12 common reasons why people resist change in the workplace:
- Loss of Job: In an organizational
setting, any process, technological advancement, systems, or product
change will include streamlining, working smarter, cost reduction,
efficiency, faster turn around times. All these means staff and
managers will resist the changes that result in their roles being eliminated
or reduced. From their perspective, your change is harmful to their
position in the organization! The satisfaction that employees have with
their job determines a portion of their reactions during times of change.
Employees who experience a high degree of job satisfaction are better able
to weather periods of change. They are more positive in their approach to
their work and can see change as an organizational necessity. Unhappy
employees, on the other hand, view change as just another annoyance in a
long list of complaints. Chances are, whatever the change, any disgruntled
employees will view it as having a negative impact on both the
organization and them personally.
- Bad Communication Strategy: The way in which the change
process is communicated to employees within the organization is a
critical factor in determining their reactions. If you can’t communicate
what, why, how, when, who and what success will look like or how success
is going to be measured, then, expect resistance! If employees do not
understand the need for change, why ask for a buy in? Especially from
those who strongly believe the current way of doing things works well…and
has done for the past twenty-five years! When upper management plans
and communicates early and effectively with all employees and explains the
reasoning behind the change, employees are much more likely to buy into
it. Changes that are mandated with little or no communication, on the
other hand, are often poorly received, since employees may feel that the
change is being shoved down their throats. When it comes to change
management there’s no such thing as too much communication. If there is no
immediate information to communicate during change, telling employees that
there is no update regarding the ongoing change is communication! Don’t
just keep quiet; this is also the time to maintain an open door policy
regardless of where you are placed in the organisation. Be present and
available for questioning. Miscommunication is if you communicate
insignificant or insensitive information. You can’t communicate too much
significant, substantial information.
- Shock and Fear of the Unknown: Employees’ responses to
organizational change can range from fear and panic to enthusiastic
support. During periods of change, some employees may feel the need to
cling to the past because it was a more secure, predictable time. If what
they did in the past worked well for them, they may resist changing their
behaviour out of fear that they will not achieve as much in the future.
The less the organization knows about the change and its impact on them,
the more fearful they become. Leading change also requires not springing
surprises on people! The organisation needs to be prepared for the change.
In the absence of continuing a two-way communication with leadership,
grapevine rumours will fill the void and sabotage any change effort.
- Loss of Control: Familiar routines help
employees develop a sense of control over their work environment. Being
asked to change the way they operate may make employees feel powerless and
confused. People are more likely to understand and implement changes when
they feel they have some form of control. Keeping the doors of
communication open and soliciting input, support and help from employees
lets them know that their contributions matter. Involve them, elicit their
feedback, let them volunteer for participatory roles in the change and all
of these in turn, will help give them a sense of control during periods of
change.
- Lack of Competence: This is a fear that is
difficult for employees to admit openly. But sometimes, change in
organizations necessitates changes in skills, and some people will feel
that they won’t be able to make the transition well. Therefore, the only
way for them to try and survive is to kick against the change. Some
employees are just hesitant to try new routines, so they express an
unwillingness to learn anything new. They say things like, “I already know
all that I need to know to do the job,” or “I am good at what I do why
rock the boat.” Resisting employees who have already made up their minds
that the change won’t work or who are reluctant to learn something new will
impede the organization’s growth and adaptation to change. Frankly, they
also hinder their own personal growth and development.
- Poor Timing: Change must
be introduced when there are no other major initiatives going on.
Sometimes it is not what a leader does, but it is how, when and why she or
he does it that creates resistance to change! Undue resistance can occur
because changes are introduced in an insensitive manner or at an
awkward time. For any significant organizational change effort to
be effective, organizational leadership must come out of their
mahogany panelled air conditioned offices, roll up their sleeves, and
prepare a comprehensive change strategy from the onset to address
barriers. If they can’t do it, then, they should delegate or hire a change
management agent to design an effective change management strategy with
the help of some of the organisations managers.
- Lack of Reward: There is a common
business saying that managers get what they reward. Organizational
employees will resist change when they do not see anything in it for them
in terms of rewards. Without ‘WIIFM’ or a reward, there is no motivation
to support the change over the long run. This often means that
organizational reward systems must be altered to support the change that
management wants to implement. The reward does not have to always be major
or costly.
- Office Politics: Every organisation has
its own share of in-house politics. So, some employees resist change as a
political strategy to “show or prove” that the change decision is wrong.
They may also resist showing that the person leading the change is not up
to the task. These employees are committed to seeing the change effort
fail.
- Loss of Support System: Employees already in
their comfort zones, working with the managers they get along with, and
who are operating within predictable routines know their support system
will back them up during challenging times. Changing the organizational
structures may shake their confidence in their support system. They may
worry about working for a new supervisor, in a new team, or on unfamiliar
projects because they fear that if they try and fail, there will be no one
there to support them.
- Former Change Experience: Our attitudes about
change are partly determined by the way we have experienced change in the
past. For instance, if in your organisation, you have handled change badly
in the past, the employees will have good reasons for rebelling. Again, in
personal lives, how employee’s families reacted to change during their early
years is going to affect the way they view change. Employees, who live in
the same house, shop at the same stores, visit the same social club, and
drive the same routes daily throughout their formative years may have more
difficulty dealing with change than people who grew up in several
different neighbourhoods. In the same way, those who become accustomed to
associating with people who have the same values and ethics may find it
more difficult to appreciate the diversity of today’s work force. An employee
who was raised in a family that viewed change as a challenge to
be tackled will probably have a more optimistic outlook about change
than a person who was raised in a home that considered change an unwanted
experience that upset the predictable family routine.
- Empathy and Peer Pressure: Whether we are
introverted or extroverted, we are still social creatures. Organizational
stakeholders will resist change to protect the interests of a group, team
friends, and colleagues. It is normal for employees to resist change to
protect their co-workers. This could be purely because they sympathise
with their friends because of the change that has been thrusts at
them. Managers too will resist change to protect their work groups
or friends. All these behaviours can sabotage the success of any change.
- Lack of trust and support: Successful organizational
change does not occur in a climate of mistrust. Trust, involves faith in
the intentions and behaviour of others. In organizations where there is a
high degree of trust and each individual employee is treated with
respect and dignity, there is less resistance to change. Mutual mistrust
will be the bane of an otherwise well planned change initiative. If an
organisation is seen as being untrustworthy as demonstrated sometime
in the past, so why would any employee trust such an organisation? Any
sweeping changes on the job can cause employees to fear for their roles in
the organisation. For this reason, a well planned outplacement support
should be in place to mange and assist employees. Employees resist
change because they are worried that they may not find another job easily
and quickly.
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