Friday, December 14, 2018

Personal Change Reflection

For this assignment, create a new blog post that relates to the personal change blog you've been updating. It's time to reflect on your own experience with change. The post should be about how this experience will help you lead organizational change. Be specific. Consider the following questions when writing:
  1. What are your key takeaways from the experience?
  2. To what extent were you successful?
  3. How would it help you manage personal and organizational change in the future?
  4. What lessons can you use when leading organizational change?

1. Change is hard. Old habits die hard. The first few days of giving up soda were a struggle! Once I got past the headaches from the lack of caffiene, I was on the upswing. The more water I drank, the more I liked how it made me feel. I didn't feel weighted down. Actually, the more water I drank, the better I felt. I had more energy, was able to get through my day just as productively as I was when drinking soda, and in the end, felt as if I was doing something good for my health. 

2. I have been fairly succesful. I've dropped some weight even when I wasn't expecting it. Even when taking a trip for work, dealing with the multiple holiday dinners and functions, I have managed to keep on track with maintaining a healthier diet and giving up things in the diet that aren't so good for me. Thanks to feeling better overall, I've made time for getting myself to workout on a more regular basis with more plans going forward. I am scheduled for some followup labs in January with my doctor so I am curious to see if things have improved in my bloodwork. 

3. If I can manage myself and get myself back on track after having let myself go for quite a while, I really feel that I can handle anything thrown my way. Too often, we put ourselves on the back burner and deal with everyone else first. I learned that we must take time and put ourselves first if we expect to be able to tackle everything thrown at us effectively. 

4. When looking at the idea of leading organizational change, I think the biggest takeaway from this would be the first step to change is to start. If we continually procrastinate and put things off, then we will never get anywhere. Change is truly inevitable and we must embrace it. Too often, we deny that change needs to take place. We get comfortable and complacent in our work and many times like keeping the status quo. Unfortunately in today’s world, this just doesn’t cut it. If a company hopes to keep afloat, thrive, and succeed, change is certainly inevitable and leaders must realize when change is necessary. Learning to accept change and find ways to effectively deal with have been a fantastic resource through this course.

Sunday, December 9, 2018

Leading Change

Your assignment is to create a blog post about leading change. Review the reading called "Organizational Behavior Reading: Leading Organizational Change" by Ryan Raffaelli. Select 3 points made in the reading that really resonate with you. For each, write:
1.     What the part your selected says.
2.     Why it is meaningful to you.
3.     An example (real or hypothetical) of how or when this would apply.

Point 1: Why Is Change Needed?
In this section of the text, the need for change is made explicit to the reader. Leaders tend to find themselves tasked with the role of initiating change at some point along their journey with an organization. In order to determine why the change is needed leaders have to determine what type of gap exists, performance or opportunity. Performance gaps bring change that can improve current practices while opportunity gaps create new routines and practices for the future. Looking deeper in the reading, Raffaelli explains that performance gaps are derived from the difference between what is expected and the actual performance taking place. Leaders must assess the organization’s current performance based on strategy, objectives, and vision to determine if this gap exists. More often than not these are noticed when the leadership compares the performance of his or her organization to that of the competition and realize there is a shortfall in efficiency.

Too often, we deny that change needs to take place. We get comfortable and complacent in our work and many times like keeping the status quo. Unfortunately in today’s world, this just doesn’t cut it. If a company hopes to keep afloat, thrive, and succeed, change is certainly inevitable and leaders must realize when change is necessary.

Looking at my current role as STEM Outreach Director, I came on board as the director at a time when there were some definite performance gaps in the program I was placed in charge of operating. We were utilizing outdated technology and were not bringing the latest and greatest in STEM professional development to teachers and schools. From that, we had lost one of our biggest districts because we just were not providing what their teachers needed. This was a definite wake up call. I made some changes in our practices after consulting with my team that involved changing the process we implemented as well as some of the practices we were utilizing and the results have been amazing. We have added additional districts to the project and even acquired more funding than ever before to keep the project in operation and promote it’s growth. I wish I would have had this reading when I came on board as the director as it could have certainly given me greater insight into the work that I had facing me.

