Organizational Behavior by Mcshane, S. (8th edition) a summary
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Organizational Behavior
Chapter 15
Organizational changes
Organizations operate as open systems that need to keep pace with ongoing changes in their external environment.
Successful organizations monitor their environments and take appropriate steps to maintain a compatible fit with new external conditions.
Employees in successful companies embrace change as an integral part of organizational life.
Force field analysis: Kurt Lewin’s model of systemwide change that helps change agents diagnose the forces that drive and restrain proposed organizational change.
Stability occurs when the driving and restraining forces are roughly in equilibrium, they are of approximately equal strength in opposite directions.
Resistance to change takes many forms, ranging from over work stoppages to subtle attempts to continue the old ways.
Subtle resistance is more common than overt resistance.
Resistance is a common and natural human response.
Resistance is a form of conflict, but change agents unfortunately sometimes interpret that disagreement as relationship conflict.
Perversely, the change agent’s conflict-oriented response to resistance tends to escalate the conflict, which often generates even stronger resistance to the change initiative.
A more productive approach is to view resistance to change as task conflict.
From the task conflict perspective, resistance is a signal either that the change agent has not sufficiently prepared employees for change or that the change initiative should be altered or improved.
Employees might not feel sufficiently strong urgency to change, or they might feel the change strategy is ill-conceived.
Or they lack confidence to change or believe that change will make them worse of than the current situation.
Resistance is also a form of voice, so discussion potentially improves procedural justice through voice, as well as decision making through involvement.
By redirecting initial forms of resistance into constructive conversations, change agents can increase employee perceptions and feelings of fairness.
Resistance is motivated behavior, it potentially engages people to think about the change strategy and process.
Change agents can harness that motivational force to ultimately strengthen commitment to the change initiative.
Why employees resist change
Six most cited reasons why people resists change:
Unfreezing occurs when the driving forces are stronger than the restraining forces.
This happens by making the driving forces stronger, weakening or removing the restraining forces, or both.
Creating an urgency for change
Developing an urgency for change typically occurs by informing or reminding employees about competitors and changing consumer trends, impending government regulations, and other forms of turbulence in the external environment.
Creating an urgency for change without external forces
Leaders often need to begin the change before problems come knocking at the company’s door.
Creating an urgency for change when the organization is ahead of the competition requires a lot of persuasive influence that helps employees visualize future competitive threats and environmental shifts.
Employees may see this strategy as manipulative, which produces cynicism about change and undermines trust in the change agent.
The urgency for change can also develop through the leader’s vision of a more appealing future.
When the vision connects to employee values and needs, it can be a motivating force for change even when external problems are insignificant.
Reducing the restraining forces
Change agents need to address each of the sources of resistance.
Six of the main strategies:
Strategy | When applied | Problems |
Communication | When employees don’t feel an urgency for change Don’t know how the change will affect them Resist change due to a fear of the unknown. | Time-consuming and potentially costly |
Learning | When employees need to break old routines and adopt new role patterns
Change-efficacy | Time-consuming Potentially costly Some employees might not be able to learn the new skills |
Employee involvement | When the change effort needs more employee commitment Some employees need to protect their self-worth And/or employee ideas would improve decisions about the change strategy | Very time consuming Might lead to conflict and poor decisions if employees’ interest are incompatible with organizational needs |
Stress management | When communication, training, and involvement do not sufficiently ease employee worries | Time-consuming and potentially expensive. Some methods may not reduce stress for all employees |
Negotiation | When employees will clearly lose something of value from the change and would not otherwise support the new conditions. When the company must change quickly | May be expensive, particularly if other employees want to negotiate their support. Tends to produce compliance but not commitment to the change |
Coercion
| When other strategies are ineffective The company needs to change quickly | Can lead to subtler forms of resistance Long-term antagonism with the change agent. |
Refreezing the desired conditions
Unfreezing and changing behavior won’t produce lasting change.
People are creatures of habit, so they easily slip back into past patterns.
Leaders need to refreeze the new behaviors by realigning organizational systems and team dynamics with the desired changes.
Lewin’s force field analysis overlooks four other ingredients in effective change processes:
Transformational leadership and change
Effective change requires one or more change champions who apply the elements of transformational leadership.
A key element of leading change is a strategic vision.
Coalitions, social networks, and change
Change agents cannot lead the initiative alone.
Guiding coalition: several people with a similar degree of commitment to the change.
Membership extends beyond the executive team.
The guiding coalition is sometimes formed from a special task force that initially investigates the opportunities for change.
Members of the guiding coalition should be influence leaders. They should be highly respected by peers in their area of the organization.
But they alone may not generate sufficient commitment to change throughout the company’s workforce.
Social networks and viral change
A guiding coalition is a formally structured group, whereas change also occurs more informally through social networks.
To some extent, coalition members support the change process by feeding into these networks.
Social networks contribute to organizational change whether or not the change agent has a formal coalition.
Social networks are not easily controlled.
Some change agents have tapped into social networks to build a groundswell of support for a change initiative. Viral change.
In organizations, social networks represent the channels through which news and opinions about change initiatives and transmitted.
Pilot projects and diffusion of change
Many companies introduce change through a pilot project.
This cautious approach tests the effectiveness of the change as well as the strategies to gain employee support for the change without the enormous costs and risks of company-wide initiatives.
Design thinking: a human-centered, solution-focused creative process that applies both intuition and analytical thinking to clarify problems and generate innovative solutions.
How do we diffuse the pilot project’s change to other parts of the organization?
Four leading approaches:
Action research approach
Action research: a problem-focused change process that combines action orientation (changing attitudes and behavior) and research orientation (testing theory through data collection and analysis).
Main phases of action research:
Appreciative inquiry approach
Appreciative inquiry: an organizational change strategy that directs the group’s attention away from its own problems and focuses participants on the group’s potential and positive elements.
Positive organizational behavior: a perspective of organizational behavior that focuses on building positive qualities and traits within individuals or institutions as opposed to focusing on what is wrong with them.
Appreciative inquiry principles
Appreciative inquiry embraces five key principles
The four-D model of appreciative inquiry
Four stages
Depends on participant’s ability to let go of the problem-oriented approach.
Requires leaders who are willing to accept appreciative inquiry’s less structured process.
Large group intervention approach
Large group interventions adopt a ‘whole system’s perspective of change process.
They view organizations as open systems and assume that change will be more successful when as many employees and other stakeholders as possible associated with the organizational system are included in the process.
Large group interventions adopt a future-oriented positive focus.
But, involving so many people invariably limits the opportunity to contribute and increases the risk that a few people will dominate the process.
Parallel learning structure approach
Parallel learning structure: a highly participative social structure developed alongside the formal hierarchy and composed of people across organizational levels who apply the action research model to produce meaningful organizational change.
Some organizational change practices face ethical issues
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This is a summary of the book Organizational Behavior by Mcshane, S (8th edition). This book is about psychology at the workplace. It contains for instance ways to increase employee satisfaction and workplace dynamics. The book is used in the course 'Labor and and
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