Organizational Change Plan-Part I Janet Yapor HCS 587 October 6‚ 2010 Perlita Cerilo Organizational Change Plan-Part I The proposed organizational change is designed for the Miami VA Medical Center (MVAMC). The vision of the MVAMC is that of a hospital that provides veterans world-class benefits and services adhering to the highest standards‚ (Department of Veterans Affairs‚ 2010). Therefore‚ to provide and maintain excellence in care‚ it is necessary to improve constantly. Health
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Organizational Change: HP Dyniecia Barnes Keller Graduate School of Management HR587 Managing Organizational Change Prof. Alberta Lloyd Aug 21‚ 2011 Table of Contents Executive Summary 3 Assessment/Diagnosis 4 Analysis of the Change Strategy 4 Results/Outcomes 6 Evaluation of the Effort 8 Conclusion 9 References 11 Executive Summary Assessment/Diagnosis HP is the world’s largest technology company. Their area of expertise and services range from printing‚ personal computer
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Organizational Change When executives and students of management talk about organizational change‚ they mean many different things. Introducing a new enterprise resource planning system in order to coordinate and standardize internal processes is an organizational change. So is shutting down a factory‚ selling off a noncore business‚ or laying off employees. How about introducing a new business model to meet innovative competitors‚ adopting a new pay-for-performance system to motivate individual
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Managing Organizational Change Zaid Mulki AWR‚ 1 Business Administration Spring 2010 Page Contents Abstract 3 1. Introduction 4 2. Definition of Organization Change 5 3. Types of Organizational Change 5 3.1. Strategic Change 5 3.2. Structural Change 6 3.3. Technological Change 7 3.4. Behavioral Change 8 4. Change Process 9 4.1. Kurt Lewin 9 4.2. The Change Implementation Model 10 5. Obstacles to Change. 11 6. Managing Change 12 6.1. Commitment 12 6.2
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The fact and fantasy of organizational culture management: a case study of Greek food retailing Cardiff Business School‚ Cardiff University‚ Colum Drive‚ Cardiff‚ CF10 3EU‚ UK Abstract The management‚ manipulation or interference in organizational culture has become central to many theories and prescriptions of management. However‚ despite frequent prescriptions to manage culture in diverse national contexts‚ little empirical evidence has been forwarded in contexts other than the UK and
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Introduction Organizational change management (OCM) is a framework for managing the effect of new business processes‚ changes in organizational structure or cultural changes within an enterprise. Simply put‚ OCM addresses the people side of change management. Organizations operate in multiple environments (temporal‚ external and internal). The key task is to work with and try to manage them – in Schein’s (1988‚ p.94) words‚ organizations have continually to achieve ‘external adaptation and internal
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Organizational change is not always successful. Identify factors that can cause change initiatives to fail and the five pillars that can cause them to succeed. Highlight an organization that failed to adapt and evaluate which of these factors and pillars were demonstrated by this organization. Review several of your peers’ posts. Discuss any similar or opposing perspectives you have‚ with at least two of your peers. Take care to be professional and polite even if your beliefs or viewpoints differ
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environment that provokes hasty change and with the current environment that add on to the increase in complexity. Within the foundation of the ongoing evolution in the economic‚ it is unquestionably essential for companies to alter the system they are coordinated in terms of technological and social factors. According to Dupuy (2002)‚ organizations have started to adopt changes as part of the main aspect of organizational life since the 1980s. Examples of organizational changes includes the downsizing
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Planned organizational change can be defined in many different ways‚ and characterized on many different levels. The common denominator listed after reviewing two related Internet articles‚ indicates that change cannot take place for "change’s sake"‚ but must be implemented to accomplish a specific goal or task. Another common statement states that change must also be accepted and embraced before the desired outcome is achieved. Planned Organizational Change Planned organizational change can be
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Daniel LeBlanc Managing Organizational Change BUS600 Management Communication with Tech Tools Professor Emmanuel Lewis November 16‚ 2009 Organizational change is any action or set of actions resulting in a shift in direction or process that affects the way an organization works. Change can be deliberate and planned by leaders within the organization (i.e.‚ migrating from legacy technology to new improved Internet Protocol infrastructure)‚ or change can originate outside the organization
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