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Title: There


1
Theres Change. . . . and Then Theres BIG
CHANGEImplications of the BOB Era and How Public
Relations Professionals Can Lead Organizational
Transformation
  • Kathy Lewton, Steve Seekins, Ken Trester
  • APRs Fellows
  • Lewton, Seekins Trester
  • Public Relations Society of America International
    Conference
  • October 28, 2008

2
ChangeYou know it dont come easy
  • The forces demanding change have been like a
    tidal wave . . . . .
  • But in a post-BOB economy, when everything is
    moving at warp speed, the forces will be
    overwhelming and will overwhelm our organizations
    unless . . . . . we can manage change
  • And create a culture where change is the norm
  • ? Change becomes a core survival strategy

3
Full ppt deck available at www.LSTLLC.com
4
The forces demanding change are ever more
powerful
  • In an economic downturn, nothing stays the same,
    change is inevitable
  • When consumers or businesses spend for anything,
    they will expect and demand both quality AND
    service
  • Focus on quality now has a life and momentum of
    its own -- customers will expect the very best
    no tolerance for errors or mistakes
  • Unhappy consumers know how to dial 1-800-LOCAL TV
    REPORTER
  • And a highly visible group of companies doing it
    right and getting the headlines makes it harder
    for the rest of the pack

5
And yet, our organizations and our people . . .
. .
  • Are by nature resistant to change
  • Are built on policies, procedures, process
    Weve always done it/never done it THAT way
  • And now when people are fearful, angry, unsure
    they are even less likely to be able to hear,
    let alone listen and act

6
Its not the best of timesto push for change
  • Employees those who arent fleeing are tired,
    frustrated, cynical
  • Managers can be apathetic, or downright
    antagonistic
  • ? Powerful leadership and communications are
    absolutely essential

7
When simple change is not enough, and
transformation becomes the norm. . .
  • Always remember
  • Culture eats strategy for lunch!

8
Enter the hero(ine)
  • The CPRO/CCO transformed into
  • Chief Culture Warrior

9
CEO Cant Do It Alone
  • CPROs are in ideal position to help
  • Environmental scanning Trend spotters -- hear
    the drumbeat, collect and own data, sense
    danger that failure to change can bring
  • Have tools for telling and selling defining
    and describing the new vision, and persuading
  • And can adapt them for a situation where the
    audience is nervous, afraid, in a panic
  • Work effectively with management peers who are
    the critical forces in transformation
  • We can partner with the CEO to calm the waters
    and lead transformation

10
To begin our transformation, we need to figure
out?How transformation works(and doesnt) ?
Whats going on in our organization (and with
our CEO) ? Where we fit in all of this(and how
to claim our seat at the table)
11
And the survey says
12
McKinsey global survey found
  • Organizations need to change constantly, but
    achieving a true step change in performance is
    rare
  • In recent survey, only a third say that their
    organizations succeeded in making it happen

13
What McKinsey found
  • New McKinsey global survey on organizational
    transformation found that most organizations seek
    transformation in order to move from good
    performance to great. Those that succeed
  • Have well defined financial and operational goals
    AND a genuine NEW LEVEL OF PERFORMANCE
  • Had HIGHLY VISIBILE CEO
  • Had large-scale COLLABORATION across biz units
  • Had COMMUNICATIONS THAT HAD BALANCED FOCUS
    building on successes while also addressing
    problems
  • ENGAGED employees at all levels

14
And the failures (2/3 of companies surveyed) . .
. . .
  • Ill defined goals, and goals that were not a
    stretch but lack of clarity was the biggest
    problem
  • AND (surprise) ineffective communications
  • Low visibility CEO
  • Messages skewed either too much focus on
    problems, or only focusing on the good things and
    the future, and ignoring the problems
  • Communications programs used one or two tactics,
    didnt push messaging to front lines

15
Then we drilled down in an industry where change
is the norm for survival
  • Surveyed CEOs and senior PR/marketing leaders
    about culture change and where PR/Communications
    fit
  • Hint ER, MRI, IV, CT, MI, , HMO . . .

