Posted on June
13, 2012 by keithpounds.com
(The following is another excerpt from my 2008
book “The Psychology of Management.” This excerpt explores how to implement
“change” in today’s organizations. As with other articles in this
series, it will help managers improve organizational performance).
Managers
today should understand that one of the most efficient ways to handle change is
to use three basic steps. These include the steps of unfreezing, changing and
refreezing.
No human or
organizational system will change unless the current way of doing things is
first “unfrozen.” While this a very important process, it actually involves
very simple implementation. It involves “unfreezing” the way employees think
about current processes.
One way of
doing this is by showing employees how your new idea or process will benefit
them, their jobs and the organization. You should show them the negative
aspects of their current ways of doing things. This is a very important step
because it first addresses any “uncertainty avoidance” or “fear of the unknown”
that employees may have.
If you can
show them the benefits of your new ideas or processes, and the negative aspects
of their current ideas and processes, it helps employees see that there is a
benefit “to them.” So, the unfreezing process involves training and “heading
off” restraining forces. The important part here is that restraining forces are
addressed “before” they appear.
The next
step is the actual “change” itself. This step should be self-explanatory as it
involves the actual new way of doing things. This second step will also involve
training, but it will be more aligned with the actual processes: that is, how
to do the new things. Because employees were first taken through the
“unfreezing” process, they will be much more willing and open to learn the new
processes and will help to implement the change.
One of the
main reasons so many change processes fail is because management goes straight
to the change process itself without first taking employees through the unfreezing
stage. As we discussed above, doing so produces increased tension in the
organization.
While
unfreezing is such an important (and easy) process, the time and energy spent
on it is worthless unless we “refreeze” the organization into the new behavior.
This refreezing is out 3rd step in the change process.
It does us
no good if we unfreeze the way our employees think about the way they do
things, and then we implement changes in how they do those things, if we don’t
help to make sure that they continue to do those things or perform those new
processes.
Our concern
here is that without support from management, there is a very good chance that
the organization will go back to “the way we were.” By this we mean that
employees will go back to using the old behaviors and discard the new processes
and ideas.
One good way
to avoid this is to make sure that you, as a manager, recognize and reward
employees when they perform the new behaviors that were implemented during the
change process. This is something that should be planned for even before the
unfreezing stage.
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