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Best Practices in Managing Change Overview This table summarizes the ten best practices for leading change identified by one of the leading researchers on change, Harvard Business School professor John Kotter. It identifies the practices, the action steps you can take, and the things to watch out for. Practice Actions Needed Pitfalls Establish a sense of • Examine market and competitive • Underestimating the difficulty of urgency realities for potential crises and driving people from their comfort untapped opportunities. zones • Convince at least 75% of your managers • Becoming paralyzed by risks that the status quo is more dangerous than the unknown. Form a powerful • Assemble a group with shared • No prior experience in teamwork at guiding coalition commitment and enough power to lead the top the change effort. • Relegating team leadership to an HR, • Encourage them to work as a team quality, or strategic-planning outside the normal hierarchy. executive rather than a senior line manager Create a vision • Create a vision to direct the change effort. • Presenting a vision that is too • Develop strategies for realizing that vision. complicated or vague to be communicated in five minutes Communicate the • Use every vehicle possible to • Undercommunicating the vision vision communicate the new vision and • Behaving in ways antithetical to strategies for achieving it. the vision • Teach new behaviors by the example of the guiding coalition. Empower others to • Remove or alter systems or structures • Failing to remove powerful act on the vision undermining the vision. individuals who resist the change • Encourage risk taking and nontraditional effort ideas, activities, and actions. Plan for and create • Define and engineer visible • Leaving short-term successes up to short-term wins performance improvements. chance • Recognize and reward employees • Failing to score successes early contributing to those improvements. enough (12-24 months into the change effort) Consolidate improve- • Use increased credibility from early wins • Declaring victory too soon—with ments and produce to change systems, structures, and the first performance improvement more change policies undermining the vision. • Allowing resistors to convince • Hire, promote, and develop employees “troops” that the war has been won who can implement the vision. • Reinvigorate the change process with new projects and change agents. Institutionalize new • Articulate connections between new • Not creating new social norms and approaches behaviors and corporate success. shared values consistent with • Create leadership development and changes succession plans consistent with the • Promoting people into leadership new approach. positions who don’t personify the new approach Adapted from: J.Kotter. 1996. Leading Change. Harvard Business Press.
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