16
First, PR Communications Pros
  • Surveyed more than 60 very senior practitioners
  • Most at VP/SVP level and 20year veterans
  • We reported some of these findings in the June
    issue of PRSAs Tactics

17
Culture change critical to strategy, less so for
survival
18
CPROs most commited to change
19
Culture is managed in many ways no magic bullet
20
Culture is managed in many ways no magic bullet
21
Top management fully committed it goes downhill
from there
22
CPROs on culture change team, but not as leaders
(yet)
23
Why NOT leaders?
24
Then we looked at culture change from the CEO POV
  • CEOs not scientifically selected, but very
    representative of hospital types
  • Couple of huge academic medical centers,
    multi-state system, urban non-teaching, urban
    community hospital, several suburban hospitals
  • Range in size and geography from NYC to
    N.California and Utah, Michigan, Ohio and
    others in between

25
Q1 What do they want to change?
26
Many say its customer service
  • We want our employees to FOCUS on delivering good
    customer service
  • We need to become more driven by needs of the
    customers

27
Some say its all about employees
  • I believe that happy employees will make for
    more customer satisfaction . . .
  • BUT I do not really have any data to prove that,
    nor do we have a plan to make it happen.
  • ? Calling the CPRO!

28
Others say quality is job 1
  • Well its quality I mean thats all there is.
  • Anyone who says do something else without the
    grounding in quality is just wasting time, trying
    to dance around the edges. You do quality,
    everything else falls out from it you get
    better service, you get growth, you get bottom
    line benefits.
  • Skip quality and all youre doing is marking
    time till you dont have a choice.

29
Some wanted to change more fundamental values
  • Every place Ive worked Ive focused on the need
    for a positive culture its about people,
    helping them reach full potential.
  • Its about being open, transparent . . . how
    leaders behave, communication, no blaming,
    treating people with respect.
  • ? When times are hard, we need to communicate
    more.

30
Especially true in BOB era
  • National W/S survey two weeks ago More than half
    of U.S. employees have not heard from their
    companies leaders about the impact of the
    financial crisis.
  • 71 percent felt their companys leadership should
    be communicating more about the economic crisis.
  • 70 feel that their company will be negatively
    affected by the crisis -- 26 expect layoffs, 62
    say employer will have trouble meeting goals.
  • At companies where leaders have communicated with
    employees, 86 percent said that senior executives
    or management who have discussed the crisis were
    seen as believable and trustworthy sources.

31
And some want to change it all
  • We started with a good culture, but it was
    disconnected from patient service, so now were
    integrating it all including service, quality,
    staff development and growth, with bottom line
    impact.
  • Its a BIG BITE we are changing the entire
    way we operate.

32
Key insights
  • CEOs at high performing organizations realize
    that achieving a common vision (what should we
    BE) is critical to achieving the desired result
    and CPROs can and should be involved in both.
  • Some clearly ID employee satisfaction as
    foundation for any change and recognize
    communications as a core competency.

33
Q2 How do you manage change?
34
Some arent sure.
  • We dont have a formal change management process
    but we need one.
  • Im not sure where this will be managed
    needs to be close to me, Community affairs?
    Maybe marketing??
  • Our marketing staff and quality team are the
    leaders of this initiative.
  • It has been interesting to see them working
    together since that is not necessarily a regular
    fit here.

35
Most say the buck starts here
  • I manage the process. Me. Hands-on. If
    youre going to ask every employee to change the
    way they think and act, the CEO has to do the
    same, be the person at the lead in every meeting.
  • It cant be a speech and then introduce
    someone else who is responsible.

36
Some say engage senior leadership
  • Top and middle management have to drive it but
    they dont get that yet.
  • Its Baldridge senior management team are the
    leaders. It starts with us. We have the
    scorecard and track our resources. Communication
    is essential!

37
Some bring in outside experts
  • Im using a consulting firm to help make it
    happen, using their standard approach. And I got
    the two unions to participate.
  • We were starting from ground zero, so we brought
    in an acknowledged leader and said tell us what
    to do.
  • Its a science and your garden variety
    executive or manager doesnt know the science.

38
Many created formal structure
  • We created an entire infrastructure headed by
    one of the leading experts on quality, with a
    fully formed team. They report to me and its Job
    1.
  • Using Root Learning approach, we reach every one
    of our 15,000 employees.
  • We use a Plan for Excellence and its the basis
    for how we plan, how we communicate. Its values
    lay the foundation for goals corporate, unit,
    individual performance.

39
Communication is critical
  • We work hard at communications. SVP PR/Mktng is
    on senior management team and reports to me. I
    meet with the communications team monthly so they
    know what Im thinking.
  • Early and prompt feedback is critical, as is
    holding people accountable.

40
Leadership is the bottom line
  • You dont manage culture you create it. You
    have to live it, model it, set examples, lead by
    example. Breath optimism into the story.
  • We have to be seen as engaged. Its how we model
    the behavior.

