Navigating
Change - A Book Review |
 |
-- a university of arizona
course on methods and approaches for studying the future
|
The subtitle to the book
is "How CEOs, Top Teams, and Boards Steer Transformation", edited
by Donald C. Hambrick, David A. Nadler, and Michael Tushman. It is from Harvard
Business School Press, 1998, 414 pages. This is part of a series of books on
The Management of Innovation and Change. This is a book about organizational
transformation.
They set the state of change
by saying there are three important forces: 1) emergence of global competition,
2) new technology, and 3) public policy. They add that these and other forces
are redefining markets, trade relationships and the basis of competition. They
note the roles of CEO's fall into three broad categories: 1) envisioning, 2)
energizing, and 3) enabling. They call attention to the omission of "charisma",
noting it has little to do with long term success in complex organizational
change. The authors paraphrase and amplify on a Peter Drucker statement "the
first job of leaders it to define reality and the last it to say thank you",
to define 7 steps.
- Druker's Comments Paraphrased
Define Reality
- 1. Enshrine the institutional
values
- 2. Articulate a vision
- 3. Set the strategic
path to that vision
- 4. Demand performance
- 5. Empower the people
(and get out of their way)
- 6. Say thank you.
-
- The authors define lessons
of transformational leadership:
- 1. Self managed senior
teams don't work
- 2. Remotely located teams
work less well than teams in physical proximity
- 3. Laissez-faire or consensus
leadership doesn't work
- 4. Ill-defined team objectives,
processes, and rewards hamper performance
-
- How Boards of Directors
could monitor change (and performance):
- 1. Agree with management
on a strategic plan for one year and for longer (e.g., 3-5 years).
- 2. Review the annual
plan relative to execution and results at each board meeting
- 3. Annually review the
annual and longer term plans to see if actual strategy is consistent with
the plans
- 4. Part of the CEO's
annual performance evaluation relates to the strategic planning evaluations
- 5. Based on all of these
periodic assessments, revise the plan if appropriate
-
- Ten Lessons learned for
making "discontinuous change"
- 1. Do not expect people
to embrace easily the need for change
- 2. Sometimes it is better
to experiment than to plan
- 3. Pay close attention
to the timing of change
- 4. When the need to remove
people becomes clear, do not put off the inevitable
- 5. You cannot succeed
without a senior team that thinks and acts as a team
- 6. Enlist your
board of directors as active partners in change
- 7. Give coherence to
the change process by clearly articulating a central mission and consistent
set of themes
- 8. Even though the content
of change may be radical, the building process has to be methodical.
- 9. Think of change as
a campaign that must be waged simultaneously on a variety of fronts
- 10. This race may not
have any finish line, so keep looking for reasons to stop and celebrate along
the way.
-
- Five Requisites for Implementing
Change
- 1. Cultivate a winning
attitude
- 2. Make the organization
the hero
- 3. Establish cumulative
learning
- 4. Promote strategic
communication
- 5. Align strategy and
behavior
-
- Five Steps for integrating
it all into a success strategy
- 1. Master the and/also
(no single right answers)
- 2. Believe in the individual
and value diversity
- 3. Look for embedded
traits (people values and styles)
- 4. Stimulate constructive
conflict
- 5. Vision and information
management hold everything together
Return to "Anticipating
the Future" course home page
Prepared by Roger L. Caldwell