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  1. \title{Notes on Organizational Change}
  2. \author{Bil Kleb and Bill Wood}
  3. \date{3 February 2004}
  4. \documentclass{tufte-handout}
  5. \usepackage{amsmath}
  6. \usepackage{graphicx}
  7. \graphicspath{{graphics/}}
  8. \pagestyle{empty}
  9. \begin{document}
  10. \maketitle
  11. \newthought{The} Beckhard-Harris-Gleicher model of change%
  12. \sidenote{R. Beckhard and R. Harris, {\it Organizational Transitions},
  13. Addison-Wesley, 1987.}
  14. states successful change will happen if and only if the product of the
  15. level of dissatisfaction with status quo, the appeal of the future
  16. vision, and the clarity of the steps necessary to achieve the vision is
  17. greater than the cost of change, measured in terms of emotion, direct
  18. expenses, and lost opportunity.
  19. \begin{displaymath}
  20. \text{change}
  21. \,\,\iff\,\,
  22. \text{dissatisfaction}\times\text{appeal}\times\text{plan}
  23. \,>\,
  24. \text{cost}
  25. \end{displaymath}
  26. If any factor is low, the chance for successful change is slim, no matter
  27. how compelling the other factors might appear.
  28. Similarly, if the cost is high, change is not worth pursuing.
  29. \newthought{Satir's} model of well managed change%
  30. \sidenote{Virginia M. Satir, John Banmen, Jane Gerber, and Maria Gomori
  31. {\it The Satir Model: Family Therapy and Beyond}, Science and Behavior
  32. Books, 1991.\\
  33. Gerald M. Weinberg, {\it Quality Software Management: Anticipating
  34. Change}, Volume 4, Dorset House, 1997.}
  35. emphasizes all change entails phases of loss and chaos that, if
  36. unanticipated, will cause a retreat to the original status quo.
  37. A change agent initiates the descent into chaos and then a transforming
  38. idea marks the beginning of the ascent to the new status quo.\\[5pt]
  39. \marginnote{Five stage Satir change model diagram \textcopyright\
  40. stevenmsmith.com.}
  41. \includegraphics[scale=0.5]{satir_graph}
  42. \newthought{The} Bateson Double Bind%
  43. \sidenote{Gregory Bateson, D. D. Jackson, J. Haley, and J. H. Weakland,
  44. ``Toward a Theory of Schizophrenia'', {\it Behavioral Science},
  45. Volume 1, pages~251--264, 1956.\\
  46. Gregory Bateson, D. D. Jackson, J. Haley, and J. H. Weakland, ``A Note on
  47. the Double Bind'', {\it Family Process}, volume 2, 1962, pages~154--161.}
  48. is a recipe for schizophrenia that should be avoided in organizational
  49. structures:
  50. \begin{compactenum}
  51. \item Locate a victim who is somehow dependent on you.
  52. \item Issue a primary injunction with a threat of punishment for
  53. non-compliance.
  54. \item Issue a secondary injunction that contradicts the first, again
  55. coupled with the threat of punishment for non-compliance.
  56. \item Make the contradiction undiscussible and provide a threat of
  57. punishment if it is discussed.
  58. \item Make%
  59. \marginnote{Example: a researcher is dependent upon a mandated support
  60. service and the support staff imposes a level of service that is
  61. insufficient.}
  62. the undiscussibility undiscussible, but make appearances
  63. that everything is discussible.
  64. \item Make the victim believe they cannot exit the situation.
  65. \end{compactenum}
  66. \newthought{Block} observes that vision statements are worth something
  67. only to those who make them.%
  68. \sidenote{Peter Block, {\it Stewardship: Choosing Service Over
  69. Self-Interest}, Berrett-Koehler, 1993.}
  70. A vision cannot be handed down from upon high.
  71. Instead, each person or team needs to craft their own vision statement
  72. to have vested ownership and accountability.
  73. One clear requirement, however, is that at each level the vision must be
  74. tied to the one above.
  75. What%
  76. \marginnote{``Simple, clear purpose and principles give rise to complex,
  77. intelligent behavior,'' says Dee Hock, former CEO of Visa
  78. International.
  79. ``Complex rules and regulations give rise to simple, stupid behavior.''}
  80. the core workers do need from those above is a clearly defined,
  81. tangible mission statement that can be used by those at the lowest levels
  82. to make everyday decisions.
  83. NASA's current vision, mission, and goals slides have recently been
  84. cited%
  85. \sidenote{Edward R. Tufte, {\it The Cognitive Style of PowerPoint}, 2nd
  86. ed., Graphics Press, 2003, page~4.}
  87. as embarrassing examples of what not to do:\\[5pt]
  88. \begin{center}
  89. \includegraphics{nasa_vision_sm}
  90. \end{center}
  91. \newthought{Stop} using PowerPoint bullet list slides for strategic
  92. planning, technical communication, or anything but a marketing pitch.
  93. Lou Gerstner simply shut off the overhead projector when he
  94. began to bring IBM back from the brink of bankruptcy in 1992.
  95. He introduced the novel idea of using complete sentences to describe
  96. how goals would be met.%
  97. \sidenote{Louis V. Gerstner, Jr., {\it Who Says Elephants Can't Dance?
  98. Inside IBM's Historic Turnaround}, 2002, page~43.}
  99. Furthermore, 3M has documented%
  100. \sidenote{Gordon Shaw, Robert Brown, and Philip Bromiley, ``Strategic
  101. Stories: How 3M is Rewriting Business Planning,'' {\it Harvard
  102. Business Review}, vol.~76, May-June, 1998, pages~42--44.}
  103. that bullet lists make us intellectually
  104. lazy in three specific ways: (1)~they are too generic---they offer a
  105. series of things to do that could apply to any business, (2)~they leave
  106. critical relationships unspecified, and (3)~they leave critical
  107. assumptions about how the business works unstated.
  108. Our project planning needs to (a)~embrace change, not try
  109. to suppress it and (b)~use PERT charts with uncertainties
  110. instead of CPM diagrams.%
  111. \sidenote{Robert Martin, ``PERT: Precursor to Agility'' in {\it Software
  112. Development}, February 2003.}
  113. Budgets are forecast tools, not specifications.
  114. Costs should only be tracked to the same level of precision as benefits
  115. are tracked, because the cost-to-benefit ratio has an approximate
  116. uncertainty equal to the maximum of the cost and benefit uncertainties.%
  117. \sidenote{Tom DeMarco and Timothy Lister, {\it Waltzing with Bears},
  118. Dorset House, 2003, page~147.}
  119. \end{document}