Change Fatigue Revisited
eBook - ePub

Change Fatigue Revisited

A New Framework for Leading Change

  1. 140 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Change Fatigue Revisited

A New Framework for Leading Change

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About This Book

Leaders today must be able to embed resiliency into their organizations and to re-position change as a natural process. Being an effective change agent has become a critical leadership competency for 21st Century leaders. With these factors in mind, we are proposing a new approach to change in this book (the C6 Change Leadership Framework ), as a means to mitigate "Change Fatigue" and to enhance a leader's ability to positively affect change in their organizations.

This book will enable leaders to manage change in a more proactive, tailored and engaged manner to increase the likelihood of achieving the expected outcomes of the change initiatives.

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Information

Year
2022
ISBN
9781637422502
CHAPTER 1
Introduction
The year 2020 was arguably a year like no other. Leaders and organizations faced a series of overlapping crises, any one of which would have presented substantial difficulties in a normal year. Together, they created unprecedented challenges requiring responses not found in the playbooks or crises past. The global pandemic, economic downturn, social unrest, and the deep political divide interweaved to force leaders to confront organizational assumptions, fundamental structures, and underlying systems relied upon in the past. Leaders were forced to implement changes at speed and often without a full appreciation of how deep and wide the tentacles of these crises would extend. And as we have seen since the pandemic began, even the best calculated response could be upended by new changes or could still result in the dissolvement of a business, both small and large.
While 2020 brought a pandemic, for several years prior, leaders were facing a macroenvironment filled with an unprecedented level of active ā€œstressors.ā€ The landscape of the 21st century is characterized by increasing complexity, chaos, technological advances, economic shifts, intense competition, hyperchange, a 24/7 ā€œalways onā€ expectation, and a more nomadic workforce (Vƶlpel 2003; Youngman 2020). Add to these tides the overwhelming nature of endless data and information, both real and misleading, the ability to make decisions in the speed required in this century has become more difficult than ever before. We are in an era which Google Director of Engineering, Ray Kurzweil, called the ā€œage of acceleration,ā€ where globalization, technology, and financial markets instill a need for newer, better, faster products and services (Friedman 2016, 187). We have regarded organizations as ā€œsystemsā€ that change, grow, or move and in which the variables they must navigate are interacting and changing constantly in response to these interactions, which makes it difficult to predict the outcome (Clegg, Kornberger, and Pitsis 2011; Guastello 2013).
Denning (2018) labeled this environment an ā€œunstoppable revolution.ā€
The revolution is very simple. Today, organizations are connecting everyone and everything, everywhere and all the time. They are becoming capable of delivering instant, intimate, frictionless value on a large scale. They are creating a world in which people, insights and money interact quickly, easily, and cheaply. For some, the revolution is uplifting and beautiful. For others it is dark and threatening.
Organizations and leaders are also under intense scrutiny from a variety of external and internal stakeholders including customers, suppliers, employees, regulators, community activists, and governance officials. There is also systemic impatience in our ā€œinstantā€ environment, driven by unprecedented access and reach fueled by technological advances (e.g., the rise of social media). The age of Amazon has brought about a global expectation of services and goods ā€œimmediately.ā€ While some businesses have been able to pivot to this expectation, others have not with many facing the end of their time.
The presence of the noted stressors, intense scrutiny, and systemic impatience compels leaders to adjust to meet these conditions. The demands of the organizationā€™s stakeholders and market forces create pressure on the management to act. Leaders must launch change initiatives to meet the challenges they must navigate. So how does this change take place? If the playbooks of past are not as handy as they used to be, what will be the playbook of the future?