Point 2: Bold Strokes and Long Marches
Implementation tactics define what leaders must do in terms of initiating the rollout of a change. The research discussed in this section on the idea of bold strokes and long marches helps explain that leaders must be the ones to determine the approach to be taken to outline the process of any change intiative. In looking at the concept of Bold Strokes, this process involves sending a message from the top of the organization to the rest of those involved. These certainly command attention and leaders often frame their bold strokes as the big strategic decisions that have to be made for an organization in the process of change. In the text examples of buying another company or developing a  new product or technology by allocating resources to that work were provided. In terms of looking at the idea of long marches, these are sustained programs and packages that can really alter the structure or culture of the organization. This process creates a more durable condition to support change in behavior and enable employee buy-in.

As a leader, I really see the use for both of these tactics in initiating change. Sometimes it might be more useful for a leader to approach change through bold strokes because it can really help establish a new vision or approach while at the same time it might be supported with a series of long march type decisions that help set the change across the entire organization. It is crucial that leaders know when to use the tactics laid out in this text and how to use them. That is why this resonated so much with me and the work I do.

In my current work, it was a bold stroke for me to require a big change in the technology we used to deliver teacher resources during professional development. Going from a CD that we passed out at each session to a cloud-based repository that was accessed by teachers via a link handed to them on a piece of paper was big in our world. Teachers had long expected something tangible when they came to our trainings but at the same time many of them were requesting new and improved technology. Luckily my entire team was on board and it has been a highly beneficial change that has really improved the work we are doing.

Point 3: Overcoming Obstacles
This short, yet powerful section of the text, thoroughly explains how and why the leader must manage expectations appropriately in order to avoid two very common mistakes, declaring victory or admitting defeat too soon and ignoring change fatigue. In looking at the concept of declaring victory or admitting defeat too soon, leaders must be cautious so as to not declare victory or celebrate successes too soon. I was always told not to count your chickens before they hatch and this is so important as a leader. We must have our ducks in a row before we celebrate any accomplishments. On the other hand, if we throw in the towel too soon because of a setback or challenge we are faced with, we might very well be missing out on opportunities that are just around the corner. While change can be exciting and provide great, new possibilities, fatigue can also set in over time. “When the new wears off” is an old adage we have heard time and time again when thinking about how to deal with obstacles and approaches to change. It takes a very delicate balance between managing the time and effort invested into the change so that fatigue marked by the decline in performance and increase in resistance follow. That process of creating small wins does well to move this process along as a steady pace.

No one likes change when it's something that's done to us. But change that we think up or embrace on our own is different—that kind of change we never grow tired of. Everyone can think of a time when they have celebrated a win too quickly or given up just before the victory was in sight. If not that, we’ve certainly experienced that process of change fatigue at some point in life. In a new job, a new relationship, or entering new phases in life such as marriage, birth of children, etc, change causes obstacles that we must figure out how to overcome. Personally, I know that I have had to learn to manage change and “go with the flow” in several things I’ve dealt with. Having an open mind and a growth mindset have certainly helped me be able to recognize and overcome obstacles as I have faced them.

This concept of looking at change fatigue has been seen over and over again. Senior administrators or leaders announce yet another major change in how the company does business and direct middle managers to implement it by rolling out the bells and whistles with binders, videos, pamphlets, trainings, etc.  Months later, if anyone even bothers to check, little or nothing has happened. The leaders have moved on to another “urgent” project. In my work as a teacher this is no different. We are often tasked with implementing the lastest and greatest approach to teaching just to go on six months down the road with nothing changing due to the lack of followup or buy in.

Other readings I found on this concept of change fatigue and how leaders can help employees deal with it:

REFERENCES:

Raffaelli, Ryan. "Organizational Behavior Reading: Leading Organizational Change." (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site.Core Curriculum Readings Series. Boston, MA: Harvard Business Publishing 8324, 2017