Change Model Assignment
Change Model Assignment
Assume you are the Sales and Marketing Director for Sea Treasures, a small group of well-known retail stores specializing in exotic sea life and high-end accessories for aquariums. The company has been in business for over 50 years, but the customer base is shrinking, sales are slow, and you are faced with reducing staff and closing stores. Sea Treasures will be out of business within a year if innovative and creative changes are not made quickly. After many months, you have finally been able to convince the owner that the only way to sustain the business and increase revenue is to create an Internet Website to sell the large inventory of aquarium decorator items (currently gathering dust in a costly warehouse) . This will be a short-term, small scale change. Six months later, you will expand the Website to sell live sea creatures such as tropical fish and small sea turtles online, which is a long-term, large-scale change.
You face many challenges in this transformational change initiative, beginning with strong employee resistance, new technology, and shipping methods. Many small businesses have been faced with these same issues, and have made the transition successfully. Consider the humble beginnings of Amazon, and look where they are today. Selecting the best change model for this business, and implementing it step by step provides the foundation for creating an exciting new company.
In 3 - 5 pages, explain which change model you would follow for the short-term change and which you would follow for the long-term change. Provide rationale for your decision and discuss the effects that these changes would have on the employees, managers, and executives within the organization. Include at least three references and follow standard APA formatting for your paper.
Learning Objectives
After reading this chapter, you should be able to do the following:
1. Define planned organizational change. 2. Describe the importance and necessity of planned change for organizations. 3. Describe the fields of Organizational Development (OD) and change management. 4. Identify the competencies/skills of OD and change management specialists. 5. Describe the external forces of change affecting organizations. 6. State the forces for change and those that balance change with stability. 7. Identify the three basic types of organizational change. 8. State the differences between strategic and tactical responses to change, proactive versus reactive. 9. Explain the differences among the following four approaches to change: open systems, contingency alignment, balanced scorecard, and stakeholder approach.
Organizational Change Management: An Introduction1
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.1 Introduction
1.1 Introduction
Three decades ago, courses on change management were not listed in most univer-sity and college curricula. Now such courses are commonplace (Worren, Ruddle, & Moore, 1999). This is due in large part to, well, change. The ways in which we think, work and communicate have changed dramatically over the last 30 years. Globaliza- tion and technology have made the world smaller and far more interconnected, so what affects one business sector or one part of the world invariably affects everyone. Eco- nomic uncertainty in Europe and Asia affects exports here in the United States, and vice versa. An oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico affects the restaurant industry in every corner of the country, from Boston to Seattle. Decades ago, events could be isolated; today change is everywhere and can come at any time. To be effective in such a marketplace, managing change has become essential. Leading and managing organizational change has become a core competency for business professionals. Not only do companies
Chapter 1 Outline
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Organizational Development (OD) and Change Management
Organizational Development Change Management
1.3 Forces Driving Change in Organizations Technology Forces Economic Forces The Environment Healthcare Government and Political Forces Sociocultural Forces Globalization Forces Organizational and Managerial Responses
to These Changes Change with Stability: Balancing Perception
with Wisdom
1.4 Nature and Types of Organizational Change Dunphy and Stace’s Four Levels of Change Balogun and Hailey’s Change Model Proactive Versus Reactive Changes Strategic Change Versus Tactical Change Tichy’s Three Types of Change
1.5 Organizational Effectiveness: Frameworks for Change
Open-Systems Framework Contingency Alignment Framework Balanced Scorecard The Stakeholder Approach
“Everybody has accepted by now that change is
unavoidable. But that still implies that change
is like death and taxes— it should be postponed as
long as possible and no change would be vastly
preferable. But in a period of upheaval, such as the
one we are living in, change is the norm.” —Peter Drucker,
Management Challenges for the 21st Century (1999)
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need to manage change to survive, they need to manage change to create a competitive advantage. In order to do so, companies must not only know what types of change to look out for, but also how to implement effective strategies for dealing with it. This chapter will provide a broad overview of types of changes, the forces that induce change, and organi- zational frameworks for dealing with change.
Broadly speaking, planned organizational change is a process that moves companies from a present state to a desired future state with the goal of enhancing their effective- ness. Ultimately, the goal of planned organizational change is to improve an organiza- tion’s capabilities, thus enhancing its value to stakeholders and stockholders (Beer, 1980). Organizational leaders who do not—or cannot—use change to their organization’s stra- tegic advantage may see change as threatening. Those leaders who work with change specialists to plan, respond to, and even create change, can view change as a competitive advantage if effectively planned and implemented.
A glance at rival Internet companies Google and Facebook is a good place to turn to see the importance of using change as a competitive advantage. Facebook managed to knock other social network- ing sites out of the market. Friendster, MySpace, and AOL have all been relegated to secondary status in comparison to Face- book. But the larger competitors, such as Google, Microsoft, Apple, and others, are not waiting for their turf to be overtaken, and Google seems to be trying to venture into the social networking domain more aggressively than the rest. In the words of David Rowan, editor of Wired maga- zine, Facebook and Google are “. . . in the ultimate battle for control of the Internet” (Rowan, 2010). He writes that Google hires the world’s smartest software engineers and through algorithm-based computing power has been able to dominate the desktop-Internet era for a decade. He specifically states,
. . . Facebook intends to dominate by knowing what we are thinking, doing and intending to spend—wherever we happen to be. As Facebook’s founder Mark Zuckerberg sees it, ‘this ‘social graph’, built around our friends, fam- ily and colleagues, will determine how hundreds of millions of us decide on everything from holidays to cosmetic surgeons. (Rowan, 2010).
As Facebook’s scope and reach continues to grow without limits, Google’s executives are taking notice. Both companies are extending into markets that no one ever anticipated. For example, Google’s recent $12.5 billion purchase of Motorola Mobility business puts the search company into mobile phones (Waters, 2011). As this trend unfolds, more com- panies will, no doubt, build some form of social networking into their technology capa- bilities and businesses.
A company such as Google is internally driv- ing change, but must also must plan for exter- nal changes brought on by the market from technology companies such as Facebook.