Many prescriptive change models treat change as linear, one dimensional, simple, and static. We have learned in 2020 that the actual change experience is nonlinear, complex, messy, three dimensional, and dynamic due to the continuous and overlapping stream of environmental demands.
Well intentioned, but poorly positioned and executed change management prescriptive programs may contribute to organizational dysfunction because leaders frame or position change inappropriately. Or, under pressure to deliver results, leaders launch iterations of the change initiatives if the expected results are not experienced quickly enough. On the immediate receiving end of such drastic change is the company itself, its workers, and middle management. The adage ā€œchange is the only constantā€ is often used to accept, justify, or normalize the rapid change, even poorly executed change initiatives. Such rapid change has negative cost associated with itā€”an environment where disorientation, shifting priorities, and rapid responses can lead to a condition we have labeled as ā€œChange FatigueTM.ā€
In this new reality, organizations have to change how they change and match the pace of change in a manner both responsive yet sustainable. They need to increase their organizational agility, increase flexibility, and infuse into the culture a continuous focus that makes change a natural part of the cultural fabric (Kelley 2016). The fatigue that comes from continuous change will both tax the system and confuse the customer base. Imagine a restaurant that changes its menu almost daily in response to different variablesā€”customer tastes, trendy dishes, supply of ingredients. While in some ways this can be viewed as responsive and agile, the toll it takes on staff, waiters, and the confusion caused to customers looking for consistency is a cost to the business that is not always factored into change decisions.
In 2008, IBM conducted a study with global CEOs (Kelley 2016) and found that the following were factors that presented challenges to an organizationā€™s ability to embrace change:
ā€¢ Changing mindsets and attitudes (58 percent)
ā€¢ Corporate culture (49 percent)
ā€¢ Underestimating complexity (35 percent)
ā€¢ Shortage of resources (33 percent)
ā€¢ Lack of commitment of senior leaders (32 percent)
ā€¢ Lack of change know-how (20 percent)
ā€¢ Lack of motivation of employees (16 percent)
What stands out in the prior list is that with the exception of a shortage of resources, the rest are human trait challengesā€”from human disposition, emotional inclination, behavioral motivation, and skills development.
In 2014, Forbes found that ā€œdespite the life-or-death stakes, only 50% of executives say their companies adapt well to new technologies or processes, or are well versed in transformation.ā€
The biggest barrier to overcome is conflicting visions among executive leadership or decision makers, cited by 33% of respondents. This is followed by a lack of internal talent to spearhead or execute business change (28%) and resource/budget constraints (25%).
While it might be easy to read the above and surmise that the failure is in leadership, recent studies have shown that leaders themselves are feeling the effects of continuous change. Segal (2021) noted that:
ā€¢ Nearly 60 percent of leaders reported they feel used up at the end of the workday, which is a strong indicator of burnout.
ā€¢ Approximately 44 percent of leaders who feel used up at the end of the day expected to change companies in order to advance; 26 percent expected to leave within the next year.
ā€¢ Only 20 percent of surveyed leaders believed they were effective at leading virtually, a key element in todayā€™s changing landscape.
Brower (2020) captures the need to lead change in this environment: ā€œChange is constant and as a result, people, teams and organizations must build their skills in managing change and fostering flexibility.ā€
Given the systemic impatience in many of the organizationā€™s stakeholders, the pace of the environment and the advances in technology, leaders must be able to embed resiliency into the organizational culture and to reposition change as a natural organizational process. It is true that ā€œchange is the only constantā€ will lead to some level of fatigue. But what happens if we take that as a given but prepare organizations to lead within the context of continuous change? If your restaurant must change its menu frequently to keep up with dinersā€™ tastes and preferences, how can the owners of the restaurant ā€œretrofitā€ these changes so as not to cause undue fatigue to everyone involved? With these factors and our high-speed future in front of us, we are proposing a new approach to change in this text (the C6 Change Leadership Framework), as a means to mitigate ā€œchange fatigue.ā€
CHAPTER 2
Context
The Speed of Now
