Successfully implement and embed change in your business
If you're considering a small change to your business or a company-wide change, it's common to hit road blocks and obstacles. Bringing the team in across your organisation will help to build support and drive momentum. #growthmindset #smallbiz
Eight ways to successfully implement and embed change in your business
Research by Kotter International found that more than 70% of change projects within a business fail. Why is this?
The research findings show that employee engagement is the biggest factor. Whether it is a small change to one or two processes or a company-wide change, it's common for staff to feel intimidated by it.
So what can you do for successful implementation of change? We’ve outlined eight progressive steps.
1. Get the team onboard
communicate the benefits with the whole company to build support and create momentum behind the changes you are making.
Start honest discussions with your team and give dynamic and convincing reasons to get people talking and thinking about the change.
Demonstrate what would happen if you didn’t make the change and what else it could affect in the future.
Request support from customers in this instance who may love the product, outside stakeholders and others known in the industry to strengthen your argument.
Kotter suggests that 75 percent of a company's management needs to support a change in order to succeed.
2. Form a Powerful Coalition from all areas of the business
Share the support you have from all areas in the business (not just the leadership team). Visible support from key people within the organisation will bring others on board and create a sense of urgency. Give these people key roles in the change process to help progress it.
Once formed, your "change coalition" needs to work as a team, continuing to build urgency and momentum around the need for change.
What you can do:
Identify the influencers in your organisation for this change, as well as your key stakeholders.
Ensure that you have a good mix of people from different levels within your firm.
Ask for a commitment from these key people.
Work on team building within your change coalition.
3. Create a Vision for Change
Create an overall vision that helps everyone understand why you're asking them to do something.
What you can do:
Determine the values that are central to the change.
Develop a short summary (one or two sentences) that captures what you "see" as the future of your organisation.
Create a strategy to execute that vision.
Ensure that your team leading the change are all on the same page.
4. Communicate the Vision
Embed this in everything you do so it is not lost in the day-to-day operation but a powerful part of this.
What you can do:
Talk often about vision and change.
Make sure the vision is applied to all aspects of the operations. For example, ensure it’s added to the training and induction program and is encapsulated into the relevant job descriptions and evaluations.
Address people’s concerns and anxieties about it openly and honestly.
Lead by example.
5. Remove Obstacles
Check constantly for processes and structures that need to adjust to allow you to execute the vision and help the change move forward.
What you can do:
Look at your organisational structure, job descriptions, and performance and compensation systems to ensure they're in line with your vision.
Recognise and reward people for making change happen.
Identify, or hire, change managers whose core role is to deliver the change.
Identify areas or team members that stand in the way of change, and find solutions.
Take action to quickly remove barriers rather than letting them fester.
6. Create Short-Term Wins
Create short-term targets – not just one long-term goal. Each "win" that you produce can further motivate all the staff especially if it’s a big change requiring a longer process and help keep them on task.
What you can do:
Reward people who help you meet the targets.
Look for sure-fire projects that you can implement without help from any strong critics of the change.
Don't choose early targets that are expensive. You want to be able to justify the investment in each project.
7. Build on the Change
keep looking for improvements to the system to ensure the long term goals are achieved.
What you can do:
After every win, analyse what went right, and what needs improving.
Set goals to continue building on the momentum you've achieved.
Develop a culture of continuous improvement.
Keep ideas fresh by bringing in new people to lead the change.
8. Anchor the Changes in Your Culture
Finally, to make any change stick, it should become part of the core of your organisation. Make continuous efforts to ensure that the change is seen in every aspect, giving it a solid place in your organisation. It's also important that your company's leaders continue to support the change. This includes existing staff and new leaders who are brought in.
What you can do:
Talk about progress every chance you get. Tell success stories about the change process, and repeat other stories that you hear.
Include the change ideals and values when hiring and training new staff so it is enforced from the start.
Publicly recognise key members and enablers of the change.
Create plans to replace key leaders of change as they move on. This will help ensure that their legacy is not lost or forgotten.
The principals for this article were taken from Kotter’s 8-Step Program for Leading Change.