Resistance to change may be categorized into three groups of factors (Mabin‚ Forgeson & Green‚ 2001): organizational‚ group and individual. Organizational factors are caused by threats presented by unknown or unwelcome organizational structure and process change and threats induced by the environment inside or outside of the organization. Group cohesiveness and social norms under threat and participation in decision-making not properly attended would trigger resistance to change. Individual factors
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mfl CHANGE w 1 M mBRILLB AND BTBarnOIES Session 4 Planning and implementing change Contents 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 The need for strategy Alternative approaches Process and politics in implementing change Planning and scheduling Towards successful implementation of change ARer you have completed this session you should be able to: appreciate the importance of an implementation strategy in change management recognize when SIS and OD may be inappropriate approaches to planning and managing change
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Page 1 An Unplanned change Cari Spier HCS/587 November 28‚ 2011 Barbara P. Carter Page 2 An Unplanned Change Change is making something different from the way it was. It can be planned or unplanned. Unplanned change can bring about resistance. In the Tales of Woe at Concord Bookshop (Mehegan‚ 2003)‚ resistance was met at full force. The owners of the bookshop made an unplanned change to restructure the management team due to a financial slide. Instead of having three tenured
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Change Management Individual Assignment Individual Assignment: Leadership and Change Management Workplace change‚ due to a sustainable workplace Author: Nasrin Solati Class: Master of Science in Facility management Term: Spring 2013 Deadline: 05 June 2013 © 2013 ZHAW Institute for Facility Management I Change Management Individual Assignment Summary This report bases on a hypothetical organization‚ which is going to apply a change process in whole organization
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went through second-order change. According the National Academy for Academic leadership “Second-order change is deciding – or being forced – to do something significantly or fundamentally different from what we have done before. The process is irreversible: once you begin‚ it is impossible to return to the way you were doing before. Second- order‚ discontinuous change is transformational‚ radical‚ and fundamentally alters the organization at its core. Second- order change entails not only developing
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eyeing a new opportunity tries—and fails—to cram through some sort of major transformation using a change process that worked in the past. But the old ways of setting and implementing strategy are failing us. We can’t keep up with the pace of change‚ let alone get ahead of it. At the same time‚ the stakes— financial‚ social‚ environmental‚ political—are rising. The hierarchical structures and organizational processes we have used for decades to run and improve our enterprises are no longer up to the task
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For this case study I will be using The Cycle of Change (TCC) or otherwise known as the Transtheoretical Model of Change (TTMC) by Prochaska & DiClemente (1983). This theory was originally used to facilitate and understanding process of behavioural change (Horwath & Morrison 2001). Originally used to understand the process of change for people that wanted to stop smoking‚ it is now applied and used with a wide range of issues. For example‚ treatment from a range of genetic concerns‚ domestic abuse
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August 18‚ 2013 Pressures for Change Environmental Pressures for Change Of the environmental pressures for change‚ I believe hyper competition and market decline were the pressures experienced by Intel. The reason I believe this is because in the case study Barrett talked about its rival Micro Devices and how he felt the competitiveness that was among them. In the reading it states‚ “Barrett felt that in this competitive and segmented market‚ Intel needed to be reorganized to make it more
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Key Concepts | Key notions/ ideas/ points | Comments | InertiaWhy is it difficult to change? | To understand why there is organisational inertia and why it is difficult to change‚ it is necessary to first identify them so that they can be individually addressed. This can be done by categorising the inertias identified into ‘socio-technical’‚ ‘cultural’‚ ‘political’ and ‘economical’ with the ‘today’ and ‘tomorrow’ scenarios mapped out for each category. (refer to Appendix A for notes on the various
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Conceptually‚ the change process starts wit awareness of the need for change. An analysis of this situation and the factors that have created it leads to diagnosis of their constructive characteristics and an indication of the direction in which action needs to be taken. Possible courses of action can then be identified and evaluated and a choice made of the preferred action. It is necessary to decide how to get from here to there. Managing change during this transition state is a critical phase
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