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July 2008
Thriving on discontinuous change
IBM's
2008 Global CEO Study finds that organizations
are being bombarded by change, and many are
struggling to keep up. Executives see
significant change ahead, but the gap between
expected change and the ability to manage it has
almost tripled since the last Global Study in
2006.
The question is: How do we create the kind of
organization that not only adapts quickly to
current trends, but is aggressive about shaping
and leading change?
There are two kinds of change -- incremental and
discontinuous -- that are taking place
simultaneously and constantly in business
organizations around the world. Incremental
change is the process of continuous improvement
-- what the Japanese refer to as "kaizen."
Discontinuous change is the kind of large-scale
transformation that turns organizations inside
out and upside down.
If managing incremental change can be compared
to encouraging a group of joggers to gradually
pick up the pace, then leading discontinuous
change is like getting those same joggers to
leap off a cliff and build their parachutes on
the way down.
Incremental change fits the Newtonian framework
of a linear, progressive and predictable world.
There is an unmistakable logic behind
incremental change that makes it easy to
communicate and relatively easy for people to
adopt. Best of all, it uses current practices as
a baseline for the systematic improvement of a
product, service or system. And people like the
fact that they can base their future success on
their past performance.
But much of the change our organizations are
facing today is not incremental. It is
discontinuous. It is restructuring,
reengineering, transformation. It is these
actions - and others - that challenge our most
deeply held beliefs about the past.
Discontinuous change confronts the entire
organization with the possibility that the very
roles, actions and attitudes that were most
responsible for past success will be
insufficient, and perhaps even detrimental, in
the future. And that concept is difficult to
communicate and much harder for people to
adopt.
No one likes to contemplate letting go of the
skills and behaviors that "got us here." As
individuals, we become psychologically attached
to the status quo because it is familiar and
comfortable. But even more difficult than
fighting off the inertia of comfort, we find it
hard to let go of the past because it is there
that we've experienced personal success.
People like the experience of mastery.
That's understandable. It's basic human
psychology - but not an attitude that
helps us move forward. Although "knowledge
is power" may have been an accurate assumption
in the past, the reality of today's high-speed
business environment is that information and
skills become outdated faster than the current
fashion. In this climate, employees are valued
primarily for how quickly they can learn,
unlearn and relearn.
One of the greatest challenges for anyone who
wants to become change adept is to identify
those practices and attitudes that need to be
unlearned in order to more quickly adopt new
behaviors.
Here are a few questions to consider:
What do I do best? (What skills and
abilities am I most proud of?)
Which current skills, abilities, and
attitudes will continue to make me
successful in the future?
How does feeling competent stop me from
doing things differently? (Where are the
"comfort zones" that I'm most reluctant to
leave?)
What new skills do I need to learn to stay
valuable to the organization?
What do I need to unlearn? (Which
skills are becoming obsolete? What practices
-- attitudes, behaviors, work routines, etc.
-- that worked for me in the past are no
longer valid?)
Leaders who help their team or department thrive
on discontinuous change begin by identifying
those skills and behaviors that they themselves
need to learn and unlearn. Then they address the
topic openly: They talk about their own problems
with letting go of past competencies, they
empathize with the feelings of awkwardness that
come with leaving the "comfort zone," and they
are candid about the reason why they decided to
leave some behaviors in the past in order to
better serve the future. Then they massage
damaged egos by applauding the efforts that all
team members are making.
Building a style of corporate behavior that is
comfortable with -- even aggressive about - the
significant change that CEOs project for our
future, means that everyone needs to realize
that the process of continuous learning,
unlearning and relearning is the key to both
organizational and personal success.
Carol Kinsey Goman, Ph.D., is a keynote speaker
who helps association, government, and business
audiences around the world thrive on change. Her
newest book and program topic is "THE NONVERBAL
ADVANTAGE - Secrets and Science of Body Language
at Work". She can be reached by phone:
510-526-1727,or by
email:
CGoman@CKG.com.
Keywords: Carol Kinsey Goman, change, incremental change, discontinuous change, careers, human resource, human capital, life style
News Beats: Human Resource, Health and LifeStyle, Business