PG webinar series 2024_For the organisation or against it? How change agents within organisations make sense of their role and develop the skills they need to manage change.pptx
Presented as part of the Essex Business School (University of Essex, UK) Postgraduate Webinar series in March 2024.
The webinar series showcases the research interests of academics at Essex Business School.
In this presentation I discuss:
- What is organisational change and why do we do it?
- What are the experiences of change leaders who enact change?
- What are the benefits of a change agency approach to change
- How to resolve identity ambiguity
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PG webinar series 2024_For the organisation or against it? How change agents within organisations make sense of their role and develop the skills they need to manage change.pptx
1. For the organisation or against it? How
change agents within organisations make
sense of their role and develop the skills
they need to manage change
PG Webinar Series
Tuesday 12th March 2024
Dr Danielle Tucker
2. Slide
Today’s session
Today’s Session
1. What is organisational change and why do we do
it?
2. What are the experiences of change leaders who
enact change?
3. A change agency approach to change
4. Resolving identity ambiguity
3. Slide
Organisational change occurs when business strategies or
major sections of the business are altered
Common terminology:
• Transformation
• Transition
• Reorganisation
• Restructuring
• Strategic change
Organisational level
What is Organisational Change?
4. Slide
What examples of organisational change have
you encountered?
Exercise
Answer in the chat
5. Slide
Internal Drivers External drivers
• Improving performance • Compliance
• New technology • Technology
• Globalisation
• Changing attitudes of
employees
• Changing attitudes of
customers
• Changes in business
processes
• Mergers and acquisitions
• Legislation
(Mullins, 2010)
Why do organisations change?
6. Slide
A daunting task?
A thought experiment…
Imagine you work for an NHS Hospital Trust. Your organization
is building a new hospital, it will have state of the art equipment
and facilities but the way care is provided will be fundamentally
different. All your colleagues are nervous about the changes –
how will they care for patients and find their way in this new
building? There is so much to learn and so much at stake!
You are a great people-person and your employer asks you to
become a ‘change champion’ – your job is to convince
colleagues to embrace the changes and help them through the
process. They are looking to you for support.
How do you feel?
6
Answer in the chat
8. Slide
We studied the experiences of change agents – defined as any
employees who are tasked with leading the implementation of
organisational change.
Many different types of change agents exist in organisations,
many supporting change in conjunction with other full time
roles.
We studied individuals where leading change was a formalised
part of their role
- Posts were short term secondment (part time or full time) to work on a particular project or an
acknowledged part of a permanent role.
- Our subjects came from a variety of roles and backgrounds (clinical or administrative).
- For most it was their first experience of leadership.
Change Agents Leading Change
Examples of role titles:
• Divisional Project Manager
• Programme Manager
• Project Officer
• Director of Integrated
Solutions
• Project Analyst
• Change Co-Ordinator
• Subject Matter Expert
• Operational lead
• Project Manager
9. Slide
Lived Experience of Change Leadership
Experiences of Change Leaders
• High level of task complexity, with lots of unanticipated work
• Wide variety of (unrealistic) role expectations from within the
organisation
• Poorly defined roles and/or lack of job description. Often a new role with
no handover or precedent.
• Leadership without defined reporting structures or lines of accountability
• Burden of work intensification as change evolves or escalates during
implementation
• A context where priorities and resources for change were ever-
changing.
• Organisational misconception and oversimplification of the use of
change agents
9
10. Slide
Implications of poor change leadership support
Implications
For Organisations
• Change project is more likely to fail or
not realise its potential
• Change leader enacts change which is
not aligned with organisational strategy
or values
• Lost opportunity for change and
innovation skills to be cultivated
internally – upskilling the workforce to
support future change and innovation
• Loss of trained and talented individuals
from the organisation
For Change Leaders
• Stress, poor motivation
• Decreased sense of worth
• Disconnection from work
• Loss of relationships
• Feeling undervalued
• Career paralysis
12. Slide
A Change Agency Approach
A change agency approach places an emphasis on
understanding the experience of change agents and
identifying what training and other requirements are
needed for the role to be effective
Change Agent/ Change Maker – someone who becomes
the architect and builder of change in organizations
To make change is to construct, create or concoct
something new from the resources available.