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.1 Introduction
Not all companies are as competitive or as successful in responding to and creating change as Google and Facebook have been. Gary Hamel, a leading business strategist, notes the danger in standing pat in an increasingly fluid marketplace: “Somewhere out there is a bullet with your company’s name on it. Somewhere out there is a competitor, unborn and unknown, that will render your business model obsolete” (Hamel, 1998a, p. 81). Most organizations acknowledge that they must continuously anticipate, plan, and implement different types of change to be effective and prepared for that bullet. Facebook, Google, Microsoft, Apple, and other highly successful technology companies have all had to (and must continue to) make changes in their leadership, strategy, structures, marketing, sales, and products to maintain competitiveness.
On the other hand, several U.S. firms that were once stable icons have not survived chang- ing competitive environments. For example, great companies such as Polaroid, Digital Equipment Corporation, American Motors, Sperry Rand, and Lipton (Unilever owns and sells the Lipton tea brands), to name only a few, have perished because they could not effectively transform or transition themselves to compete in their changing markets. IBM is another example of a once-powerful corporate giant that struggled for a time to adjust to shifting market forces in a timely way:
In 1962, there were eight companies in the computer hardware industry: IBM and the seven dwarfs (Burroughs, Sperry, etc.). In 1967 IBM accounted for more than 55 percent of all sales in the sector. . . . IBM earned 80 percent of all net operating profits within the industry in 1967; by 1995 that number was 40 percent. (Hamel, 1998b, p. 161)
As the technology industry evolved during the 1970s and 1980s, and as more competitors entered the field, IBM failed to adjust fast enough and saw its profits plummet. Many labeled the nearly century-old company a dinosaur, thinking it would eventually go under completely. IBM, however, recouped and continues to be a player in the computer hardware industry; it’s simply no longer the only player in town.
Authors of the book Creative Destruction predicted that “. . . by the year 2025, the average length of time a company resides on the S&P 500 will be no more than ten years, compared to twenty years today” (Rao, 2010). In fact, General Electric (GE) is the only surviving company from the top 12 firms in the Dow Jones Index in 1900 (Rao, 2010). It’s no coin- cidence that GE, as we discuss later, has also been a champion at leading and manag- ing organizational change. Other firms such as UPS (United Postal Service), Apple, Intel, AMD (Advanced Micro Devices), McDonalds, Kodak, and Motorola have also planned and implemented highly successful turnarounds to reinvent themselves, not by luck but by strategically planned and managed change leadership. The pace of change is accelerat- ing. Survival alone, as we have seen, is no guarantee of performance (Foster & Kaplan, 2001); in other words, hypercompetition in many industries now requires that companies not only do well, but that they must also innovate to stay ahead.
It is not only the giant corporate firms or famous CEOs (Chief Executive Officers) who must address issues related to change. Universities, hospitals, nonprofits, and small companies across industries must plan for change. It is estimated that 7 out of 10 new employer firms survive just two years, and only about half survive five years. There are 29.6 million small businesses in the United States. Of that number, 627,200 are new businesses from which
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.2 Organizational Development (OD) and Change Management
595,600 were recently listed as business closures and 43,546 as bankruptcies (SCORE, 2010). A major challenge for small businesses in general is com- petitiveness (the ability of a business and organiza- tion to succeed in meeting the owners’ broad busi- ness goals to serve customers). In particular, small firms reportedly experience difficulty in gaining access to needed capital and in effectively innovat- ing and marketing (Network Solutions, 2010), two key factors in becoming more competitive.
Not all changes involve entire organizations and their leaders, managers, and employees in dramatic ways. Some divisions, business units, departments, teams, and even individuals may require different types of change, coaching, and improvements to increase effectiveness and to obtain desired results. As we discuss later, dif- ferent types of change specialists offer particular expertise, experience, and knowledge in diagnos- ing and addressing issues. While we do focus on large-scale change here, we also acknowledge and discuss different types, scales, and scopes of orga- nizational change, models, and skills to plan and implement these strategies.
In organizations both large and small, significant changes are usually not easy or linear. In fact, the
larger changes tend to be messy, especially if there is not a realistic plan. Because orga- nizational changes involve people, emotions, courage and energy, resistance is natural. Who wants to give up or change jobs and routines they know? A 2008 McKinsey survey of 3,199 executives worldwide found that only one in three transformational organizational change programs succeeds (Aiken & Keller, 2009). Leadership is crucial to executing an effective change program. Effective change projects call for emotionally intelligent and mindful leaders and managers. Such leaders need to be flexible, creative, and good com- municators who can work well with people.
Let’s now turn our attention to how organizations are developed and how an understand- ing of two fields of change specialists can help in negotiating and managing changes that will occur both internally and externally.
1.2 Organizational Development (OD) and Change Management
In this section we discuss and compare the two fields and professions that created the modern principles of planned change: organizational development and change man- agement. The approaches used by specialists in these two fields are essential for achieving planned change in organizations.
Companies must continually change and reinvent themselves in accor- dance with market demands. See, for example, how McDonald’s is trying to reposition itself with healthier menu options, such as its new Happy Meal with apple slices rather than fries.
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.2 Organizational Development (OD) and Change Management
Organizational Development
The field of organizational development (OD) is “the practice of changing people and organizations for positive growth” (Richards, n.d.). Beckhard (1969) expands this straight- forward definition by adding that “Organizational development is an effort, planned, organization-wide, and managed from the top, to increase organization effectiveness and health through planned interventions in the organization’s processes, using behavioral- science knowledge” (p. 9). It was the first professional field in management/organizational behavior and development to develop social-science based strategies and skills to diag- nose, plan, and help business leaders implement changes for organizational improvement. Waclawski and Church (2002) noted that OD as a specialized area has been described in different ways, for example: it has been called a data-based process supported by survey feedback (Nadler, 1977), a sociotechnical approach that is centered on job tasks and char- acteristics (Hackman & Oldham, 1980), and as an interpersonal process approach led by group dynamics (Schein, 1969). . . .” The authors continue to note that:
Unlike medicine, accounting, law, police work, national politics, and many other disciplines, professions, and vocational callings that one might choose to pursue, all of which have a clear, consistent, and focused sense of purpose, the field of organization development is somewhat unique in its inherent and fundamental lack of clarity about itself. OD is a field that is both constantly evolving and yet constantly struggling with a dilemma regarding its fundamental nature and unique contribution as a collection of organizational scientists and practitioners. Although OD practitioners have been thinking, writing, and debating about the under- lying nature of the field for decades (Church, Hurley, & Burke, 1992; Friedlander, 1976; Greiner, 1980; Weisbord, 1982), the field itself has yet to come to agreement on its basic boundaries or parameters. (Waclawski & Church, 2002, pp. 3, 4)
Pioneers and those active in the OD field pride themselves on the inclusivity and diversity of their profession’s values and approaches for dealing with organiza- tional change.
