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MANAGING CHANGE

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Staff and Consultant Driven. Bias to Orthodoxy not Empiricism ... Brand image and equity - What do you stand for? Multiple divisions selling to same customer ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MANAGING CHANGE


1
MANAGING CHANGE
2
The Three Cs of Change
  • Customers take charge
  • Competition intensifies
  • Change becomes constant

3
The Quest for Business Effectiveness is . . .
  • a continuous challenge as customer expectations
    change and can sometimes
    change faster than
    organizations can respond

4
Challenges Associated with Change Management
Programs
  • Companywide change programs often represent the
    greatest obstacle to the revitalization of a
    company
  • Most change programs do not work because the
    theory of change is basically flawed

5
Making Change Management Programs Work
  • Change theory is based on the belief that the
    place to begin is with the knowledge and
    attitudes of individuals
  • The most effective way to change behavior is to
    place people in new organizational contexts,
    therefore providing new roles, new
    responsibilities, and new relationships

6
Change in Organizations
  • Drastic Action
  • Discontinuous
  • Forced
  • Mandated by top management
  • Evolutionary
  • Incremental
  • Decentralized
  • Results in broad/ lasting shifts

7
Change in Organizations
  • Disruptive Self-Expression
  • - slowly changes work atmosphere
  • - people notice, talk, imitate

8
Change in Organizations
  • Verbal Jujitsu
  • react to negatives and turn them into
    opportunities for change others will notice

9
Change in Organizations
  • Variable Term Opportunism
  • Capitalize on serendipity
  • Be alert

10
Change in Organizations
  • Strategic Alliance Building
  • Sense of legitimacy
  • Access to resources/ contacts
  • Technical and task assistance
  • Emotional support
  • advice

11
Why Change Does Not Work (Two Sales Related
Examples)
Pay-for-Performance System
Managers Differentiate Between Better and Poorer
Performers
  • Are new performance standards defined and
    communicated? (coordination)
  • Do managers become better judges of sales
    performance? (competency)
  • Do managers deal more effectively with
    performance problems? (competency)
  • Is the cultural context which people need to
    develop new competencies provided? (commitment)

12
Why Change Does Not Work (Two Sales Related
Examples)
Sales Training Program
Improve Salesperson Competencies
  • Are company coordination patterns changed?
    (coordination)
  • Does excitement lead to frustration as newly
    learned skills are not used? (competency)
  • What else has changed in the organization?
    (coordination)
  • Do salespeople view training as a waste of time?
    (commitment)
  • Do salespeople easily commit to programs they
    view as a waste of time? Commitment)

13
Five Key Themes That Are Prevalent in Successful
Organizations
  • Open inquiry
  • Morale
  • Humility
  • Learning
  • Sustainability

14
Five Indicators of Failure
  • Low morale
  • Declining unit performance
  • Discrepancies in performance
  • Increased cost of human resources
  • Inadequacy of short term benefits

15
Six Reasons Why Activity-Centered Improvement
Programs Do Not Work
  • They are not keyed to specific results
  • They are too large scale and diffused
  • Results is a four-letter word
  • Delusional measurements
  • Staff and Consultant Driven
  • Bias to Orthodoxy not Empiricism

16
Clicks and Bricks(articles by Hwang)
  • What is best retail use of the Internet?
  • - selling (e-commerce)?
  • - combining Web presence with a
    familiar brand?
  • Most consumers feel that pure on-line company can
    satisfy all needs

17
Clicks and Bricks(article by Hwang)
  • 1/2 of the top 50 visited web sites are on-line
    company additions to established companies
  • The largest growth rates came from new on-line
    efforts by established stores

18
Clicks and Bricks(article by Hwang)
  • Internet
  • - not truly relevant to most Americans
  • - vast majority with Internet access barely go
    on-line
  • - 1/2 Internet users go on-line once per month
  • - 1/2 on-line sessions last less than 10 minutes
  • - 1/6 on-line sessions last less than 60 seconds

19
Clicks and Bricks(article by Hwang)
  • Simplifiers (29 of users) - focus on a few
    sites
  • - spend 3/4 time of average user
  • Surfers - less likely to buy than simplifiers
  • Connectors (36 of users) - newcomers
  • - they gravitate to brands they know

20
Get Ready For More Reengineering(Champy Article)
  • Old ways of doing business will not cut it
    anymore
  • Reengineering results
  • Growth in productivity
  • Products developed faster
  • Orders filled faster
  • service provided faster