My new book provides an education syllabus based
on a change agency approach
12
13. Slide
A Change Agency Approach
More strategic development of change management roles in organization
Training and support for change managers focused on personal reflection
and coping strategies
Peer support and/or coaching to support change managers throughout
their journey
Personal effectiveness and career development support for change
managers
14. Slide
Individual outcomes
Organisational outcomes
Change manager wellbeing
- Less stress and burnout
Organisational capability for
future change
Better
understanding of
change manager
role (by senior
leaders)
Less change agent
role ambiguity
Change managers
proactively engage
with their role (job
crafting)
Better able to recruit
the right people to be
change managers
Change manager feels they have
more alignment between career
goals and current role
A Change
Agency
Approach to
Change
Provide more effective training
for change managers that is
more specific to their needs
More effective group leadership
of change managers – providing
appropriate level of ongoing
support
Change manager develops
unique skills, expertise that
can support future change
projects
Current change project runs
smoothly
Change manager develops
unique skills, expertise that
can support their
employability
16. Slide
Identity ambiguity
How identity ambiguity affects change managers
• Too much space to define their role – especially where the role is unclear, undecided, or unrealistic
• Confusion on how to situate oneself within the organisation (especially where change activities sit outside
normal reporting structures)
• Representing different stakeholders where this creates conflict. Discovering hidden and/or shifting
expectations of others. Managing political agendas.
• Need to compartmentalise or integrate different identities (who am I at work?)
• Influence of relationships brought from a previous role (relationships dismantled or disrupted)
• Struggle to understand their contribution (e.g. public speaking, strategy development) and the associated
questioning of self-efficacy
• Difficulty in articulating accomplishments or success criteria
• Much of the work that change managers do is hidden from other organisational actors who only see the
end product.
17. Slide
Job Crafting
We examined how change managers crafted
their job to manage the identity tensions that
they experienced
• Job crafting – a self-initiated process of work design to
create alignment between personal needs, goals, skills
and the characteristics of one’s job
• A proactive behavioural strategy, resulting from reflection,
to manage the demands and resources an individual has
at work (Bakker et al, 2012; Dabak and Mulla, 2022)
17
18. Slide
Job Crafting
Job crafting strategies for identity work
• We have identified six different job crafting tactics that change agents often use to self-define
their role, regain confidence and control over their work, establish boundaries and establish
realistic performance expectations for themselves and the change project.
• These tactics can be consolidated into three strategies used to stabilise change leader’s
identity and role conflict in a way that is agile, self-affirming and compassionate.
Strategy (i): Seeking alternative ways
of thinking and behaving
• Tactic 1. Distinguishing self from the
organisation
• Tactic 2. Striving for the greater
good
Strategy (ii): Seeking to align self with
job role
• Tactic 3. Expanding self to
accommodate role ambiguity
• Tactic 4. (Re-)establishing social
referents for identity (choosing
subjects for comparison with others)
Strategy (iii): Reframing self as
competent and consolidating self-
esteem
• Tactic 5. Integrating organisational
and own values, success criteria
and goals
• Tactic 6. Understanding new values
20. Slide
Recommendations for leadership development
Recommendations for leadership development programmes
1. There is a need for increased focus on the personal and career
development of health and care employees promoted or seconded into
change leadership roles.
2. Most leadership training focuses on organisational development and
change management. However, change leaders would also benefit from
opportunities for reflection on their own role in a change process and their
own personal coping mechanisms.
20
21. Any
questions?
essex.ac.uk
If you enjoyed the subject matter of this
lecture and are considering postgraduate
study, you might like:
MSc Organisational Change Management
MSc Human Resource Management