We also note at the outset and, as will be discussed in this text, that OD and change management specialists and con- sultants work closely with organizational officers and professionals in planning, diagnosing, and implementing change. HR (human resource) professionals in organizations are particularly charged with helping to plan and drive change. In large-scale changes, it is imperative that organizational professionals in all business units (divisions, departments, and other teams) be involved in this process.
HR professionals in organizations are particu- larly charged with helping to plan and drive change.
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.2 Organizational Development (OD) and Change Management
Organizational Development Specialists OD specialists, many of whom are academics and organizational behavior profession- als, are a major source of organizational change expertise, theoretical and applied. Orga- nizational development differs in several ways from change management. OD is based on humanistic, egalitarian, and process-oriented values; in short, OD was originally grounded more in the “people side” of things. Change management, on the other hand, is grounded more in business, finance, strategic and operations management content-based disciplines. Both fields have expanded to include parts of each, while each still main- tains certain subject-matter expertise as noted here. Leaders and consultants from both fields are important and complementary to organizations planning change. We use the term “specialists” for both OD and change management experts. This term encompasses consultants, practitioners, and others with expertise in these areas. Notice the differences between the two fields and specialists’ expertise areas as you continue to read.
OD methods that specialists use have focused mainly on people and the human dimen- sions of organizations such as culture, climate, leadership, and communication. These areas include methods that involve team building, survey feedback, quality of work life, restructuring work and positions, and job satisfaction (French & Bell, 1978). As the field of OD has evolved, it has incorporated change planning and interventions that also focus on structural, work process and organizational design changes with top level leaders as well as the entire organization.
An example of an OD specialist’s work is as follows. The leaders of a midsize firm need help in identifying objective criteria for the outputs of key goals of a major division in the company. The head of the company and the division manager want to hold people accountable for the stated goals, the criteria underlying the goals, and the desired results from the goals. No one at the company has this expertise. An OD consultant is interviewed and hired to identify the criteria of each goal and to articulate the goals to match those criteria. The consultant then meets with the hiring manager to clarify and articulate the desired work and outcomes. A proposal is submitted by the consultant that includes the work to be done, how it will be done, and the anticipated deliverables. This type of project requires interviewing, examining goals and documents, and constructing criteria that support the goals. It may turn out that after the consultant successfully completes this project, she may be called back to train teams in that division on how to effectively imple- ment these goals. She may also discover during her work with this division that the goals do not connect well with the overall strategy of the company. When reporting her findings to the hiring manager, she would share this discovery and perhaps extend the contract to address larger related issues in the organization.
OD specialists rely on a variety of theories, concepts, and practical applications that we describe in more detail in the following chapters. For example, specialists use systems theory—that is, organizations are viewed as a total system of interdependent subsystems with individual components that include people, technology, work, and culture, all of which operate together to respond to external environmental changes such as competi- tors, customers, or government regulations (Katz & Kahn, 1978). Relatedly, OD specialists also conceptualize organizational systems using contingency theory, that is, viewing these organizational dimensions (strategy, structure, people, work, rewards) as parts of a whole
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.2 Organizational Development (OD) and Change Management
that “fit” together. When one of these dimensions is out of sync with the others, issues emerge. When all subsystems function well together and fit with the external environment, the organization has a higher probability of fulfilling its goals (Burke & Bradford, 2005).
OD specialists also use a wide array of skills and tools in their change work: for example, intrapersonal (self-management and emotional intelligence) skills; interpersonal skills; one-on-one coaching and mentoring; group facilitating; interviewing and surveying; col- lecting, analyzing, diagnosing data and information; problem solving; assessing; program planning and implementing.
OD specialists need to look at an organizational problem in a number of different ways in an effort to accurately diagnose what exactly is wrong, and also to implement the most effective strategy for change. Major approaches that OD specialists may take include the following:
• A long-term change approach that focuses on lasting effects through changes in cultural norms including interventions that alter attitudes, behaviors, processes, knowledge, and structures.
• A top-down approach that seeks to gain top management commitment and involvement in order to significantly affect intended changes. While change begins at the top, it is implemented throughout the organization.
• A collaborative approach involving professionals who are affected by changes and who support the changes to the organization.
• An analytical approach that examines data, diagnoses present problems, and motivates change to resolve issues. Accurate diagnostic skills are a core compe- tency of OD change agents.
• A facilitation approach that uses skilled dialogue and discussion, listening, and feedback when assisting professionals to identify weaknesses and strengths of the organization; planning for change; managing the change process; and imple- menting, coaching, and problem solving during the change.
• A design approach that helps leaders and managers develop meaningful work climates where organizational members can accomplish their goals and objectives in healthy ways (Cummings & Worley, 2009; Church, Burke, & Van Eynde, 1994).
Organizational Effectiveness from an OD Perspective From an OD perspective, an effective organization is one that is adaptable and meets both internal and external requirements to thrive. Cummings and Worley (2010) portray an effective organization as one that solves its own problems and focuses attention, resources, and effort on obtaining major goals. OD specialists involve organizational leaders, man- agers, and members in change activities in order to equip them with the know-how and capabilities they need to manage their processes. Effective organizations also have satis- fied customers and stakeholders and continue to learn and improve their processes after OD specialists leave. Such organizations maintain best practices by improving products and services. Lower costs and increased productivity result from motivated employees. The organization, in turn, is able to attract other employees to perform at higher levels. Effective organizations, then, create a win-win-win situation with external stakeholders (suppliers, vendors, government agencies, the media), customers, and their employees.
