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10 DOs and DONTs of organizational change

For a recent boardroom presentation to a group of CEOs of large organizations I prepared ten ‘dos and donts’ on my topic of organizational change.


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Enterprise 2.0 Implementation Framework

I drew on the core ideas in our Implementing Enterprise 2.0 report and framework (as above). Enterprise 2.0 is ultimately far more about organizational change than technology, though it happens to be driven by web technologies. As such much of my focus today is on how to change organizations, to literally create the next version of the enterprise. Far more details on how to put the ideas below into practice are in the Implementing Enterprise 2.0 report.

My list got an extremely positive response from the audience, so I thought I’d share it here.

DOS

1. Create a vision
The most important aspect of your vision is that it must be compelling. Unless people are drawn to it and want to help create it, it is useless. This means it needs to be focused on the benefits to everyone in the organization.

2. Set and communicate policies
Policies provide parameters in which people can freely play. Without guidelines staff will either be reluctant to try things for fear of going too far, or will do inappropriate things because they haven’t been told otherwise. Simple, clear policies are a powerful enabler of positive change.

3. Select and discover pilots
Pilots are the instrument of experimentation, of trying new things within safe boundaries. Choose what new things you want to try and how to go about it, so you find out what works and how to scale it across the organization. However the most valuable experiments are probably already happening, so you need to discover and nurture them.

4. Identify and support champions
Every organization that has rapidly and successfully changed has depended on champions that have provided a lead for others. In many cases they are informal champions, driving change through their enthusiasm and energy. Don’t manage them, but find them and support them.

5. Iterate!
We are living in what I call “The Heuristic Age,” in which everything is driven by trial and error. Grand plans will never succeed (as planned) in a complex world. The key driver of change must be trying things, learning from them about what does and doesn’t work in your unique organization, and trying again being a little bit wiser.

DON’TS

1. Ignore concerns
Everyone - from corporate directors through entry-level staff - will be worried about change. Do not ignore these concerns but address them. If they are unjustified, show why. If they are justified, assess real risks and rewards and act to swing the balance to the rewards.

2. Start with technologies
Many people are excited by the plethora of awesome technologies we now have available. It is a mistake to start with a technology and try to make it useful. That approach usually fails. Instead start with business issues and see what technologies can help them.

3. Create a master plan
While you need a vision, you shouldn’t create a fixed master plan of how you’ll get there. It’s a delicate balance, as you do need a roadmap of where you think you’re going. However the temptation can be to get too detailed and too prescriptive. Any plan must allow for development, learning, iteration, and change.

4. Let pilots run indefinitely
Pilots are a tool of finding what works. That means you need to clearly distinguish between what is working and what isn’t. If things aren’t working, either close them down or change them dramatically. It is easy to set up pilots. It is harder, but just as important, to close them down if they are not creating value.

5. Try to do everything
With so many opportunities for positive change in organizations, it is tempting to try to do it all, to truly transform the organization into a far more effective machine. The chances of success are minimal, and the risk is failure means everything stays at the status quo. Contain your ambitions and move by steps rather than leaps, at least initially.


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4 Comments

Martin said:

- [Don't] Start with technologies: that's right, but the opposite is also not true.

start with business issues, but then think of solutions which will be inevitably centered around technologies-as-mediums and define 'user experiences' (in another word: how we think and work). Like Joel Spolsky once blogged: Communities are built by software. Real-life workflows too.

- [Do] The Most Simple Thing That Could Possibly Work (mantra of Ward Cunningham, wiki-inventor):

Enterprise Software is broken, because it is too complex. It is not built and designed for the everyday user experience (UX) of information/knowledge workers down in the trenches, but for mirroring the bigger-than-life-image a organisation holds of itself. Basically, a plain & simple Web 2.0-ish UX design would work best also within enterprises. Workers are (information) consumers too.

You touch on the importance of communication but you don't really elaborate on it. I think communication or the dissemination of information to the right people, at the right time, using the right medium and messenger, should definitely be in your top 5.

Ross Dawson said:

Martin, yes absolutely agree. Though the second point is still a little easier to say than to do :-).

Danielle, yes it's absolutely critical. The way I see it is that the communication you describe is the outcome that will support a high-performance organization. The challenge is how do you get there - and change is required to get to those kind of effective communication flows.

Stuart Glendinning Hall said:

Interesting content. I prefer the concept of cultural change in respect of E2.0, as it tends to encourage focus on people, rather than organisational change with its tendency to focus on 'structures'.

About the blog author

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Ross Dawson is globally recognized as a leading futurist, entrepreneur, keynote speaker, strategy advisor, and bestselling author. He is Founding Chairman of four companies: professional services and venture firm Advanced Human Technologies, future and strategy consulting group Future Exploration Network, leading events firm The Insight Exchange, and influence ratings start-up Repyoot.

Ross is author most recently of Implementing Enterprise 2.0, the prescient Living Networks, which anticipated the social network revolution, and the Amazon.com bestseller Developing Knowledge-Based Client Relationships (click on the links for free chapter downloads). He is based in Sydney and San Francisco with his wife jewellery designer Victoria Buckley and two beautiful young daughters.

Contact me

rossd [AT] ahtgroup [DOT] com

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