AHBETE

[miniMBA_03] Change Management

Ice Cubes vs. White Water Rapids: Understanding Past & Present Models of Change

Past Model of Organizational Change: Ice Cube
Present Model of Organizational Change: White Water Rapids

Are You Managing or Leading Change?

Managers
Change Management
Leaders
Change Leadership
SWOT

S - Strengths - internal elements we do better than others

W - Weaknesses - internal elements where we we lag behind others

O - Opportunities - external force that can help

T - Threats - external force that can hurt

Our Volunteer Army: Building Your Team for Change

5 Kinds of Power
  1. Legitimate power / position power - influence based on the role held such as a boss
  2. Reward power - influence based on control of valued rewards such as a raise
  3. Coercive power - influence based on the fear of punishment
  4. Expert power - influence based on the possession of valued knowledge or expertise
  5. Referent power - influence based on respect or admiration
3 Outcomes When Asking/Telling Others to Change Behaviors
  1. Resistance - will refuse the change
  2. Compliance - will make the change but only because they feel they must
  3. Commitment - do make the change because they want to and believe it is for the best

Commitment is the goal as leaders.

Expert and referent power are most likely to result in commitment, therefore leaders need to enlist others with referent and expert power into their “volunteer army.”

Using your position, reward, or punishment to influence will most likely result in compliance or resistance.

Are You on Mute? Communicating in Times of Change & Crisis

3 Reasons Leaders Don’t Communicate in a Crisis
  1. Leaders assume they have to know all of the answers.
  2. Leaders assume no news is better than bad news.
  3. Leaders worry reaching out will invite questions they can’t answer.
Communication Tips
Key Phrases to Help Leaders Communicate in Times of Change or Crisis

Crucibles of Leadership

4 Skills to Survive and Thrive
  1. Engage others in shared meaning - what can we learn from the crisis?
  2. Develop a distinctive voice - help narrate and make sense of the situation
  3. Have integrity - respond in ways that clearly connect to your stated values
  4. Use your adaptive capacity - ability to think broadly about the context of the situation

Adaptive capacity and persistence represent a leader and organization that can adjust and adapt to rapid change for the long-term.