Organizational Change - An Everyday Occurrence

Posted by Jim Connolly on 8 December, 2009 Email This Post Email This Post - Print This Post Print This Post

If you thought all the talk about “organizational change” was a fad that would pass by like many of the other tired fads (quality circles, ropes courses, personal coaches, managing up, etc.), the “Great Recession” has changed that.

I just got off the phone with yet another CEO who wondered out loud when the pace of constant change brought about by the “Great Recession” was going to end.  I told him what I tell all of my clients.  Organizational change will be a constant presence and to pretend any differently will negatively affect employee performance and organizational results. 

We, and our employees, all want the merry-go-round to stop so we could get off and rest.  But it’s not going to stop.  At least not for a while (until we get near the peak of the next economic expansion).  So how do we cope?

Three Organizational Strategies

  1. Treat the organizational change process as a human behavior process, not an organizational structure project.  These are people, not boxes and lines on a chart.
  2. Set the expectation that your leaders will guide their people through the process instead of telling them to “sink or swim.”  You need those who can swim to step up.
  3. Find a way to embrace on-going organizational change as a key component in your company culture.  Make change normal.

If you do these things, employees will perform, leaders will lead at a higher level and the organization will deliver improved results.  In doing so, you’ll build proactive competitive advantage that can’t be matched by sale prices, staff cuts, search engine optimization or the status quo.

For more insights on building organizational performance and breakthrough results, check out our other blog resources at www.orgresults.net/newsblog.  To find out how we have delivered results for organizations like yours, visit www.orgresults.net or contact our Founder and President, Jim Connolly here or call him at (309) 828-9060.

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Categories : Employee Performance, Human Behavior, Organizational Change, Organizational Performance Tags :

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