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.2 Organizational Development (OD) and Change Management
Change Management
We have learned that OD emphasizes the people and behavioral dimensions of an orga- nization (i.e., ways to enhance their motivation and productivity, which in turn enhances the organization as a whole) while, at the same time, improves the overall alignment of an organization’s systems (i.e., works to ensure the strategy fits with the culture, reward system, and employee satisfaction and effectiveness). Now we focus on a complementary field called change management, which has more recently defined its domain to include both business and behavioral aspects of organizational change. Worren, Ruddle, and Moore (1999) stated, “We observe that the major consulting firms—including those that in the past dealt exclusively with strategy or operations—now have separate divisions or competency groups specializing in change management. . . .” (p. 273). In other words, organizations need help with content expertise in strategy, marketing, production, and finance, as well as behavioral expertise in human communication, motivation, job defini- tion, partnership with customers, and leadership.
Change management encompasses approaches used by business content and behavioral process specialists that assist leaders to move entire organizations, or units, from a pres- ent to a desired future state. Whereas OD specialists focus more on process (how leaders, managers, and employees communicate, relate, strategize, sell, and solve problems) and general systems-oriented interventions (how strategy, culture, structure, accounting and human resource systems work together to meet goals), change management specialists address such areas as:
• competitive business strategy • strategic firm (human resource benefits, budgeting, profit sharing) planning • IT (information technology) and engineering solutions design and development • IT infrastructure support • business process engineering and reengineering • marketing planning • financial analysis, inventory control and analysis, work-flow analysis and design
solutions • project management methods
Part of the role of change management specialists is to help align objectives and practices of the business with the new or desired strategy, structure, and systems. To do this effec- tively, change specialists must focus on both the content and process; for example, they too must be concerned about how organizational leaders communicate business strategy with IT teams, although this may not be their primary expertise.
More subtle differences between the fields of OD and change management also exist. For example, Worren, Ruddle, and Moore (1999) state that:
. . . technical experts (e.g., manufacturing engineers) tend to deal with tasks that can (and must) be standardized and controlled so that they can be repeated in a reliable fashion. In contrast, the typical OD practitioner tends to see routines and procedures as things that stifle creativity and foster dis- satisfaction. (Worren, Ruddle, & Moore, 1979, p. 279: Adler & Borys, 1996)
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.2 Organizational Development (OD) and Change Management
Scholars have also noted that, “The most important difference [between OD and change management] is that change man- agement consultants work in teams” (Wor- ren, Ruddle, & Moore, 1999, p. 276). Often these teams are composed of people with skills that complement one another. Mem- bers may, for example, come from entirely different segments of a business. One member might come from IT, another from marketing, another from engineering, and another from organizational design.
Change Management Specialists Change management specialists offer expertise that depends on the nature and
the type of programs where change is required. Larger, organization-wide change pro- grams may demand content changes in different functional areas (e.g., research & devel- opment, production, online marketing, and product distribution) that can redefine an entire organization. In such situations, change management specialists might provide detailed corporate strategy content—that is, an overall direction of a company and how its business operations and functions fit together to achieve the goals of the company—along with finance and business process expertise—that is, the sequencing of activities to pro- duce a product or service for customers. If an entire IT system is needed, then engineering, IT architecture, programming, and business-specific skills may be needed. More internal, piecemeal changes that relate to change control programs could require specific tools and processes related to daily operational or project specific changes (Clark, 2007).
Different types of skills are essential to an organization’s change requirements. The point here is that more engineering, IT, and functional area content expertise is specifically but not exclusively related to change management specialists. For example, Japan’s Matsushita Electric Company’s Saga plant managers decided to reinvent their phone- producing assembly line by replacing miles of conveyor belts with clusters of software- controlled robots that would synchronize production without downtime. One robot replaced another that might fail in the highly technical process. Skilled software and technical engineers working with business specialists executed this change. The result? What used to take 2 ½ days now took only 40 minutes. Five hundred phones were pro- duced every eight-hour shift, compared to half that number before the change (Hall, 2006; also, see Daft, 2010).
Currently, to oversee the entire transformational organizational change process, clients hire teams consisting of OD, change management, IT, and other content specialists. It is not uncommon in large organizations undergoing transformational changes to find different consultants with various skills working on projects. Organizations also hire and develop more “internal consultants” who have both OD and change management expertise.
Change management specialists often work in teams and must coordinate many facets of an organization to effectively execute a change plan.
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.3 Forces Driving Change in Organizations
As change management, like OD, continues to evolve as a field, it encompasses process oriented skills found in OD.
In the field of planned organizational change, one of the few things we know with some certainty is that change programs are rarely successful if they are directed at only one component in isolation from others. A well- known university president once stated that you cannot lift a blanket by one corner; there must be efforts at several points . . . . Change manage- ment promises to be a discipline that will integrate the thought worlds that separate OD from strategy and technology, thus enabling the coordi- nated efforts necessary to bring about strategic change. (Worren, Ruddle, & Moore, 1999, p. 286)
1.3 Forces Driving Change in Organizations
Organizational change is generally triggered by external and/or internal forces. Such forces could include special industry events, an unforeseen opportunity for a com- pany to grow, industry trends, or any myriad of pressures generating inside or outside the company. Detecting signs of external change is important since failure to do so could mean missed opportunities and/or impending threats to an organization. For example, during the 1980s Japanese auto manufacturers Honda and Toyota were among the early entrants into the U.S. market with their fuel efficient 4-cylinder engine cars. U.S. auto- makers were much later to follow Japan’s lead with 4-cylinder vehicles, even though there was a severe shortage of oil and a gasoline crisis in the United States in the early 1970s, and the years that followed, which caused gas prices to become volatile and many Americans to seek more fuel-efficient options. Monitoring world events and looking at social trends is essential for organizational survival and success. This was certainly true for Steve Jobs at Apple who saw market potential for portable, inexpensive access to music over handheld devices like the iPod, iPhone, and iPad. Other companies continue to imitate and follow Jobs’ lead. Predicting the future and commercial trends is obviously not easy. However, companies and organizations are challenged to do just that, espe- cially in hypercompetitive markets and uncertain environments that continue to evolve at increasingly faster rates. Planned change begins with learning to read, interpret, and respond to trends triggered in external environments.
