Everything you want to know about Organisational Change
By Brian Johnson and Darren Arcangel
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About this ebook
This practical guide recognises that every organisation functions differently, has different goals, and faces different challenges. It will give you the tools you need to understand the factors influencing your organisation, to identify how your business must respond, and to implement the necessary changes. Your organisation will survive and become more efficient.
Brian Johnson
Brian Johnson is the lead singer of AC/DC. When he’s not performing, he hosts a couple of cable TV shows: Life on the Road (interviewing other performers) and Cars That Rock. He lives in Florida, with his wife.
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Everything you want to know about Organisational Change - Brian Johnson
Everything you want to know about Organisational Change
Everything you want to know about Organisational Change
DARREN ARCANGEL AND
BRIAN JOHNSON
Every possible effort has been made to ensure that the information contained in this book is accurate at the time of going to press, and the publisher and the authors cannot accept responsibility for any errors or omissions, however caused. No responsibility for loss or damage occasioned to any person acting, or refraining from action, as a result of the material in this publication can be accepted by the publisher or the authors.
Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, this publication may only be reproduced, stored or transmitted, in any form, or by any means, with the prior permission in writing of the publisher or, in the case of reprographic reproduction, in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside those terms should be sent to the publisher at the following address:
IT Governance Publishing
IT Governance Limited
Unit 3, Clive Court
Bartholomew’s Walk
Cambridgeshire Business Park
Ely
Cambridgeshire
CB7 4EH
United Kingdom
www.itgovernance.co.uk
© Darren Arcangel and Brian Johnson 2011
The authors have asserted the rights of the authors under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identified as the authors of this work.
First published in the United Kingdom in 2011
by IT Governance Publishing.
ISBN 978-1-84928-199-7
FOREWORD
In every leadership position I’ve held, my philosophy has been the same: hire smart, self-motivated, creative people, and establish an environment conducive to teaming and leadership. I’ve found that to be particularly important in my current position as General Manager, Services, Support and Education for CA Technologies. One of the talents I admire most is the ability to create thought leadership, whether through an article, white paper or, in this case, a book.
The authoring of this book was the culmination of a multinational team effort. US-based authors, Brian and Darren, drew from the expertise and experience of a number of CA Services individuals. Most notable was Julie Tilke, VP Practice Services for Europe, from England. She was also an instrumental part of this work coming together.
The book is about organisations, and the complexities and dynamics that are found within them. It evaluates ‘old school’ and modern-day practices, and discusses the advantages of bringing the best of both ‘worlds’ together. In the book, Brian and Darren highlight a number of solid ‘old school’ practices that have largely been overlooked in recent times and discuss the value of modernisation of those practices.
It is also a book about people, the heart of all organisations, and how they are affected by technology. It explores how understanding the impact of technology on people can greatly improve the adoption of technology and the value that it brings.
I hope you will enjoy this book and find it as thought provoking as I have.
Adam Elster
GM, Services Support and Education
CA Technologies
PREFACE
Why do organisations exist? This philosophical point is discussed in Chapter 1, though fundamentally the answer is that they fill a niche (or perhaps a better description is a need) in society.
Why do organisations change? This can probably be summed up in one of two ways: because people change their minds, and because everyone likes to be seen to be flexible (or agile, if current buzzword terminology is used).
One of the key attributes of the ‘IT of the future’ should be flexibility. In simple terms, this means that it should be possible for your portfolio of IT applications software to be changed quickly, and at minimum cost, whenever your business needs for IT support change. You can certainly count on the business needing faster access to greater quantities of information than ever before, from a growing spread of geographical locations; though it is impossible to predict what the information will be.
You will, unfortunately, also be faced with changes in technology, at least some of which will be intended to provide the very flexibility we are discussing. Flexibility is the main benefit of technology – not the much claimed cost-savings which many authorities dispute. Flexibility, including access to information wherever it may be stored, from any location, is the major benefit of the Internet and the World Wide Web. What is unfortunate, is that in many cases you will have to change your applications to allow them to run on the improved technology.
So there it is then, IT is the driver for business change and everything you do will be dependent on IT. Well, not so fast. IT outsourcing is more popular than ever, and the business world sees IT as the tail on the dog – not vice versa.
A reviewer of this book made the excellent suggestion that a statement should be made that IT change inevitably should follow business change. The ubiquity of IT tends to the belief that IT is the driver, the enabler and the goal of all change, whereas, in reality, it is no more than a tool for business. Despite all of our technological advances, people remain essential and people drive business.
IT may cause change to the business (and, therefore, to how the business organisation must change to accommodate new concepts, lines of business and consumption of IT), but that does not mean IT shapes the business organisation, or its hierarchies, or that it is anything more than a factor in understanding the job performed by a person.
By itself, IT is irrelevant in terms of hardware. Services provided by IT to support government, banking, insurance and so on, are based on applications developed to automate or support business processes. And most often, business change is driven by the need to change services, create new services, or simply to fix problems with existing services – in other words, applications development.
Deciding your requirements for new applications on the basis of a defined business need is by no means straightforward. It isn’t like building a garage or a patio, where the end product is tangible, the planning, architectural and building work are well understood and straightforward, and the scope for changing your mind before, or after completion, is limited.
IT is complex, intangible, quite hard to understand, very easy to change, and hard to keep under control. The ‘easy to change’ statement perhaps needs a little more amplification. IT spends vast sums of money because it is complex and because it needs to control many thousands of changes every month. And yet, that very complexity is one of the reasons cited by IT for needing experts to manage change – because it is so difficult and so complex, it needs expensive monitoring software to keep things under control, and many highly-paid experts to ensure change goes well.
These experts tell you how hard it is to change IT – what they really mean is how hard it is to change IT successfully – without detriment, or the need for further change, or indeed, the need to back out of ill-conceived changes.
The truth is that IT is far too easy to change, and the IT organisation is often predicated on managing change, instead of managing the delivery of more reliable services.
It is not easy for business and IT people to talk about the IT requirements of the business because it is claimed that IT requires precise language. The plain words spoken by business are clearly imprecise then …
Of course, the root problem is that IT wants business to communicate in quasi-technical language and the business is paying IT to support business. What should bring both sides together is a properly planned programme of change, where requirements are fully understood, specifications agreed by both sides, organisational impact assessed and risks are identified and managed.
In short, this is the time for detailed project planning and project execution within the framework of the change programme. Some IT preparation may be possible in advance of the change, but much of it will have to be done during the change. You may need projects to manage some, or all, of the following IT-related changes.
Infrastructure acquisition
Acquire application package software
Develop bespoke software
Acquire underpinning IT infrastructure (system software, telecommunications facilities).
Infrastructure integration
Smoothly integrate new IT infrastructure with existing
Infrastructure management
Improve the management, or control, of the IT infrastructure.
Continuity of support
Ensure existing IT facilities operate smoothly until replaced, or no longer required
Ensure arrangements exist for fall-back and disaster recovery.
Business readiness
Prepare business and IT users to cope with changes
Accommodation changes
Prepare the physical accommodation and environment for the changes.
Undertaking changes of this scale, so that everything happens in the right sequence and at the right time, is a matter of careful planning, good organisation and readiness to deal with the unforeseen.
And key to all of the issues associated with smoothly managing change, is understanding and managing how the organisation must change (not only in the business as new practices are rolled out, but also in IT, where new skills may be needed and where technology change has a major impact on the role of support staff).
And then there are the people issues …
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Darren Arcangel is a VP, Principal Services Architect at CA Technology. Since joining CA in early 2008, he has been the lead architect for some of CA Technology’s largest enterprise IT service management implementations. These implementations