Kotter's 8 Step Model of Change: 1. Creating An Urgency: This Can Be Done in The Following Ways
Kotter's 8 Step Model of Change: 1. Creating An Urgency: This Can Be Done in The Following Ways
Kotter's 8 Step Model of Change: 1. Creating An Urgency: This Can Be Done in The Following Ways
John Kotter (1996), a Harvard Business School Professor and a renowned change expert, in his book “Leading
Change”, introduced 8 Step Model of Change which he developed on the basis of research of 100 organizations
which were going through a process of change.
The 8 steps in the process of change include: creating a sense of urgency, forming powerful guiding coalitions,
developing a vision and a strategy, communicating the vision, removing obstacles and empowering employees for
action, creating short-term wins, consolidating gains and strengthening change by anchoring change in the culture.
Kotter’s 8 step model can be explained with the help of the illustration given below:
Identifying the effective change leaders in your organizations and also the key stakeholders,
requesting their involvement and commitment towards the entire process.
Form a powerful change coalition who would be working as a team.
Identify the weak areas in the coalition teams and ensure that the team involves many influential
people from various cross functional departments and working in different levels in the company.
3. Developing a Vision and a Strategy
This can be achieved by:
Determining the core values, defining the ultimate vision and the strategies for realizing a change in
an organization.
Ensure that the change leaders can describe the vision effectively and in a manner that people can
easily understand and follow.
4. Communicating the Vision
Communicate the change in the vision very often powerfully and convincingly. Connect the vision with
all the crucial aspects like performance reviews, training, etc.
Handle the concerns and issues of people honestly and with involvement.
5. Removing Obstacles
Ensure that the organizational processes and structure are in place and aligned with the overall
organizational vision.
Continuously check for barriers or people who are resisting change. Implement proactive actions to
remove the obstacles involved in the process of change.
Reward people for endorsing change and supporting in the process.
6. Creating Short-Term Wins
By creating short term wins early in the change process, you can give a feel of victory in the early
stages of change.
Create many short term targets instead of one long-term goal, which are achievable and less
expensive and have lesser possibilities of failure.
Reward the contributions of people who are involved in meeting the targets.
7. Consolidating Gains
Achieve continuous improvement by analysing the success stories individually and improving from
those individual experiences.
8. Anchoring Change in the Corporate Culture
Discuss the successful stories related to change initiatives on every given opportunity.
Ensure that the change becomes an integral part in your organizational culture and is visible in every
organizational aspect.
Ensure that the support of the existing company leaders as well as the new leaders continue to
extend their support towards the change.