Turbulence is occurring at a blistering pace, leaving many businesses unprepared and vulnerable to the chaos it brings.
ā€”Kotler and Caslione (2009)
The world is changing all around us at an increasing rate and does not appear to be slowing down. The 2020/21 pandemic has added to the pace and complexity of change. That said, change has been increasing in pace for more than 50 years. Kelley (2016) noted that in the last 50 years the average lifespan of a S&P 500 company has dropped from 61 years to 18 years. It took the automobile 90 years to reach 90 percent of U.S. households but only 20 years for the mobile phone to attain the same level of utilization.
Garelli (2016) noted a study finding from McKinsey:
A recent study by McKinsey found that the average lifespan of companies listed in Standard & Poorā€™s 500 was 61 years in 1958. Today, it is less than 18 years. McKinsey believes that, in 2027, 75% of the companies currently quoted on the S&P 500 will have disappeared.
Garelli goes on to note:
As the life expectancy of companies drops, ours is increasing. Since the beginning of the century, 50% of the children born in advanced economies can expect to leave up to 100 years old. In addition, the retirement age will certainly increase. The new generation, the Millennials, will probably have to work longer and will do a lot of job hopping during their lifetimes.
It will imply more flexibility in the labor market and more mobility for employees. Also, an increasing number of people will work outside the traditional setup of corporate employment.
We are in the throes of an unstable environment, which for now appears will remain the status quo for some time to come. Organizations are struggling to increase business agilityā€”their ability to quickly respond to change, adapt products, services, and processes, and potentially reconfigure themselves to meet customer demands (Hugos 2009; Kotter 2014; Friedman 2016).
This environment has been labeled as one characterized by ā€œVUCAā€ (volatility, uncertainty, complexity, and ambiguity), where the rules and norms of the past no longer create results that organizations and their consumers desire. ā€œVUCAā€ was used by the U.S. Army War College (Stiehm and Townsend 2002) to describe the postā€“Cold War global environment and has been applied to organizational survival (Bennett and Lemoine 2014).
image
Source: SEEDAdvisory (n.d.)
Simon Sinek (2019) describes this environment as an ā€œinfinite gameā€ in his book with the same title. He notes that there are no exact or agreed upon rules, and ā€œwinningā€ is too narrow in perspective. In an infinite game, there is no finish line, but there are infinite time horizons. The primary objective is to keep playing. This speaks to the point that change initiatives should not be treated as events but more appropriately seen as a natural and ongoing daily process. It is a fairly human trait to think that if you solve a problem with an action, that that action will have solved the issue in perpetuity. But as every parent knows, just when you have your newborn in a sleep pattern that you think has stuck, you have to change tactics yet again when only part of that sleep training has stuck. As such, an infinite game, at least for a decade or so.
By its nature, most change is complex, iterative, and politicized (Buchanan 2003).
In times of ceaseless change, organizations that do not adapt, that do not challenge the status quo, are in danger of irrelevancyā€”or worse, extinction. Change is accelerating, uniformity is giving way to diversity, and complexity has become every leaderā€™s biggest concern. As for businesses, globalization and a rapidly evolving workforce is redefining how we think about competence, creativity, productivity, and the structuring of organizations (Cisco 2011).
Kotler and Casilone, in Chaotics (2009), argued for the need to manage differently in what Alan Greenspan referred to as the ā€œage of turbulence.ā€ They noted, ā€œChange is the new status quo, leaving managers without firm ground from which to gaze at the onrushing future as markets, technologies, governments, consumers and products undergo consta...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half-Title Page
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright
  5. Description
  6. Contents
  7. Chapter 1 Introduction
  8. Chapter 2 Context: The Speed of Now
  9. Chapter 3 Change Realities and Dynamics
  10. Chapter 4 Change Models: No Silver Bullets
  11. Chapter 5 Change Fatigueā„¢ Revisited
  12. Chapter 6 Effective Change Agents: Leading Change, the Agile Leader
  13. Chapter 7 The Adaptive Organization
  14. Chapter 8 The Change Mindset
  15. Chapter 9 The Cā¶ Change Leadership Framework
  16. Chapter 10 Bringing It All Together
  17. References
  18. About the Authors
  19. Index
  20. Backcover