Macro-level external sources of change are depicted in Figure 1.1. These include gov- ernment and political, economic, technological, sociocultural, and natural- and human- related forces. When planning a change, we begin with this broader level of analysis before identifying more specific operational dimensions of change—that is, the particular industry and the niche of the organization in that industry.
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.3 Forces Driving Change in Organizations
Figure 1.1: Macro forces and organizational change
Socio-Cultural Forces • Demographic trends • Lifestyle changes • Availability Skills • Attitudes toward work • Gender issues • Willingness to move • Ethics
Technological Forces • Information technology/the Internet • New production processes • Computerization of processes • How technology is sold and serviced
Natural Disasters & Human Induced Problems • Weather • Extreme storms (hurricanes, tsunamis, volcanoes, earthquakes) • Pollution • Health, food, stress
Natural Disasters & Human Induced Problems • Weather • Extreme storms (hurricanes, tsunamis, volcanoes, earthquakes) • Pollution • Health, food, stress
Economic Forces • Globalization • Competitors/suppliers • Currency exchange rates • Employment and wage rates • Government economic policies • Lending policies of financial institutions
Government & Political Forces • Government legislation • International law • Wars • Local regulations • Taxation • Trade unions activities
Organization
From a change perspective, there are many effects these environmental forces can have on an organization’s internal systems—that is, its leaders and employees, its strategy and operating systems (IT, HR, etc.), even its very culture. See Figure 1.2 for a depiction of the external influences on an organization’s internal systems.
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.3 Forces Driving Change in Organizations
Figure 1.2: Environmental influence on internal organization
Political-Legal Forces
Socio-Cultural Forces
Technological Forces
Internal Environment The Organization
External Environment
Informal Subsystem Managers, Culture, Norms, Relationships, Politics, Leadership
Formal Subsystem Leadership, Strategy, Management, Goals, Marketing, Operations, Technology, Structure
Economic Forces
To help understand how organizational leaders and change specialists analyze environ- ments, try this exercise as you read this section. Think of an organization(s) in which you work or have worked, or think of an organization you’ve seen in the media. Then answer these questions, as you read this section.
1. Identify an influence(s) from Figure 1.1 that has affected the way an organization markets, produces, sells, and delivers its goods and/or services (also see Figure 1.2).
2. Can you think of a particular way the organization changed (Figure 1.2) or must change to compete as a result of any of the environmental influences in Figure 1.1?
3. How do you as a customer purchase a product from a company that reflects the result of an influence on that company’s way of doing business?
Your answers to these questions indicate changes organizations have to make or need to plan for in order to meet new market and customer demands.
Let’s look at the dimensions in Figure 1.1 to see how these forces and influences have and can create both threats and opportunities for organizations.
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.3 Forces Driving Change in Organizations
Technology Forces
Technology is one of the primary drivers and enablers of change. Organizations use infor- mation technologies in their strategies and operations to gain speed, scale, scope, and reach with customers and stakeholders globally. The Internet, social media, and informa- tion technology have recently enabled the creation of new industries, business models, professions, products, and services. Take, for example, Google, Facebook, Twitter, Yahoo!, e-Bay, YouTube, Amazon.com, and Groupon.com, to name some of the prominent compa- nies that have dramatically shifted customer-to-customer as well as business-to-customer relationships. E-Bay introduced bartering and purchasing products electronically among customers. Amazon shifted people from sifting through bookshelves in bookstores to online Web pages—and then most recently to Kindle. Google and Yahoo! have practically replaced the Yellow Pages and traditional map-printing companies like Rand McNally. Facebook created not only networks of friends but also networks of clustered, self-promo- tional buyers. YouTube became an entertainment, educational, and journalistic resource center. These companies along with PayPal have changed the business practices of pay- ment for services and products, marketing, advertising, sales, and delivery. These firms and their uses of technology have also helped shift power to customers since they select from a wider and more differentiated set of Web sites and digital stores for doing business.
An example of the influence of technology on higher education is the University of Phoe- nix. Traditionally, universities held classes on campus during semesters or trimesters and used printed textbooks. John Sperling, founder of The University of Phoenix, pioneered a change in this model by questioning why students could not attend classes at other times of the year, use electronic texts, and study wher- ever they felt most comfortable. Sperling saw technology as a means to change a major educa- tional business model. The new model worked. 2010 statistics showed that the University of Phoenix, now owned by the Apollo Group, is sec- ond in the country to the State University of New York in student enrollment (Wilson, 2010) and is listed as a corporation on the S&P 500 exchange with a market cap of approximately $7.5 billion. The extent to which enrollment will continue to increase at this level is questionable. However, the point is that innovations in technology like for-profit (and online) programs and institutions are making an impact on traditional higher edu- cational business models and practices.
Mobile technology, such as smartphones and iPads, have profoundly impacted and changed the way we think about and do business, as well as how we conceive of personal time in relation to work time. Mobile technology has greatly dimin- ished the need for physical office space and the need for face-to-face business time, and it’s dras- tically increased the speed at which business com- munication and transactions can be conducted. Because people can be accessed or communicated
Mobile technology and devices such as the smartphone have changed the way we think about and consume informa- tion. To remain viable and competitive, organizations must effectively plan for how technology will continue to evolve in the future.
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with pretty much anywhere and at any time, traditional “work hours” are quickly going by the wayside. The print media industries—newspapers, magazines, and books—have also been significantly impacted because of digital e-readers like Nook and Kindle. More- over, blogs and YouTube now complement and replace network news. Hulu and NetFlix on the iPad, smartphone, and TV, for example, now complement and may perhaps one day replace the movie theatre.
