|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Much of the literature and advice on implementing business change focuses on knowing where you are going and making sure that you understand and communicate a consistent vision of the future. Indeed, I have looked at the importance of this in an earlier article in this series. This month's article, however, looks at the past and its often under-estimated importance in implementing change.
Clean sheets and blue skies
Business change projects tend to begin with a "visioning exercise", to determine where the organisation is going and what its objectives are. The output of this exercise is used as a guide to determine the changes that need to be made. Much is made of "starting with a clean sheet" or the clichéd "blue-sky thinking".
This approach has the benefit of allowing more radical changes to be made, facilitating (consultant cliché overload warning!) "thinking outside of the box" in an environment where "there are no sacred cows".
It is true that the proposed changes need to be freed from the constraints of the past, however there is far too much accumulated experience and knowledge in the existing processes to be ignored.
Experience and knowledge
Every view of the processes of a business is conceptualised, usually very highly so. The real processes that ensure that the job is carried out are largely informal and fill in all the gaps around any formalised procedures that are in place. These informal processes exist as a result of the cumulative experience and knowledge of the employees carrying them out. Every time minor problems occur, these informal processes are tweaked to ensure that the job gets done.
This knowledge and experience is not captured anywhere and is not even in the heads of the management team - it exists only in the heads of the employees involved in the process.
To start a change project without capturing this knowledge and experience is asking for trouble, either through getting it wrong or through disillusionment of the employees who see the proposed changes as being quite abstract to their day-to-day jobs.
Babies and bathwater
Any business going through a change project has usually been in business for some time. It is highly unlikely that they have always done everything wrong (otherwise they would not be here to be looking at a change project) or that the change involves an entirely new industry where none of this experience is relevant.
In the main they are likely to be getting most, if not all, of the basics right. To start with a "clean sheet" in this environment can be catastrophic. They are quite likely to "throw the baby out with the bathwater".
By this I mean that in addressing a particular desired change, they create more problems than they solve by replacing all of the things they used to do well, with new processes that pay no heed to the cumulative knowledge and experience held in the existing ones.
Physical and logical
At Feechan Consulting we use a method called PISO® (Process Improvement for Strategic Objectives) which was developed at the University of Sunderland. PISO® gets round this problem by first of all allowing the employees to map out their informal processes using a very flexible diagramming technique. The employees then take this "physical" view of their existing processes and remove all of the physical constraints, e.g. departments, documents, etc. leaving a "logical" view of the underlying processes to which the proposed changes are made. The final step involves these same employees re-introducing physical constraints to implement the proposed solution.
This approach captures the cumulative knowledge and experience held in the existing processes but by then removing the physical constraints and making the changes in a "logical" environment it allows for the degree of radical change possible in a "blue-sky" approach. You can find out more about PISO® at www.feechan.co.uk.
Glen Feechan is Chief Executive of Feechan Consulting Ltd (http://www.feechan.co.uk), a business consultancy specialising in business process improvement training and consultancy. Email Glen at glen@feechan.co.uk.
Glen is also the editor (and regular contributor) of Changing Business ezine (sign up at http://www.feechan.co.uk).

I personally struggle with the term 'managing people' - because I firmly believe that people cannot be managed ? only processes and systems can. How many times... Read More
Few Decision makers see the link between between creativity and innovation management, as performed by MBA's in firms, and creative endeavours such as screenwriting. In fact, there... Read More
You know the drill - the ridiculous deadlines, the relentless barrage of email, voicemail, phone calls, all those "got a minute" interruptions, the constant worrying that one... Read More
I have been an entrepreneur for over twenty years and have absolutely embraced information that would help maintain a well managed and profitable business. We have been... Read More
PERMISSION TO REPUBLISH: This article may be republished in newsletters and on web sites provided attribution is provided to the author, and it appears with the included... Read More
Bad news.Your senior vice-president, your marketing director or your accounting department head has decided to retire, move to Okinawa or start his own business??and you're left staring,... Read More
Every parent, educator, and manager knows that "Nintendo children"--those born after 1970 and raised on video and computer games, Walkmans, the Internet, etc.--are different. Unfortunately, the Gen-X... Read More
How content and satisfied are American employees? Not very!According to Corinne Maier, a psychotherapist and author of "Bonjour Laziness," corporate cubicle inhabitants are anything but tranquil and... Read More
With deference to Dr. Covey and his very popular Seven Habits of Highly Effective People (all habits that will make us better consultants!), here are eight skills... Read More
You, the Entrepreneur, are 'normally' a type-A individual. One who has little patience with the establishment ~ he or she likes to do it 'his/her way' and... Read More
When you first take over a department, expectations are usually high but operations are sometimes in disarray. The staff is disorganized, goals aren't being met, and hours... Read More
Remember the 80:20 rule? You may not get everything perfectly right, but getting most right will be much, much better than the majority of your competition. These... Read More
People buy from you, offer help, and grant rewards based on trust. Here are ways to increase your success by creating trust. While we do most of... Read More
Service Level Agreements, or "SLA's" are tricky but useful mechanisms for managing the risk of an on-going relationship with IT service providers. Unfortunately, most SLA's that show... Read More
