Leadership and Strategic Change
Leadership and Strategic Change
Leadership and Strategic Change
1
Learning outcomes (1)
• Identify types of required strategic change.
• Analyse how organisational context might affect the
design of strategic change programmes.
• Undertake a forcefield analysis to identify forces
blocking and facilitating change.
2
Learning outcomes (2)
• Identify and assess the different styles of leading
and managing strategic change.
• Assess the value of different levers for strategic
change.
• Identify the pitfalls and problems of managing
change programmes.
3
Key elements in managing
strategic change
Diagnosis
Managing
change
programmes
4
Managing change – key issues
Four key premises:
Strategy matters – in identifying the need for change and the
direction of change.
Context matters – the right approach to change depends on
the circumstances.
Inertia and resistance – getting people to change from existing
ways of doing things is essential.
Leadership matters – good leadership of change at all levels is
needed.
5
Diagnosing the change context
Forcefield analysis
6
Types of strategic change
7
Types of strategic change
Four types of strategic change:
Adaptation – can be accommodated with the existing culture
and can occur incrementally.
Reconstruction – rapid change but without fundamentally
changing the culture.
Revolution – fundamental changes in both strategy and culture.
Evolution – cultural change is required but this can be
accomplished over time.
8
The importance of context
9
Forcefield analysis
10
A forcefield analysis for the UK forestry
commission
Illustration 14.2
11
Strategic leadership roles
12
Newcomers and outsiders
‘Outsiders’ can also play an important role in strategic change.
These could include:
• A new chief executive from outside the organisation can bring a
new perspective.
• New management from outside can also increase the diversity
of ideas.
• Consultants are used to help formulate strategy or to plan the
change process.
13
Styles of strategic leadership
Situational leadership – successful strategic leaders are
able to adjust their style of leadership to the context they
face.
Two approaches:
• Theory E: the pursuit of economic value; top-down; ‘hard’
levers of change; emphasis on changes of structures and
systems, financial incentives, portfolio changes, downsizing.
14
Styles of managing change
Education/
Delegation
Styles of
Participation Collaboration
Managing
Change
Direction Coercion
15
Styles of managing change (1)
Education and delegation – Small group briefings to
discuss and explain things. The aim is to gain support
for change by generating understanding and
commitment.
Advantages – Spreads support for change. Ensures a
wide base of understanding.
Disadvantages – Takes a long time. For radical change it
may not be enough to convince people of the need for
change. Easy to voice support, then do nothing.
16
Styles of managing change (2)
Collaboration – Widespread involvement of the
employees on decisions about what and how to
change.
• Advantages – Spreads not only support but
ownership of change by increasing levels of
involvement.
• Disadvantages – Time-consuming. Little control over
decisions made. May lead to change within existing
paradigm.
17
Styles of managing change (3)
Participation – Involvement of employees in how to
deliver the desired changes. May include limited
collaboration over aspects of ‘how’ to change as well
as ‘what’ to change.
Advantages – Spreads ownership and support of
change, but within a more controlled framework.
Easier to shape decisions.
Disadvantages – Can be perceived as manipulation.
18
Styles of managing change (4)
Direction – Change leaders make the majority of
decisions about what to change and how. Use of
authority to direct change.
Advantages – Less time-consuming. Provides a clear
change of direction and focus.
Disadvantages – Potentially less support and
commitment, and therefore proposed changes may
be resisted.
19
Styles of managing change (5)
Coercion – Use of power to impose change.
Advantages – Allows for prompt action.
Disadvantages – Unlikely to achieve buy-in without
a crisis.
20
Levers for change
A compelling case for change
Symbolic changes
21
Organisational rituals and change
24
Turnaround strategy (1)
A turnaround strategy is where the emphasis is on
speed of change and rapid cost reduction and/or
revenue generation.
25
Turnaround strategy (2)
Elements of turnaround strategies:
Crisis stabilisation.
Management changes.
Gaining stakeholder support.
Clarifying the target market(s) and core products.
Financial restructuring.
26
Turnaround strategy
28
Managing evolutionary change
Managing change as evolution involves transformational
change, but implemented incrementally. This requires:
An empowering organisation.
Clear strategic vision.
Continual change and commitment to experimentation.
Identifying interim stages and targets.
Use of irreversible changes.
Sustained top management commitment.
Winning hearts and minds.
29
Why change programmes fail
Research into why change programmes fail indicates seven main failings:
Death by planning.
Loss of focus.
Reinterpretation of change in terms of current
culture.
Disconnectedness.
Behavioural (only) compliance.
Misreading scrutiny and resistance.
Broken agreements and violation of trust by management.
30
Summary (1)
• Types of strategic change differ in terms of:
• extent of culture change required;
• incremental change or urgency
• Aspects of organisational context (as shown in the Change Kaleidoscope)
include:
the resources and skills that need to be preserved,
the degree of homogeneity or diversity in the organisation,
the capability, capacity and readiness for change,
the power to make change happen.
• Different approaches to managing change are likely according for different
types of change and context.
31 31
Summary (2)
• Forcefield analysis is a useful means of identifying blockages to
change and potential levers for change.
• Situational leadership suggests that strategic leaders need to
adopt different styles of managing strategic change according to
different contexts and in relation to the involvement and interest
of different groups.
• Levers for managing strategic change need to be considered in
terms of the type of change and context of change. Such levers
include building a compelling case for change, challenging the
taken-for-granted, the need to change operational processes,
routines and symbols, the importance of political processes, and
other change tactics.
32
Class room test
• Select one strategic change in your organization or any other
organization and discuss what “style of managing change”,
management applied and its repercussions.
(20 Marks)
33