41
Key Insights
  • Most get that it starts at the top no ifs,
    ands or buts its the CEO responsibility
  • After that, theres less uniformity
  • Some use the add on method give it to someone
    as a new part of their existing job (so its not
    Job 1, but Job 43)
  • Some hire consultants (so its the consultants
    program, and then they eventually go away)
  • The ones that seem most successful pony up hire
    staff, create a fully embedded quality team.
    They dedicate substantial, if not massive,
    resources.

42
Key Insights
  • CPROs not often mentioned unaided as part of the
    team making the whole thing happen . . . . but
    when probed, most (not all) get that the
    function should involve the CPRO as a leader
  • And the presence of some CPROs at the CEOs right
    hand, as lead change agent, shows that we can
    play this role.

43
Q3 What are the barriers to change?
44
1 is middle management
  • Middle management feels disenfranchised by
    change, so you have to drag them along.
  • Managers are neither hired nor trained to be
    LEADERS. We had to teach and train and require
    and motivate and reward. But they CAN ALL do
    it.
  • People dont like to change what theyre doing,
    especially when they think things are going
    pretty well.
  • But since I fired three directors, that may
    change the dynamics.

45
Then theres the challenge of sustaining momentum
  • Keeping going. This is not a one-month thing
    its FOREVER. So if you cant do it, then get
    out now.
  • Its hard to sustain momentum among the staff..
    You can change ops and systems, but its people
    who impact the customer.
  • Taking a short-term view. You have to say this
    is long-term and stay the course, but its hard
    to keep the workforce engaged through a long-term
    process.

46
The this too shall pass mentality
  • I inherited a place in shell shock from the
    initiative of the month. They had so many of
    these short-term, gimmicky programs customer
    service training (a 45-minute video), MBO,
    gainsharing the employees now look at any new
    initiative with great cynicism.
  • They figure theyll wait it out, keep doing
    what theyre doing, and it will go away.

47
Key Insights
  • Changing attitudes of middlemen and middle
    management is a key task and as we all know,
    extremely difficult
  • Have to cast change as a win/win in realistic
    terms and involve them in leading the process

48
Key Insights
  • Every team member must have culture change as
    part of their performance accountabilities, which
    means a massive communications effort that never
    quits just keeps on going
  • Chief communicators can help articulate a vision
    that enhances motivation.

49
Q4 Where do PR/communications fit in the quest
for transformation?
50
Center stage . . .
  • Their leadership has been a critical success
    factor. We had to create from the ground up an
    entire communications system, dozens of
    facilities in several states and it had to be
    based on first-line supervisors as the
    communicators.
  • WOW! Our PR team created the system, the
    training, DID the training, for months. Now they
    manage the info flow. It is the rock of our
    success.

51
From delivering messages . . .
  • PR creates and delivers the messages. Marketing
    identifies the key markers and keeps the
    scoreboard.
  • . . . . . To managing process
  • Each of our strategies has an oversight team that
    the communications people manage. They document
    the plan and make sure it feeds back to the board
    and medical staff.

52
At the heart of . . . communications
  • Communications is essential we do round the
    clock town halls. Used to be 10 participation,
    now were up to 34. Plus newsletters and blast
    emails and videos of patient stories and banners.
    We are trying to reconnect our employees to our
    purpose.

53
At the heart of . . . communications
  • We need robust communications. We actually
    created a new internal communications department
    because its so important.
  • Communicators give the organization clarity.
    They need to stick to the message and the plan
    and most of all, support management with
    optimism.
  • I expect that my communications team will have
    the pulse of this very decentralized
    organization. They bring valuable insights and
    info to the table.

54
And some put us on the fringes
  • Well, sort of peripherally, I think. In a
    support way. I mean, they manage the channels
    the quality team needs to use to disseminate
    info. And they do take our success story out to
    the media. But I dont think of them as integral
    to the process beyond what they already do.

55
Waiting in the wings . . .
  • We give them direction to be more strategic and
    more challenging but we have to give them a
    climate that allows them to do that. We are
    failing to tell them this is our expectation.
  • I need them to be creative and strategic right
    now, theyre more likely to be tactical.

56
Waiting in the wings . . . .with high expectations
  • Now that I think about it, this is where culture
    change really belongs. But our people do not
    seem to be strategy focused I need to change
    that and see if they can respond. They have done
    nothing to date, but I havent asked them.
  • I expect them to be skilled strategists, to
    disagree with me and come up with new ideas not
    just in culture, but in marketing.
  • I need strategic thinking, creativity and
    judgment.

57
Key Insights
  • Marketing and communications people are owning
    important parts of the process at some places,
    barely remembered at others
  • Some CEOs say they havent yet told their CPRO
    that they expect strategic counsel
  • BUT should they have to ask or tell?
  • We must find the strategies for driving culture
    change, working with the CEO and senior
    management team.

