Friday, August 9, 2013

Managing change or not...

Whether the company is going through a re-organization, a downsizing or a merger, change management is key but most organizations do not do it effectively. Usually there is minimum communications and considerable miscommunications - let's face it people talk and they spread what they think they know - right or wrong.

If you're re-organizing you should have:
  • a clear understanding of what people do; jobs change over time so job descriptions need to be up-to-date
  • a skills assessment of staff; they may have taken on tasks or further education or they may be struggling with duties they can't manage
  • an impact assessment - if you're going to let people go what duties need to be redistributed and how can that be done with the least disruption; what are the implications if they manage several email addresses or committees; are there processes that they manage or have a  role in; - its not just the what its also the who
  • a communication strategy; if you are re-organizing and people will have different reporting structures have follow-up meetings for the new teams so they have the opportunity to ask questions. It's far better to get everything in the open right away rather than let people disperse to ask questions of people who don't know the answers or to complain to each other that they don't know what is  going on; people have a right to be concerned and worried and the best way to alleviate that is to communicate and get them in a productive environment as soon as possible
  • a talent management strategy; if people suddenly become people managers they need to have the maturity, skills and resources to fulfill the duties required of them; and if they go f rom managing one or two staff to a dozen additional skills may need to be learned including conflict management, communications, and time management; otherwise the Peter Principal comes into play and no one is happy
It's equally important to know what you shouldn't do:
  • don't lie, people figure things out sooner or later and they talk with each other; lies destroy trust and credibility and you will never achieve employee engagement or loyalty
  • don't hide, being unavailable at a critical time reflects poorly - it can be interpreted as not caring and can foster distrust
  • don't ignore, if staff have come forward with concerns about process, resources and responsibilities acknowledge them and create a plan to deal with those concerns in a timely manner (this really should be in the planning phase prior to the change)
Change isn't easy - but it shouldn't be so hard...

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