How can a leader implement planned Organisational change effectively?

Managing organizational change is complicated. Leaders must align people to the reason for the change, often working against long-standing habits and beliefs. Organizations are more likely to succeed when they plan change initiatives proactively and engage employees before, during and after the change. Below are the seven ways leaders can effectively manage change in their organizations.

1. Put people first

Successful change management prioritizes people. People fuel change and sustain its momentum. Change initiatives fail when the people involved don’t understand, believe in or engage in the change.

Leaders make change easier when they engage employees in the change. Leaders accomplish this through proactive change management communication that creates a desire to change across the workforce.

This aligns with the Prosci change methodology, Beehive’s change model of choice. Prosci’s methodology is based on more than 20 years of research, with 45,000 people trained and certified globally, making it a strong option for global businesses.

Change initiatives will fail if people don’t believe in the change and aren’t mobilized by others to act.

How can a leader implement planned Organisational change effectively?

2. Work with a change management model

Leaders are up against company culture, organizational momentum and human psychology when enacting change. To make change happen, they need the right tools to guide them. Change management models help leaders connect business strategy to action, which increases the likelihood of success.

There are a variety of change management models from which to choose (e.g., Prosci’s ADKAR model, Lewin’s Change Management Model, Kotter’s Change Management Model). Each model varies, but all follow similar core tenants of identifying needs and planning for and implementing change. Prosci’s methodology is Beehive’s change management model of choice because it: 1) blends the psychology of individual change with organizational change, 2) is globally backed with more than 20 years of research and 3) clearly addresses the role of communication in change.

Download your own change management communication plan now.

3. Empower employees through communication

Communication is an essential part of effectively managing organizational change. A vision for change is only as powerful as the communication that supports it. Effective change management communication provides clarity for why the change is needed and mobilizes employees with a sense of urgency for the change. Companies fail to drive meaningful change when they fail to communicate.

Change management communication isn’t a one-time transfer of information. It requires commitment, clarity and consistency. It should engage employees through two-way communication methods like surveys, focus groups and informal feedback collection. When leadership involves employees, they feel valued. When employees feel valued, they are more likely to embrace change and participate in making it happen.

Two-way communication also helps leaders identify barriers to change before they become a problem. Proactively identifying barriers can enable the organization to respond to and dissolve issues that create change resistance.

4. Activate leadership

A recent Prosci survey cited “active and visible executive sponsorship” as the top reason change initiatives succeed. Leadership’s impact on change is well-understood. The problem is that many leaders don’t understand the vital role they play in change. Educate leaders on their roles, and you’ll enable them to advance change successfully.

Leaders:

  • are responsible for achieving change goals from start to finish.
  • help the organization understand and interpret what the change means for their teams, the organization and the marketplace.
  • ensure those who enable organizational change stay actively involved.
  • keep the train on the tracks and are ready to switch directions, choose a new path or create a new approach if necessary.

Read more about motivating your leadership team to embrace change here

5. Make change compelling and exciting

Employees can better understand the rationale behind a change when organizations prioritize purposeful, clear and consistent communication. This targeted communication strategy provides the context to understand the why, what and so what of the change. Effective communication answers the most important question people are thinking: What does this mean to me; how will it impact my work? With a deeper, clearer understanding of the change, employees are much more likely to ask, “How can I help?”

The shift from rote compliance to true engagement and belief is powerful. Strong employee support deters change resistance that could hold the organization back.

6. Pay attention to high and low points in momentum

There will be both high and low points during change initiatives. Leaders can proactively manage and leverage these points in time. During the high points of change, leaders should celebrate wins to fuel momentum. At the low points, leaders can reset communication strategies to listen to employee input and build trust and support. Being proactive helps leaders manage momentum for the greatest success.

7. Don’t ignore resistance

Change resistance is poisonous to an organization’s transformation. Resistance is much easier to counter when it’s identified early. Leaders should pay attention to the signs of change resistance, including inaction, procrastination, withholding information and the spread of rumors. Communication is the key to identifying resistance. Create feedback loops with employees, like surveys, feedback channels and input sessions to proactively identify signs of resistance, then take fast action.

Change is the lifeblood of successful, growing organizations, and the heart of change is people. Leaders position themselves and their companies for managing organizational change effectively when they proactively engage employees and ensure communication is clear, consistent and transparent.

How can a leader implement planned Organisational change effectively?

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About Lisa Hannum, President & CEO

Lisa Hannum is founder and CEO of Beehive Strategic Communication, a Certified B Corporation. She is a purpose-driven leader who believes in the power of communication to build better businesses for a better world. Lisa has more than 30 years of experience in brand positioning, change management, culture transformation, crisis and issues management, marketing and public relations. Her clients have included Verizon, 3M, Cargill, University of Minnesota Health and Beaumont Health. Lisa frequently speaks and writes on the business value of communication and workplace culture.

How do you effectively implement organizational change?

In this article, PulseLearning presents six key steps to effective organizational change management..
Clearly define the change and align it to business goals. ... .
Determine impacts and those affected. ... .
Develop a communication strategy. ... .
Provide effective training. ... .
Implement a support structure. ... .
Measure the change process..

How do you implement planned change?

Planned change requires managers to follow an eight‐step process for successful implementations, which is illustrated in Figure 1..
Recognize the need for change. ... .
Develop the goals of the change. ... .
Select a change agent. ... .
Diagnose the current climate. ... .
Select an implementation method. ... .
Develop a plan. ... .
Implement the plan..

How are planned changes implemented in an organization?

Planned change in organizational development is preparing the entire organization for new goals or a new digital business strategy. The direction can be culture, metrics, internal structures, processes, or other relevant areas. Change does not appear randomly but needs a structured approach.

How a team leader can implement change in the workplace?

Delegate tasks to individuals across the team and assign firm deadlines for completion. Be sure to follow up with each individual and provide support when necessary. While going through this period of change, be on hand to answer questions, provide guidance and offer support.