58
Key Insights
  • High performer CEOs clearly understand the value
    of internal communications, rating it above
    external PR.
  • BUT CPROs often relegate internal communications
    to a newsletter editor and concentrate on
    marketing communications, advertising and media
    relations

59
Key Insights
  • High performing CEOs understand the real value of
    creativity cant get results with old methods.
  • Creativity should be our sweet spot
  • CPROs key skills analyze the market, develop
    strategies and manage communications are
    central to transformation. So we should be
    central to the process.

60
The BIG Take Aways Lessons Learned from the
Research
61
BIG Take Away 1
  • Every CEO gets it. Not one said Change?? Why?
  • They clearly have moved beyond denial (FINALLY)
    but are at various stages of What now?
  • We should be the answer people
  • And for us, that means no more waiting to be
    asked or called the change train has left the
    station

62
BIG Take Away 2
  • Culture change is never over
  • You cant plant a flag and say Were done
  • The messages and desired behaviors have to be
    sent and reinforced FOREVER
  • So make culture change the primary focus of your
    role and your teams work

63
BIG Take Away 3
  • Theres some dissonance in here somewhere
  • CEOs said culture is being carefully managed
  • Last year half of CPROs said culture just
    happens
  • Either the CEO is kidding him/herself, OR . . .
  • The CPRO is out of touch or out of the loop

64
BIG Take Away 4
  • There is a clear role for marketing and
    communications teams
  • Some CEOs clearly get it learn from what they
    have their CPROs doing
  • If you work for someone like those who dont seem
    to get it, dont wait to be asked.
  • Even if they dont see YOU in the role, figure
    out how you can get there. Start with the
    barriers that exist -- speak out, step up,
    present your plan.

65
BIG Take Away 5
  • Its all about working with YOUR CEO
  • No silver bullet or magic formula.
  • Cant ask this on PRSA ListServ
  • YOU have to dig down and understand your
    organization, your CEO and the strategies that
    will work
  • ? Take a closer look!

66
(No Transcript)
67
Step 1 Get inside the CEOs head
  • Some CEOs are process oriented and care about
    systems, metrics.
  • SO you have to talk Baldridge
  • Some are people oriented and care about attitudes
    and behaviors
  • So you have to help with visioning
  • Some are political and care about relationships
    and power bases
  • So you have to help them by creating a planning
    process thats inclusive and gets all the right
    people involved (friends and enemies)

68
Getting Inside the CEOs head
  • Three typical archetypes
  • The innovator, already out in front wants you
    on board with him/her and probably sees a
    specific role for you
  • Resigned but willing wants you to help figure
    out how to do it, you can design your own role
  • Resistant needs you to convince him/her (then
    make it his/her idea and work it behind the
    scenes)

69
With CEO, use right ammunition to take your best
shots
  • Bring data so CEO can identify issues and answers
  • Bring new tools
  • Trot out outside experts
  • Bring outside models that work to the table
  • Partner with colleagues in middle management -
    mobilize them

70
Step 2 Be a strategist
71
Strategist Know where your organization is NOW
(post-BOB)
  • We often try to move people toward a new vision
    with no clear sense of where the people are in
    terms of attitudes, opinions, morale, commitment.
  • Use comprehensive internal research on the
    variables most likely to affect ability to
    change.
  • Assess attitudes, needs, concerns and commitment
    of key players such as middle managers and first
    line supervisor

72
Strategist Strategic priorities foundation for
transformation
  • Culture needs a foundation must match strategic
    priorities desired market positioning
  • Customer service strategy means focusing on the
    behaviors and skill sets that will deliver
    customer satisfaction.
  • Quality positioning requires addressing
    organizational effectiveness.
  • Low-cost position means focusing on efficiency
  • No one can afford to focus on just one strategic
    priority and totally ignore others -- BUT one
    driving imperative makes transformation easier
    because theres a clear vision that supports the
    need for change.

73
Step 3 Bring it all together
  • The CPRO/CCO transformed into Chief Culture
    Warrior can lead transformation
  • With a clear vision of strategic imperatives
  • With deep and broad understanding of the
    organization and its people as they are now
  • With effective marketing and communications
    strategies and tools to change attitudes and
    behaviors
  • And by partnering with operations execs who will
    lead the effort to re-tool policies, procedures
    and processes.

74
STEP 4 About Face!
  • Culture is determined by what we DO. It is
    memorialized by what we SAY.
  • Both are important, but one must precede the
    other.
  • To be the change agent, the Chief Culture
    Warrior, instead of communicator
  • First be the doer, then the sayer.
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