadership, leadership pipeling, management, MBA, research, torbert, transition

Kotter’s Eight-Stage Process of Change

October 25, 2011 by robertsrobson 5 Comments
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Organisations have always changed, but the discipline of Change Management is one that has developed over the last couple of decades, as the pace of change has increased beyond recognition. Undoubtedly one of the leading figures of this ‘new’ discipline has been John Kotter of Harvard Business School.

Kotter’s seminal HBR  article, “Leading Change: Why Transformations Fail” first outlined his lessons from fifteen years of analysis, which were later developed into his Eight-Stage change framework. These eight stages have been a central influence in many of the change management methodologies used by corporates and consulting firms.

Kotter’s Eight Stage Process for Managing Change

Establishing a sense of urgency

Many people talk of creating a “burning platform”, and the need for discomfort with the

Leading Change

status quo. On the other hand, “if it ain’t broke, why fix it?”. Comfort and complacency are a barrier to change and it is imperative that change leaders establish a sense of urgency to overcome them.  This isn’t easy – your leadership team might instinctively seek to “soften the blow”, or they may themselves be in the denial for the change. The urgency may not be clear enough, or undercommunicated. People might simply not care…

Creating the Guiding Coalition

Leaders cannot deliver change on their own. They need to build ‘critical mass’.  Malcolm Gladwell’s “Tipping Point” provides some interesting reading on the phenomenon of ‘social epidemics’ and the importance of certain types of people. Credibility, coverage and the effectiveness of the coalition as a collective are all important.

Developing a Vision Strategy

Vision is essential, and often underdeveloped and undercommunicated during failed change. Vision is a core aspect of leaderships that creates the general direction of change, motivating (or “compelling”) people to act in that direction in a co-ordinated manner. A sound vision is, according to Kotter, Imaginable, Desirable (the attractive destination to go with the burning platform), Feasible, Focused, Flexible and Communicable.

Communicating the Change Vision

In his original article Kotter suggested that in failed change the vision is undercommunicated to the power of ten. In other words, a lot. Then do it again. Don’t just have a ‘roadshow’ with powerpoint slides, put the vision into the hands of your coalition and other leaders, in an easily communicated format. At my old consulting firm we used ‘Rich Pictures’ on the basis that ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’ – initially these were literally paintings before we moved into digital (and more interactive) formats.

Empowering Employees for Broad-Based Action

Simply put, people that feel powerless to act cannot make change happen. And you need them to help. Barriers to ‘empowerment’ (the ability of people to take responsibility) include structure, competence, processes and systems. Perhaps most of all, line managers can give or remove power from their reports. Identify those in your organisation that can have this influence (often supervisors) and target their behaviour.

Generating Short-Term Wins

One thing that I can vouch for is that as a change manager you can find that you can have to do a lot of work before anyone sees the fruits of your labour, and momentum can be easily lost.  Short-term wins help provide opportunities to reinforce momentum towards change, create confidence and give cause for celebration while undermining critics. When creating your plans, consider what short-term wins might be accomplished.

Consolidating Gains and Producing More Change

I guess I’d sum this one up as “keep the ball rolling”.  It may be tempting to let up at certain times, good or bad, but Kotter’s advice is to build on success by creating more change.  This requires leadership to be out of the detail, providing general direction and more people contributing to the change effort at lower levels.  Yes, people can become change-fatigued but that’s more to do with trying to manage multiple changes at once or because change initiatives are abandoned before the benefits can be realised. In reality, it may be best not to set out towards a fixed destination, but to make change a journey, updating the vision and keeping things moving.

Anchoring New Approaches in the Culture

This is about sustaining the change, or making it ‘sticky’. It’s easy for old ways to re-establish themselves when change is new. Kotter’s view is that it’s a mistake to try to fix the culture first, and that it should be done last. People need to see that the new ways work. Assuming they produce results, build on those with continued communication (informal as much as formal) and be prepared to reward, promote and hire based on the culture that you want to create.

Kotter’s Eight Stages in Practice

In summing up, there’s no doubt that Kotter’s Eight Stage Process has been one of the most important frameworks in shaping change management as a discipline. As always, however, it is not without its critics.

One of these is that it is described as a process, per se. You don’t necessarily move from one step to another, ticking each one off as you go. Ensure that you are constantly reviewing where you are, whether you have done enough, whether you need to go back and do more – and this becomes less of a problem, in my view.

Of course, neither is Kotter’s framework a complete change management methodology in its own right. There are more complete methodologies out there, such as Prosci, and indeed many consulting firms and corporates now have more fully developed toolkits with their own process and tools. That’s fine. If you are new to change management, you will still gain from reading Kotter’s work.

Finally, it’s easier to put down in words some guiding steps than to provide detailed instruction on how to carry them out effectively. There are, now more practical resources available that build on the original framework. Alternatively (or in parallel), combine Kotter’s framework (or others) with a good grounding in psychology to understand the human dynamics that will determine the success with which you apply these steps, and you will do so with more skill.

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Filed Under: Business Psychology and Change Books, Change Management, Leadership Tagged With: 8 stage, change framework, eight stage process, kotter, leading change, methodology

The Facebook Effect

August 30, 2011 by robertsrobson 2 Comments
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My holiday read this year was The Facebook Effect (David Kirkpatrick), which explored the meteoric growth of the company and it’s founder, Mark Zuckerburg, who was made infamous by the film, the Social Network. The book itself is an impressively candid account that provides a great insight into the mechanics, the politics and the personalities of the company and the world of tech start ups and their finance.The Facebook Effect

A few things in particular struck me.

First, Zuckerburg’s unflinching commitment to his vision and principles that Facebook could be a tool for the development of a more open societyand for growth over financial gain. Time and time again Zuckergberg turned down potentially lucrative offers for the company. This commitment and long-term perspective has unquestionably helped Facebook to navigate difficult waters and retain a clear identity through such an incredible pace of change.

Zuckerberg showed the capacity to be both fiercely loyal to his friends yet ruthless when making business decisions. His initial team stayed with the company for a long time, yet from the beginning he was prepared to let people go. The case of Sean Parker, who was president of the company in its formative stages is interesting. Zuckerberg recognised that Parker had been integral to the company’s early successes in raising money and developing, but also that he had to move on. Parker, although one could argue that he left a rich man with a substantial skin in the game, remained committed to Facebook’s success and close to Zuckerberg despite no longer being in a salaried position.

Facebook as a platform could have been opened up to the world much sooner than it was. It took a few years to get beyond college and high school students, and the roll-out to new campuses in the early days was carefully controlled. This was at least in part due to an almost obsessive desire not to do a ‘Friendster’ and lose technical performance as users increased, but it also created an insatiable level of up-front demand at schools that were not yet connected, to the point where each new school brought onto the service saw take up of around 70% within days. This management of the rollout kept performance high and ensured that virtually nothing above server costs had to be spent to bring on new users. Indeed, around the time that the user base hit 300 million users, the company had spent $300m, or $1 per user!

Although at the pace of change Facebook has both undergone and created, things can appear terribly chaotic, Facebook’s success is no accident and no fluke. What’s most amazing is that Mark Zuckerberg set out, from an early stage, to change the world. And like it or not, Facebook is doing, or helping to do, just that.

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Filed Under: Business Psychology and Change Books, Leadership Tagged With: facebook, social networking, the facebook effect, zuckerberg

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