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?AND YOU ALL KNOW SECURITY IS MORTALS CHIEFEST ENEMY". Macbeth Act 3 Sc.. ?EVERYONE THINKS OF CHANGING THE WORLD, BUT NO-ONE THINKS OF CHANGING THEMSELVES" Tolstoy, L.. ?IT IS NOT THE STRONGEST OF THE SPECIES THAT SURVIVES, NOT THE MOST INTELLIGENT, BUT THE ONES MOST RESPONSIVE TO CHANGE" Darwin
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1. Managing Change John Davidson
Chris Lee
2. “AND YOU ALL KNOW SECURITY IS MORTALS CHIEFEST ENEMY”
Macbeth Act 3 Sc.
3. “EVERYONE THINKS OF CHANGING THE WORLD, BUT NO-ONE THINKS OF CHANGING THEMSELVES”Tolstoy, L.
4. “IT IS NOT THE STRONGEST OF THE SPECIES THAT SURVIVES, NOT THE MOST INTELLIGENT, BUT THE ONES MOST RESPONSIVE TO CHANGE”Darwin, C.
6. THREE ENVIRONMENTS 1. Internal Environment
Staff, Resources, Facilities (Can Control)
2 Near Environment
Customers, clients, contractors, suppliers, competitors (can influence)
3. Far External Environment
S.T.E.E.P. Cannot Control or Influence)
7. T = TECHNOLOGICAL FACTORS IT lowers barriers of time and place
IT creates industries
Nature of service functions have changed
Marginalisation occurs at organisational level
Technologies do not change over night
8. E = ECONOMIC FACTORS Rate of Economic Growth
Interest rates
Inflation
Energy prices
Exchange rates
Unemployment
9. E= ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS Legislation
Information
Employees
Share Holders
Pressure Groups
Customers
10. P = POLITICAL FACTOR Legislation – Health and Safety; Equal Opportunities
Trading relationships
Government major party
Public service
Taxation (individual, business, properties)
11. CHANGEINDICATION OF NEED Drop in Profits
Escalation of Costs
Loss of Market Share
Failure to Meet Targets
Innovation by Competition
Serious Conflict
Widespread Dissatisfaction
High Turnover and Absenteeism
Change in Environment
12. THE SCOPE OF CHANGE
13. Forcefield analysis (Assets for change) Driving Forces
Equilibrium
Restraining Forces
(After Lewin 1951)
14. MECHANISMS FOR ASSISTING CHANGE Appoint a “Change Master” (MONO-MANIAC)
Pilot Studies
New Personnel
Consultants
Incentive Schemes
15. FACTORS LIKELY TO BE ASSOCIATED WITH RESISTANCE TO CHANGE Perceived threat to job
Perceived threat to income level
Perceived threat to skill level
Perceived threat to relationships
Lack of consultation or misunderstanding (rumours)
Solidarity of work groups or parochial self interest
Distrust of management of different assessment of the situation
16. ROSABETH MOSS KANTER Rosabeth Moss Kanter, in her book “The Change Masters – Corporate Entrepreneur at Work” cites ten reasons why people resist change:
Loss of Control
Excessive personal uncertainty
Avoid surprises
The difference effect
Loss of face
Concerns about competence
Ripples
More work
Past resentment
Real Threats
17. METHODS FOR DEALING WITH RESISTANCES TO CHANGE There can be two areas that overlap. They can be considered to be “people” and “organisations”:
18. PEOPLE APPROACH Education and communication
Participation and involvement
Facilitation and support
Negotiation and agreement
Manipulative and co-option
Explicit and implicit coercion
19. ORGANISATION AND PEOPLE Seek areas for agreement
Explore the “knock-on” effect
Support of key opinion leaders
Identify resistances
Show potential benefits
Do not disguise your feelings
20. CHANGE STRATEGIES Thurley and Wirdenius (1973) looked at an alternative change strategy approach. This is:
Directive; imposition of change by management
Negotiating; recognises legitimacy of other bargaining groups
Normative (hearts and minds); seeks overall attitudes / values about change. Often uses external change agent.
Analytical; clear definition of problem, collect data, use experts
Action Centred; start with general idea of problem. Try out solutions and modify in the light of effects. More involved than analytical
21. FACTORS AFFECTING THE CHOICE OF STRATEGY Why and when should you choose one strategy over another. The factors that affect your choice are:
The pace of change
The amount and kind of resistance anticipated
The power base of the initiator
The amount of information required
The stakes involved