A Nightmare That Really HappenedOver 10 years ago, when I worked as a manager at a major corporation, I received a call from a headhunter about a... Read More
The purpose of any selection process is to discriminate (albeit fairly) among job candidates. Your goal is to select the right people, with the right skills, at... Read More
The world has always been mixed with the rich, the poor and the middle ground. Should we assume that if you make more and more... Read More
In numerous programs I've conducted on performance appraisals, with Human Resource people (who are responsible for developing and implementing programs) and with line managers (who actually conduct... Read More
Transitioning from Vertical Hierarchies to Decentralized / Flatter OrganizationsThe need to restructure for traditional, bureaucratic firms is essential in the fast paced, dynamic business world today. Team-based... Read More
Nearly every office, be it commercial or home-based, may have areas of inefficiency that can be improved upon. We are not talking sales figures or profit margins... Read More
Are you NICE or do you CARE? Most people and most managers want to be nice. After all, it's easier to be nice... Read More
A framework is a way of thinking, a point-of-view, a perspective on something. Here are the 15 frameworks of the successfully self-employed professional. You'll find some of... Read More
Organizations live and die by results. Yet most organizations get a fraction of the results they are capable of. There are many reasons for this: poor strategy,... Read More
"Must Project Managers be technically savvy?" This topic always seems to cause quite a stir. While some believe that all you need to manage a project is... Read More
Wow! You're brilliant! You have a great idea. You've looked at it every possible way to find holes in your logic, fallacies in your assumptions. You know... Read More
When you think of all the things companies have, you do not always consider the knowledge they have. For instance, a company is only as good as... Read More
Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation whilst innovation can be defined as idea selection, development and commercialisation.There are other useful definitions in this... Read More
If you're not satfied with the results of your management training programs, maybe it's because you handle training as a 'one shot' event rather than a process... Read More
What is Six Sigma?Six Sigma is a quality management program that is designed to achieve a "six sigma" level of quality for products. In the mid 1980s,... Read More
Once working and focused in tune with what they do best, your people are freed up to deliver their very best performances. They encourage others to work... Read More
SELECTING THE RIGHT PERSON: To whom should tasks be delegated? Selecting the right subordinate to do the work is an evaluative process, and managers must be able... Read More
On August 3rd/2005, Reuters reported that a German man had colluded with a phone sex operator to defraud his employer's company out of approximately 16,000 Euro or... Read More
Certain processes enhance creative output and others enhance innovative output. Defining creativity as problem identification and idea generation and innovation as idea selection, development and commercialisation, this... Read More
For small business owners, an enthusiastic vision for smooth, steady growth can become nothing more than a mirage once company cash flow problems begin to heat up.... Read More
Employers have become so concerned about seeming "unfair" or worse becoming the victims of lawsuits by unhappy ex-employees that they've stopped requiring minimum standards of employees. This... Read More
Good news spreads quickly News of the invention of the wheel must have traveled in every direction as quickly as horse or camel could run. Those who... Read More
We all see it . . . business markets are trying hard but continue to be flat, easily scared, and "frozen in the headlights," - - -... Read More
This article relates to the Culture & Climate competency, commonly evaluated in employee satisfaction surveys. AlphaMeasure defines climate as the effect an organization has on the employees,... Read More
Don't Let Your Measurements Mislead You There aren't too many words that can strike as much fear and loathing into the hearts of... Read More
According to a study by the Manchester Group, 4 out of 10 new managers fail in the first 18 months! The top 5 reasons cited:Not building partnerships... Read More
Why are people changing jobs so quickly these days?Here are a few reasons why:They have a boring job therefore they feel they are not achieving anything.They have... Read More
"Experience is not what happens to a man; it is what a man does with what happens to him." - Aldous HuxleyEver have one of those supervisors... Read More
Successful enterprise building requires seven elements. These are:1. People, who are the source of the creative ideas which drive the enterprise' s innovations;2. Financial Resources, to fund... Read More
Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation whilst innovation can be defined as idea selection, development and commercialisation.There are distinct processes that enhance problem... Read More
To develop and deliver a great Leadership Talk, you must understand that every Talk has three important parts. (1) Audience Needs. (2) Strong Belief. (3) Action.(1) Audience... Read More
Communication is the basis of who you are as a manager/leader in business. The rules are simple and the good news is that you can learn them... Read More
Tips for Getting the Most From Your Conference Investment All professionals attend conferences, seminars, and trade shows each year. Through my observation and person experience here are... Read More
Since the beginning of the industrial era our world has been facing what some historians call an ongoing "crisis of modernity". As fast as we adjust to... Read More
As you look around your office, is everyone just like you? Probably not. The demographics of the American workforce have changed dramatically over the last 50 years.... Read More
Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation whilst innovation can be defined as idea selection, development and commercialisation. There are other useful definitions, for... Read More
Many kinds of interferences or disturbances can confuse a message. Communication specialists call them ''noise.'' A noise is anything that competes against communication. Obviously, if we want... Read More
Want to hear a fascinating story? Let's sit in at a meeting of the human resources department of a large corporation. A number of human resources specialists... Read More