Social networking technologies are also changing politics and the way political leaders interact and try to convey messages to their constituents. President Obama’s election cam- paign was empowered by social network communications and information sharing. He was able to directly e-mail campaign messages and updates to potential voters, and he was able to create local networks of volunteers to help at a grassroots level. Since then, it’s become standard for an elected official or a political figure to maintain a Facebook page and even a Twitter account to post updates, convey messages, and organize events. Simi- larly, young people throughout the Middle East are rebelling in mass numbers in what’s being called the “Arab Spring.” They have been efficient and effective in organizing grass- roots movements due, in no small part, to social networking sites such as Facebook. Mov- ing forward, we can expect many social and political events, from election campaigns to grassroots social movements, to achieve their goals via social networking technologies.
Organizations, regardless of size, are becoming more effective, efficient, connected, and “globalized” because of the Internet and related technologies. Real-time production serving customized demand is the norm (Intuit 2020 Report, 2010). Many large firms with global supply chains are now networked to their suppliers, customers, and vendors through extranets and integrated internally through intranets, which are information networks that operate much like the Internet, but are restricted to a particular business or organization’s employees. Extranets are intranets that also allow access into an organization’s system to approved people outside of the business (www.1stflash.com).
According to The Journal of Business Strategy, between 1997 and 2001 “90 percent of major corporations implemented an intranet strategy”(Intranets and extranets, 2011). By the early 2000s, “extranets also were rapidly becoming an expectation rather than a bonus.” According to Information Week, most IT managers expect a positive return on investment in network infrastructure such as this (Intranets and extranets, 2011). And with regard to social media, another survey showed that “29 percent of organizations with fewer than 500 employees said they use social media to promote their companies, while that percent- age jumps to 38 and 44 percent for companies with 501–1,000 and more than 1,000 employ- ees, respectively” (Needle, 2010). Innovation in this field will only lead to widespread use in companies big and small.
Organizations that lag behind in their production processes and in getting products or services to customers in timely and efficient ways are usually in need of organizational change. To change a major production process affects other parts of an organization’s internal system, as Figure 1.2 indicates. All aspects of the company, from leadership to company culture, could likely be affected.
Economic Forces
As we discussed at the beginning of this chapter, the world has become smaller, and what affects one region of the world has direct and immediate consequences everywhere else.
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.3 Forces Driving Change in Organizations
Whereas once a troubled economy in a particular region could be isolated to that region, it now can quickly drag down economies the world over. We saw this effect firsthand with the Great Recession of 2008–2009. No country was spared in the fallout from the housing market bubble in the United States. Likewise, uncertainty in the European Union in 2011 has created economic instability in Asia and in the United States. Economies,
and the governments that manage those economies, are interconnected like at no other time in human history. Monitoring governmental decisions and economic con- ditions around the world has become a crit- ical necessity for any size business.
Economic predictions through 2020 that will influence organizations and consum- ers include an increase in consumer spend- ing in developing countries; depleted sav- ings in the United States; and continuing debt and deficits throughout the Western world that will restrain spending rates. However, economic growth globally is predicted with more than one billion new middle-class consumers who will increase spending. Mobile technologies as well as
those discussed in the previous paragraphs will grow in demand. New businesses and business models will be needed in large and small companies that can meet the demands of the new rising middle-class consumers (Intuit 2020 Report, 2010) and, at the same time, meet the demands of diminishing economies.
The Environment
Environmental issues present another factor that is driving change. Chronic smog and air pollution from carbon emissions in cities throughout the world is a major health hazard that must be dealt with. Climate change and sustainability considerations (“green” initia- tives) also present challenges for organizations, but dealing with these forces is no longer a choice; it’s becoming a competitive requirement, especially as companies try to dig their way out of the Great Recession. Companies’ growth, however, will be pressured by prices and resource supplies that will be influenced by increased regulation, taxes, and other restrictions to reduce carbon footprints. Consumers also will expect businesses to incorpo- rate sustainable practices in their operations, products, and services (Watson, n.d.).
In response to these pressures, some companies are taking the lead not only in managing these changes but also in making sustainability of a healthy and clean environment a goal of change management. Procter & Gamble, for example, committed to power all of their fac- tories with renewable energy within the next 10 years. FedEx committed to improve vehicle fuel efficiency by 20 percent by 2020. Walmart pledged to sell $1 billion of fresh produce that was sourced from 1,000 small- and medium-sized farms. Hasbro committed to having 75 percent of its paperboard packaging come from recycled materials in 2011 (Watson, n.d.). Corporations and organizations will be pressured to plan, budget, and implement the logic
In this globalized economy, monitoring and preparing for economic changes and condi- tions around the world has become a critical necessity for any size business.
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.3 Forces Driving Change in Organizations
“think green” into their business strategies, production, manufacturing. They will need to plan and act responsibly with concern for the environment, use of energy, and disposal of waste in all their strategies, using the four Rs: “Reduce, Reuse, Recycle and Recover the resource into action.” And as technology allows for more ways to meet these growing envi- ronmental concerns, companies will be well-served to remain on the innovative forefront by seeking cost-effective ways to implement these sustainable technologies. Managing change in this regard will help companies become more efficient and also to appeal to a growing consumer base that is looking for such considerations (Sustainability Report, 2010).
Some industries and companies do not practice “green” or sustainable clean air and water strategies in their operations. For example, supporters of environmental sustainability contend that industries and firms that use coal in particular contribute to pollution (John- son, 2011). Converting to clean energies and sustainable business practices can be costly, and when governments do not offer industries and companies incentives for this effort, pollution and unhealthy consequences can result.
Healthcare
With an aging population, ever-evolving medical innovations, and a consumer demand for the highest quality medical products and services, the cost of health care is continuing to rise at an alarming rate, with no end in sight. Health-care costs in the United States are pre- dicted to rise from 16 percent of GDP to 20 percent by 2020. These costs will likely increase the already overburdened national debt and compete with other government programs. Likewise, businesses are saddled with escalating insurance premiums for their employees, which is contributing to a flattening out of real wages and handcuffing what companies can offer in terms of compensation and benefits packages. The ultimate effects that the recent health-care reform bill passed in 2010 under the Obama administration will have on alleviating these issues has yet to be determined. One thing is certain though: With the policies of the health-care bill set to be implemented in stages over the course of the next few years, companies will have to manage change on this front better than ever before. Health-care expansion will present business growth opportunities, but it will also present potential dangers. Change management will be critical in determining these outcomes.
