I wonder if the paradigm for change management should be changed? I'll bet a lot of people have an opinion on this. If so, and having received their input, I wonder if we would all come together to make a change to the means and manner for managing change?
Parse the paragraph just read:
Step A: Pose a hypothesis or ask about a possible outcome
Step B: Test the hypothesis or evaluate the responses to the question
Step C: Plan the change, or roll out what can be changed (successfully)
Step B: Test the hypothesis or evaluate the responses to the question
Step C: Plan the change, or roll out what can be changed (successfully)
This is a simple example of the "ask-receive-change" paradigm. Too often, that's not the paradigm of change management. Too often we get:
Step 1: Plot the change
Step 2: Impose the change
Step 3: Enforce the change
Step 2: Impose the change
Step 3: Enforce the change
A friend recently asked: plot or plan -- what's the difference?
Two responses to that question:
- Dictionary: Plot: a secret plan or scheme to accomplish some purpose; Plan: a not-secret plan or scheme to accomplish some purpose.
- Management view: Transparency. Plots come from the back room; plans come from the front room.
Of course the words are dripping with bias. Often, you can't plan in a fishbowl; does that make planning in private a plot? And, no matter its noble purpose and majority advantages, there are will likely be a minority -- sometimes vocal -- for which enforcement is the only highway.
My advice: be biased toward A,B,C even if 1,2,3 are necessary.
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