Saturday, October 23, 2021

How to Make Change Stick


How to Make Change Stick
Takeaways
“If you’re going to win, and keep on winning, you have to recognize that change is continuous and is never done.” Jack Welch
How to Make Change Stick
What it Means
A change initiative is an effort to permanently implement new behaviors and set a strong foundation for the next project. With every change initiative (large or small), the potential exists that the organization will revert back to old habits after the initiative is completed. Effective change leaders take proactive steps to ensure their initiatives endure the test of time.
Why it Matters
·         Effective change initiatives must be designed to institute sustainable improvement
·         Letting an organization revert to old habits nullifies all the work done by the project team
·         Well-executed change initiatives make it easy for an organization to embrace new behaviors
Good business leaders create a vision, articulate the vision, passionately own the vision, and relentlessly drive it to completion.” Jack Welch
Action Plan
How to Make Change Stick
Independent of the size of your change initiative, there is always the risk that the organization will soon forget the new processes and revert to the old habits. The activities that follow will:
·         Help you “mistake proof” your new processes, supporting sustainable change
·         Show you how to analyze external drivers that support or restrain your changes
Your Starting Point
This activity invites you to think about your organization’s current level of support for change, which will help you implement sustainable solutions. Learning from what worked and didn’t work in past initiatives can increase your chances for sustainable, long-term change.
1.       Is my organization used to embracing change and modifying behaviors?


2.       Have past change initiatives taken hold and endured the test of time?


3.       Thinking about the more successful initiatives, how did they make change sustainable?


4.       What are the key risks that could undermine the implemented changes?


Quick Wins for Managing Change
Every organization has a different culture, so you will need to adapt your approach based on what works in your environment. Some organizations are very top-down driven, so enlisting key leaders to drive the initiative long-term is the right approach. Other organizations tend to rely on clearly documented Standard Operating Procedures, so focusing on documentation may be the best option there.
The following four simple activities can be a great support as you begin to plan how to make your change initiative stick. The goal is to clearly understand what challenges (and temptations) the people closest to the change face, so that you can implement permanent solutions.
1.       Gather a cross-functional group of people that will execute the new processes after the change initiative is complete:
·         What are the biggest challenges they face?
·         Which part of the new process presents the steepest learning curve?
·         Are there activities from the old processes that people would like to revert to?
2.       Following the brainstorming session, review their notes and create a prioritized list of key risks to the continued use of the new process.
3.       Start brainstorming ways you can mitigate or eliminate these risks, so that the new process has a stronger likelihood of being permanently implemented. You will likely recognize two or three major ones, focus on these first.
4.       Reconvene your cross-functional group to agree on how and when to implement these initial solutions.
Reinforcing the New Behaviors
In this module I describe “burning the boats,” which is a guaranteed way to prevent the organization from reverting to old habits. This tactic is all about eliminating the “former way,” so that users simply cannot go back to old habits even if they chose to. For example, if you are migrating from an old IT system to a new one, you can just switch off access to the old system.
Effective change leaders invest time to understand key causes that could contribute to the organization reverting back and put in place steps, tools and a support system to avoid that threat.
In many change initiatives, however, the transition is not simply “black and white.” This is where “mistake proofing” can help you. The goal is to redirect the behavior of a user back to a new way. The tactics used for this are the same for all regardless of whether they consciously or unconsciously tried to go back to the old behavior.
The main reason you need to have a disciplined process to manage this is because you cannot be watching over people’s shoulders all the time. It’s human nature to be a creature of habit, so it’s just a matter of time before someone will try to revert back to the old ways. In the next steps, you will find techniques to help you prevent that.
Mistake Proofing
Your goal as a change leader is to ensure the new behaviors you implemented remain in place even after you have on to your next challenge.
There are five ways you can accomplish mistake proofing:
1.      Eliminate temptation
Look at opportunities where a user would be tempted to go back to the old process and try to eliminate those instances. If you have moved the organization from paper records to digital ones, prevent paper files from re-entering the process. You may need to create a new process at the front end to scan incoming paper, so that you immediately convert it to a digital copy.
2.      Remind users about the new way
People can just forget: they return from vacation or they are immersed in their work and all of a sudden they are using the old process again. Keep reminding them about the new way. When driving a car from mainland Europe to the UK (where they drive on the left side of the road), motorists are greeted with multiple signs at each intersection reminding them to “Keep left.” When the new habit takes over, you should not need to remind people something has changed, but for a while at first, you definitely will.
3.      Invest in training
The better that users understand the new process and system, the easier they will switch over. Don’t just limit yourself to classroom training: provide “cheat sheets” or any type of job aide that can help users.
4.      Collect a pipeline of improvements
Don’t just stop with your first improvement. Start collecting immediately a list of incremental improvements to be made. If the organization sees that their input is valued, they will embrace the new way and keep engaged to make it even better.
5.      Collect data and flag variation
Since you know some users WILL revert back to old habits, see if automation can help you collect data and flag as soon as possible variations. The sooner you can correct undesired behavior, the lower the risk to your initiative.
Identifying, Supporting and Restraining Forces
Proactively managing forces that prevent change from sticking is vital for the long-term success of your initiative. As part of any initiative, there will be events and drivers which help support the change and others that will push the organization towards old habits.
Effective Change Agents always stay on top of the forces that are supporting the adoption of the new initiative and proactively manage the forces that are risks of reverting to old behaviors.
One tool to help determine what is supporting new habits and what is driving resistance to change is force-field analysis. This tool has its best use when resistance is being encountered and much of the initiative is complete. The benefit of this analysis is the visual representation of which types of internal and external drivers are supporting or restraining your new model.
For instance, positive customer feedback is a great enabler as an external force. On the other hand, if the initiative was aimed at eliminating paper records and some associates are still maintaining paper files that is an internal restrainer.
To perform this analysis for your initiative, bring your team together and work through this exercise.
·         Divide a chart in half.
·         On the left, have your team list things that are driving change forward.
·         On the right, list things that are holding back or restraining change. Include both internal forces like employee behaviors and actions as well as external forces, such as other projects or customer reactions.
·         Remember to involve the entire team, because what one person might consider an enabler of change, another might consider a restraint of change.
·         Rank the items so you can see what is doing the most to drive change forward and what is doing the most to hold it back.
For those forces restraining change, develop a plan to lessen or eliminate them. Sometimes you just need to tweak a new process or increase the amount of training to mitigate restrainers. The easier you make it for the organization to embrace the new behaviors, the less likely they will revert to old habits.
Game Pages
How to Make Changes Stick
Your Starting Point
Mistake Proofing My New Process
Tactic
My Ideas
1.       Eliminate temptation

2.       Remind users about the new way

3.       Invest in training

4.       Collect a pipeline of improvements

5.       Collect data and flag variation


Force Field Analysis
                        Enablers                                                                      Restrainers








 
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