21
Get Ready For More Reengineering(Champy Article)
  • We have not realized the full effects of
    information technology
  • Issues of speed of delivery
  • Inventory management issues
  • How much to know about customers
  • Brand image and equity - What do you stand for?
  • Multiple divisions selling to same customer

22
Reengineering vs. Barriers
  • Reengineering
  • radical, discontinuous thinking about how to
    solve problems and take advantage of
    opportunities
  • rejects sacred assumptions
  • reinvention, not improvement
  • Barriers
  • rejects tried and true methods
  • traditional managers do not respect this kind of
    thinking
  • traditional managers are afraid of the morning
    after syndrome

23
Reengineering the Organization(Article by
Williams)
  • What are the fundamental questions about how
    companies operate?
  • What do we do?
  • Why do we do it?
  • Why do we do it the way we do it?
  • Radical design means disregarding existing
    structures and procedures and inventing a
    completely new way of accomplishing work.
  • Reengineering is about dramatic leaps in
    performance.
  • Reengineering is about processes not tasks, or
    jobs, or people, or structures.

24
Reengineering the Organization
  • Several jobs are combined into one
  • Workers make decisions
  • The steps in the process are performed in the
    natural order
  • Processes have multiple versions
  • Work is performed when it makes the most sense
  • Checks and controls are reduced
  • Reconciliation is minimized
  • A case manager provides a single point of contact
  • Hybrid centralized / decentralized operations are
    prevalent

25
The New World of Work
  • Peoples roles change - from controlled to
    empowered
  • Job preparation changes - from training to
    education
  • Focus of performance measures and compensation
    shifts - from activities to results
  • Advancement criteria change - from protective to
    productive
  • Managers change - from supervisors to coaches
  • Organization structures change - from
    hierarchical to flat
  • Executives change - from scorekeepers to leaders

26
Fifteen Practices for Managing People
  • Cross-utilization and cross-training
  • Symbolic egalitarianism
  • Taking the long view
  • Employment security
  • Information sharing
  • Training and skill development
  • Promotion from within
  • High wages
  • Wage compression
  • Incentive pay
  • Selectivity in recruiting
  • Employee ownership
  • Participation and empowerment
  • Measurement of practices
  • Self-managed teams

27
Operational Effectiveness Strategy
  • Operational effectiveness means performing
    similar activities better than competitors can
    perform them
  • Strategic positioning requires the performance of
    different activities or the performance of
    similar activities in different ways

28
TQM Initiatives Rest on Three Quality Principles
  • Customer focus
  • Process improvement
  • Total involvement

29
Why TQM Initiatives Fail (9)
  • A focus on internal processes rather than
    external results
  • A focus on minimum standards
  • The development of a TQM bureaucracy
  • The delegation of quality to quality czars and
    experts
  • The lack of demand for truly radical
    organizational reform

30
Why TQM Initiatives Fail (9)
  • The lack of demand for changes in management
    compensation
  • The appeal to faddism, egotism, and quickfixism
  • A drain on entrepreneurship and innovation from
    the organization culture
  • No place for love

31
Background Slides
  • You will be responsible for this material on the
    test

32
Four Basic Principles of Capabilities-Based
Competition
  • The building blocks of corporate strategy are not
    products and markets but business processes
  • Competitive success depends on transforming a
    companys key processes into strategic
    capabilities that consistently provide superior
    value to the customer
  • Companies create these capabilities by making
    strategic investments in a support infrastructure
    that links together and transcends traditional
    strategic business units and functions
  • The champion of a capabilities-based strategy is
    the CEO

33
Symptoms of Sales Force Becoming Obsolete
  • The use of salespeople to educate customers about
    products seems to have eroded
  • Trade magazines, trade shows, and targeted
    database mailing systems often beat the
    salesperson to the customer with information
    about product developments
  • Buyers are likely to be more receptive to indepth
    specifics and custom design possibilities for
    specific applications
  • Many buyers no longer require salespeople to
    place orders or to provide general information

34
Symptoms of Sales Force Becoming Obsolete
  • Increasingly, much of what customers buy takes on
    the characteristics of commodities that are
    readily available from many suppliers
  • The cost of in-person sales calls has grown
    dramatically such that many companies are
    allowing customers to self-serve
  • Many large customers have reduced their
    perceived value of salespeople
  • Many customers claim that they are seeing more
    salespeople than ever

35
Nine Recommendations For Change Initiatives
  • Consider all cost-reduction alternatives
  • Front-end-load any sizable layoffs
  • Spread the pain
  • Leverage human development
  • Create-and reward-shared wins
  • Let everyone know what the score is
  • Beware of fetishes
  • Identify and integrate multiple perspectives
  • Take time out to reflect
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