Organizations age, and grow seeking specific goals, while the organization constructs and reconstructs a number of these organizations develop negative habits, and processes adapting to changing circumstances. History and today’s society has recognized that change is necessary to meet the ever-changing needs of the individuals and the environment. Today changes are necessary to retain a competitive lead, or factors based on the economy. Change has never been an easy process as resistance is always present, with impediments existing at all levels from the organization as a whole down to individual staff members. The responsibility lies with the senior managers to recognize the source and build a plan to remedy the resistance before it …show more content…
Some individuals resist change for multiple reasons, and to add complexity, the stated reason hides a more real personal reason. Initially the individuals experience denial, then realize that they cannot ignore the change(s), and other feelings surface; such as anger, apprehension, frustration, and the feeling of defenselessness. Individuals will either negatively accept the change with complacency or resignation, or accept the change positively with enthusiasm for the new change(s). If any individual is caught in a stage, leaders must offer reinforcement, and permitting the individual space as the stage is worked through, and listen with empathy (“Resistance to change”, n.d.).. The proposed organizational change may influence the work habits developed by individuals and bad habits are “hard to break”, but the bad habits have to be broken for the advancement of the organization. The organizational change will bring individuals a feeling of insecurity and can reveal itself in increased employee turnover and absenteeism and individuals may take an extreme measure to avert changes from occurring (Akin, Dunford, & Palmer, 2006). Then there are groups within organizations may resist change, as groups tend to develop shared behaviors, and change may possibly alter the group cultural dynamics disrupting
Many types of risk are created – risk to the project, to the organization, to the employees involved and to the individuals supporting the change.
43-45). Top-down change process provides prescription that has only been developed by top managers and given to lower cadre employees down the ranks to consume without their input. According to Bovey & Hede (2001, p. 540) resistance occurs at the individual level, where employees are motivated by psychological factors to change that include resentment, frustration, low motivation and morale, fear, and feelings of failure. At the same time, earlier publication by Yilmaz & Kilicoglu (2013, pp. 17-18) identified four factors that motivate employees to resist changes in the organisation: employees focusing on self- interests as opposed to those of the organisation, having inadequate understanding of
Many people may resist change because they fear they will lose their jobs, status or position. It may be because they do not fully understand the purpose of change, or they may have a different perspective on the change than their management. “Individuals, groups, and organizations must be motivated to change. But if people perceive no performance gap or if they consider the gap unimportant, they will not have this motivation. Moreover, they will resist changes that others try to introduce,” Bateman and Zeithaml explained. Many times change for people at work
Resistance to change is an expected reaction of human nature. We are not accustomed to change, as it is possible to lead to failure; however, there are also ways to manage the resistance within the company.
Change is constant in both our professional and our private lives. Our children grow up taking for granted things like powerful personal computers that we could not envision at their ages. The idea that human beings naturally resist change is deeply embedded in our thinking about change. Our language, our assumptions, and our mental models about change all seem to imply that something in our natures leads us to resist change. However, it is easy to find examples of human beings, from childhood on through old age, actively seeking out change of all sorts. Human beings do not necessarily resist change automatically; however, many people do resist being changed, i.e., having changes imposed on them.
Week 3, the lecture on Managing Change describes organizational changes that occur when a company makes a shift from its current state to some preferred future state. Managing organizational change is the process of planning and implementing change in organizations in such a way as to decrease employee resistance and cost to the organization while concurrently expanding the effectiveness of the change effort. Today's business environment requires companies to undergo changes almost constantly if they are to remain competitive. Students of organizational change identify areas of change in order to analyze them. A manager trying to implement a change, no matter how small, should expect to encounter some resistance from within the organization.
The purpose of this paper is to discuss organizational change and the management of that change. I will talk about the different drivers of change, the factors a leader needs to weigh to implement change effectively, the various resistances a leader may encounter while trying to implement change, and how various leadership styles will effect the realization of change. I will also discuss the knowledge I have gained through the completion of this assignment and how I think it might affect the way I manage change in my workplace.
However, in my opinion this is not entirely true, although some of the changes organizations have experienced in the last decade are a product of changes and
Introducing organisational change is often hard, the main reasons for that can be variation in perceptions of the employees, fear of disruption or failure and underlining the right approach to apply change. Then even if the change in a specific organisation is projected successfully there is still lot to be done to manage it in an appropriate way (Oakland, 2007).
Employees who feel pushed out of their comfort zone may also resist change, due to the unfamiliarity of new implications or managers. The fear of uncertainties due to the lack of communication can also lead to resistance to change on an individual level. If employees are not informed of the needs of the change then the fear of the unknown can cause resistance.
According to Palmer, Dunford, and Akin (2009) there are six different approaches to managing resistance to change which are, situational, let nature take its course, thought self-leadership, creative counters, tinkering, kludging, and pacing approach, and finally the power of resistance approach. While all of these different methods or approaches for dealing with change have positives and negatives, some are better than others. For example, Kotter and Schlesinger’s situational method is great in that it recognizes some situations need to be treated differently than others. However, they suggest that manipulation could be used and while they explain the dangers of this approach, its application is very limited and the rewards don’t outweigh the risks.
People often resist change based on fear of the unknown, fear of loss, fear of failure, disruption of interpersonal
To identify the key elements of the resistanceto change described in this situation, one may make use of the six Change Approaches of Kotter and Schlesinger.[1]The model prevents, minimizes or descreases resistance to change in organizations. According to Kotter and Schlesinger (1979), there are four reasons that why people resist change, three of which are applicable to this case:
Many companies emphasize a culture of continuous improvement. While never being satisfied with the status quo can drive
Resistance to change is one of the biggest barriers that organizations face in their efforts to implement organizational change. This greatly hampers the uptake of new technologies, new ways of doing work and even progress of organizations. Reviewing on this, the British Journal of