Government and Political Forces
Governments and political forces will also continue to cope with high uncertainty as regime changes, wars, terrorism, and global economic instability persist. Political unrest can have the same effect as economic unrest. For example, in the spring of 2011, specula- tion abounded that political unrest in Libya and other parts of the Middle East was con- tributing to a rise in oil prices, which affects consumer behavior as well as how companies conduct business worldwide. In this volatile era, the U.S. government, with a lowered credit rating from Standard & Poor’s credit rating agency, must attempt to decrease unem- ployment, increase job creation—particularly in critical sectors such as engineering and manufacturing fields and technology—decrease the national debt, rebuild infrastructures, restructure the education system, and balance regulation with innovation in the financial, banking, and investment industries. At the same time, the EU (European Union) coun- tries must absorb the soaring debts of several member countries like Greece and Italy.
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.3 Forces Driving Change in Organizations
Corporate leaders must think creatively and innovatively to move their economies forward by investing in new industries and creating new jobs.
Generating this kind of positive change in such unstable political and economic times will not be easy. According to The Global Competitiveness Report (Schwab, 2010–11), the United States ranked fourth globally in competitiveness, behind Swit- zerland, Sweden, and Singapore. This is the second consecutive year the United States has fallen in this ranking, having been ranked first in 2008–2009, then sec- ond in 2009–2010, and now sliding two more places down to fourth in 2010–2011. Stopping this slide rests on the shoulders of government and business leaders. Com- petitiveness, according to the report, is defined as “. . . the set of institutions, poli- cies, and factors that determine the level of productivity of a country” (Schwab, 4). Chang- ing organizational structures to meet external competitive demands generally calls for bold, sweeping ideas. Transformational change is needed, which we discuss in a later section.
Sociocultural Forces
Brainpower and talent are the keys to reignite corporate and economic growth, and to pro- vide opportunities for a new generation of students. At the same time, companies must also provide meaningful and challenging work to new employees who value learning, ethics, and flexible working conditions. Work/life and work/family issues are also major sources of workforce and workplace change. The increasing number of women (single with children and married with children) in the U.S. workforce has pressured manage- ment to rethink work schedules. Men and women employees from the “sandwiched gen- eration” must care for their children and also their elderly parents while working full time. Flextime, telecommuting, and other forms of virtual work arrangements are required. The aging and the handicapped in the workforce, highly skilled and unskilled international entrants, dual career couples with children—all of these changing demographics pressure management to think “outside the box” in terms of organizational changes to attract and retain an increasingly diverse and, in many instances, technologically savvy workforce.
Globalization Forces
The rise of China and India as high-volume, low-cost labor manufacturers continues to pres- sure other Western countries to outsource and find new innovative ways to compete. China is now the second largest economy. The “Asian Tigers” (Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan) have emerged as advanced economies serving as financial centers and information technology innovators. The emerging economies of the BRIC (Brazil, Russia,
Political unrest can have the same far-reaching effect as economic unrest. From Tea Party and Occupy Wall Street movements domestically, to social and political unrest in the Middle East, all businesses must have plans in place to deal with instability and change. Pictured here, mass protests in Syria.
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India, and China) countries have, over the past decade “. . . contributed over a third of world GDP growth and grown from one-sixth of the world economy to almost a quarter” (Wilson, Kelston & Ahmed, 2010) and many insiders think that this trend is likely to continue moving forward. Through the merging of national economies, such as in the European Union, and the merging of national economic interests, such as through the WTO (World Trade Organi- zation), geographic boundaries have been blurred and perhaps even somewhat diminished. This change has enabled low-cost international competitors using new technologies to drive down costs of doing business, and thus force companies to streamline structures and change strategies and business practices. This has profound implications for companies of all sizes, as well as for the labor forces that supply those companies in local markets.
As we discussed earlier, international economies are more interrelated than ever before. International investments and movements in the U.S. stock markets affect American pen- sion funds, corporate earnings, and market forecasts. Regulation and deregulation of industries (especially telecommunications, banking, financial services, and the airlines) continue to stir large-scale downsizing and restructuring in companies. Mergers, acquisi- tions, and consolidations within and across industries have also created significant orga- nizational change. Grant Thornton International’s 2010 survey, for example, showed that 34 percent of the 6,000 business respondents across 39 economies were planning acquisi- tions, an increase of eight percentage points on last year (Hughes, 2011). Also, since the 9/11 attacks of 2001, and with the continuing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the threat of global terrorism and the fight against it has created major realignment and flattening of structures in the FBI, CIA, and other government bureaucracies. Partnerships, strategic alliances, and developing synergies across private and public sector organizations are also necessary to capitalize on the positive aspects of globalization.
Organizational and Managerial Responses to These Changes
Companies have responded to the external forces of change in a number of ways. Some firms have surrendered, as noted at the beginning of this section. For example, Borders bookstore closed because its brick-and-mortar infrastructure could not compete with new handheld technologies, Internet connected devices, and services provided by such compa- nies as Amazon.com. Other organizations have strategically responded to external changes with innovative organizational structures and arrangements like networks, strategic alli- ances, and virtual corporations as are found in Ford, Sun Microsystems, IBM, Mitsubishi, General Electric, and others. As one observer noted, “Sun Microsystems’ network is so complex that some products it sells are never touched by a Sun employee” (Cummings & Worley, 2009, p. 5). Innovations such as this will be required if companies are not only to survive but prosper in the face of external change on so many fronts. Cummings and Worley illustrate what will be needed in managing and leading change effectively:
. . . a growing number of organizations are undertaking the kinds of orga- nizational changes needed to survive and prosper in today’s environment. They are making themselves more streamlined and nimble, more respon- sive to external demands, and more ecologically sustainable. They are involving employees in key decisions and paying for performance rather than for time. They are taking the initiative in innovating and managing change, rather than simply responding to what has already happened. (Cummings & Worley, 2009, p. 5)
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.3 Forces Driving Change in Organizations
Change with Stability: Balancing Perception with Wisdom
It is important to point out that not all organizations will or should respond to external environmental change the same way. Smircich and Stubbart (1985) argued that the exter- nal environment is not always a totally objective phenomenon. The ways the environment is perceived and responded to depend on individual interpretations—in this case, orga- nizational leaders’ and managers’ interpretations. How leaders and managers perceive pressures and forces in their environments affects whether and how they develop change strategies to respond.
