Change Risk |
|
What is Change Risk? Most managers would generally accept that most organisations are always in a state of change – the only issues are: how much and how fast?The question is whether the change in your organisation is focused, harnessed and controlled, or is the change that happens to you.It is clear from studies, practice and simple common sense that if you can control change, you are more likely to achieve a beneficial outcome. The critical issue in encapsulating organisational change within a project management framework is to ensure that the integrity of the change is preserved. This means avoiding the view that the project is about a ‘hard change’ (new software, restructure, relocation) and the management of the change process (stakeholders, transition issues, knowledge capture) are peripheral ‘nice-to-haves’. It also means that employing a project management discipline means following guidelines rather than imposing straight-jackets. What options are there for Change Risk Management? Avoidance: Planning change so that is does not impact on high risk business areas, resources, systems, processes and stakeholder groups: easier said than done! Accountability: Ensuring that a designated party (with the resources and capability to do so) accepts accountability for managing the risk. This may be an internal individual or group, or an external specialist agency that will monitor the risk and either recommend or undertake relevant action on your behalf. Alignment: Designing the change and the change process so as to reduce the probability, impact and variety of risks. Identifying Change Risks Below is our checklist list of key risks that, if not attended to, could have the most negative effect on the ability to achieve change goals: 1. Power Wielders - Those in overall command, those that hold the purse strings and any others who are recognised in the organisation as ‘opinion leaders’ must be included in the process. For good or evil, if they speak, people listen. It is much easier to implement the quick, cheap and wrong answer that will need to be mended again in two years time by your successor. The senior players must be committed, not just involved. And they must demonstrate this by changing there own behaviours and talking up the change at every opportunity. WIIFM can include money, loyalty ‘for the company’ and relief ‘it removes my frustration with the old way.’ Stakeholder communications is not just putting regular articles in the staff newsletter, nor is it having a website on the intranet. Your toolset might include these things, but there are two key issues to manage.
Change is always a failure in the middle, so how will your stakeholders keep the faith? The project has one leader, one team, one focus, shared goals, and a common problem solving process to tackle issues as they arise and implement fixes. |
11 Denney Street,Broadmeadow, NSW, 2292
Phone: 1300 933 074
Email: info@partnercorp.com.au
Map and Directions - Click Here
Newcastle, Central Coast, Australia