Boyd, Dess, and Rasheed (1993) identified two types of errors that leaders and managers can make in perceiving change. Type 1 error happens when the environment is actually stable, but leaders and managers perceive it as turbulent and proceed to take unneeded actions to respond. Type 2 error happens when leaders and managers perceive the envi- ronment as stable when in actuality it is turbulent, and they fail to take necessary actions, thus possibly threatening the survival of their organizations. An example of a Type 1 error occurred when President George W. Bush and his cabinet declared immediate war on Iraq based on the perception (and/or belief) of that regime’s possession of weapons of mass destruction and the regime’s intention to use those weapons against its neighbors and the United States. There were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, and the costs from this misperception were and are substantial. An example of a Type 2 error occurred when, as mentioned earlier, the U.S. auto manufacturers perceived the environment in the 1980s as stable and failed to design and manufacture 4-cylinder fuel-efficient cars as did the Japanese, who later won and maintained a sizable market share in the U.S. auto industry as a result of their first-move advantage with quality cars. A lesson from this discussion is that trends and forces in the external environment must not only be monitored but must also be carefully scrutinized in conjunction with one’s own circumstance and near- and long-term goals.
Organizational leaders and change specialists need to consider the interaction and balance between the forces for change and stability. The need or drive for change can sometimes be exaggerated or romanticized. Leana and Barry (2000) argued that there are forces for stability and forces for change when considering hypercompetitive environments. They argue that both are essential for an organization’s long-term functioning. Figure 1.3 illus- trates these two types of forces and the balancing effects of each in organizations.
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.3 Forces Driving Change in Organizations
Figure 1.3: Change and stability forces
Source: Leana, C. & Barry, B. (2000). Stability and change as simultaneous experiences in organizational life.
Academy of Management Review 25(4), pp. 753–759; and Plamer, l., Dunford, R., & Akin, G. (2006). Managing Organizational Change.
2nd ed. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, p. 60.
Forces for Change Forces for Stability
• Competitive Advantage (flexible and responsive to changing markets)
• Control (less hierarchy and more power through management performance targets)
• Impatient Capital Markets (short-term investments favored over long-term)
• Cost Containment (human resources seen as a cost, not an asset)
• Environmental Adaptability (stability impedes adaptability; flexibility adapts to change)
• Predictability and Uncertainty Reduction (stability enables, not impedes change)
• Organizational Social Capital (trust among employees is created as an asset)
• Sustained Advantage (created through stable interactions over time)
• Transaction Costs (stability creates rational investment in employee development)
• Institutionalism (power structures self-perpetuating, solidify relationships and practices
Note in Figure 1.3 that “competitive advantage” as a force for change is counterbalanced by a need for “predictability and uncertainty reduction.” While competitive advantage requires organizational flexibility and responsiveness, effective organizations also require stability and uncertainty avoidance to thrive. Also, while “control” as a force for change means less hierarchy and more emphasis on performance targets, “organizational social capital” requires developing and nourishing coworker trust, which is an invisible asset as a force for stability. “Impatient capital markets” that demand immediate, short-term invest- ment are indeed a force for change; but organizations also need to have “sustained advan- tage” that is gained through stable organizational relationships and interactions over time. Finally, environmental adaptability is a requirement for organizations that wish to change to be competitive; but, at the same time, organizations need to rely and draw on institution- alized best practices based on what worked well in the past, including sound relationships.
To sum up, macro external forces affect the operational and internal environments of organizations. Trends, events, and crises that occur in the global, technological, eco- nomic, governmental, political, and demographic/social environments influence organi- zations. These influences are felt by organizations through changing markets, laws and regulations, finances, natural disasters, and so on. Leaders and managers must create and change visions, strategies, structures, systems, and talent to compete and survive in their industry sectors. Organizations that excel in changing environments have become more streamlined and nimble, more responsive to external and customer demands, and more ecologically sustainable. They have also adopted information technologies in their mar- keting and operations to enhance speed, scale, and reach.
It is also important to consider those dimensions of an organization that need to be balanced with change forces. As a student of organizational change, your skills include the ability to identify the environments that are exerting changes on organizations and, as this course progresses, to suggest different types of changes and change strategies organizations can
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.4 Nature and Types of Organizational Change
use to respond to opportunities and threats from their environments. In the next section, we present specific types of organizational change that are used depending on relevant criteria.
1.4 Nature and Types of Organizational Change
Not all changes pressuring organizations are the same. The nature of change and change frameworks presented here illustrate these differences. Some frameworks overlap and are complementary; others deal with dissimilar change philosophies and approaches. All are intended to show how change specialists can use multiple perspec- tives to understand change and to gain insight into the types of interventions and strate- gies for effectively responding to change.
At the most general level, Ackerman (2010) identified three types of change: developmen- tal, transitional, and transformational.
Developmental change involves an improvement of what already exists. For example, an organization improving a previously established process or procedure, such as an HR policy regarding employee leave time or a particular department’s procedure for filing and sharing expertise on certain projects, are examples of developmental change. The change does not necessarily have to be large in scale and scope. Consequently, little stress or anxiety is created with this type of small-scale change. Transitional change consists of an implementation to achieve a known desired state that is different from the existing one. Examples of this more intrusive, larger change include, for example, organizational mergers and acquisitions or replacing a process or procedure and introducing a new one, such as installing a new technology system. Such changes can shake up an organizational culture, disturb relationships, unsettle jobs, and require retraining and hiring. Finally, transformational change involves the emergence of a new, unknown state for the organi- zation. Examples of such changes include a shift in radically different markets that require a different strategy and skills, a move to incorporate “bleeding edge” technologies, or a new CEO and top-level team who change the structure and culture of the company. This model differentiates among the three types of change, each which has a different purpose, requires different change interventions, and presents different risks. The following mod- els expand upon and add to these thre