The document provides 10 tips for leading organizational transformation. Tip 1 emphasizes digging deep to identify the root cause of issues rather than just solving surface problems. Tip 2 stresses setting a clear scope for the transformation by defining what can and cannot be influenced. Tip 3 advises paying equal attention to organizational performance and health during transformation. The tips provide guidance for navigating the human dynamics and ensuring success of large-scale organizational change initiatives.
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10 tips for transformation
1. 10TipsforTransformation
The words ‘change’ and ‘transformation’ are often
used interchangeably, but they mean different
things in the context of organisations.
This article explores the difference between
‘change’ and ‘transformation’ in an organisational
context, and then identifies
10 Tips for Transformation.
2. Introduction
At the other end of the continuum is
‘transformation’ a radical departure
from the current ways of doing things,
and creating something new. The status
quo is disrupted through things like; a
strategic review; a new business model;
new structures across the organisation;
or working in different ways across the
whole organisation. Transformation is
often global in nature and has
significant cross-functional impact.
Transformation requires an inner shift in
people’s values and behaviours. There
is a high emotional impact because of
the need to unlearn years of habits,
which can be challenging and
uncomfortable.
Transition is a key part of transformation.
People go through individual transitions
and don’t move at the same pace as a
transformation schedule. People don’t
all transition at the same time, so be
prepared for transformation to take
longer than you think or want.
The 10 Tips for Transformation offer
guidance and support for leaders who
are currently leading and navigating
transformation in their organisation.
“I believe there’s a continuum along which the
notions of ‘change’ and ‘transformation’ sit.”
At one end there are change activities,
things that improve what’s already there.
This is sometimes referred to as
‘continuous improvement’ and requires
minimal behaviour change. These
changes are more transactional in
nature and include things like introducing
a new process or operational practice
within a team or department. If this
introduction is managed well then the
change will have little emotional impact
on people.
An example of change activity:
A client wanted to improve how
their sales and production teams
worked together to improve delivery
target performance and better
manage customers’ expectations.
A series of workshops and
conversations between the two
teams resulted in improved internal
communication so that customer
information was shared more freely
between departments. The sales
team referred to the production
team before delivery commitments
were made; and the customer was
introduced to a key contact in
production so they could be given
regular updates on the progress of
their orders through the factory.
The changes in operational practice
were relatively minor and introduced
in an inclusive way, with the teams
generating the ideas themselves, so
the emotional impact of the change
was minimal.
An example of
transformation:
A pharmaceutical company
needed to respond to a
government-led
transformation of the
healthcare sector. Significant
changes in how it would be
able to access its customers
triggered the need for a
strategic review of the UK&I
business model. The resulting
transformation saw significant
structural, cultural, and
business operating changes
across the whole of the UK&I
business
3. Gwen Stirling
Founder + Director
10TipsforTransformation
These ten tips, posed as questions, are taken from my 16
years of experience as an OD (Organisation
Development) consultant, and feature snippets of wisdom
from talented colleagues and clients I’ve worked with.
Too often senior leaders fail to look externally and leave
transformation initiatives until it's almost too late. Then they
want to rush forward and don’t give sufficient time to
identifying the real issue and having clear scope-setting
conversations; they ignore the human dynamics of
participation and engagement; and their visible
endorsement often disappears once things have started.
1. Have you dug deep enough to get to the root cause of your issue?
2. What’s the size and shape of the scoping frame?
3. Are you paying equal a@enAon to organisaAonal performance AND health?
4. What are your guiding principles underpinning the transformaAon?
5. Where’s the development opportunity for your high potenAals?
6. Where’s the balance between top down and bo@om up approaches?
7. How can you widen the circle of involvement for those impacted?
8. How skilled are your leaders at transformaAonal conversaAons?
9. What’s the rhythm of your transformaAon?
10. How fixated are you with organisaAonal structure charts?
4. Many change initiatives fail
because not enough time
and attention is given to
identifying the real issue.
Often the root cause of
issues is systemic, so it can
be valuable to spend time
seeing the interconnectivity
within the organisation and
testing internally held
assumptions about the
external market, your
strategy, culture, and the
quality of leadership.
Getting clear about the real
issue facing the business can
prevent you from solving the
wrong problem really well.
A working session attended
by more than the ‘usual
suspects’ facilitated by an
external consultant will
stimulate thinking. Invest in
someone who can provoke
and amplify difference,
disrupt normal patterns of
thinking, bring the reality of
the outside world into the
organisation, and assist you
with collective sense
making, insight, and clarity
about framing the issue you
are trying to solve. This may
end up being framed as a
series of questions you want
answered.
1. Have you dug deep enough to get
to the root cause of your issue?
5. This scope setting
conversation is critical
when you’re moving away
from traditional ‘top down’
approaches to
transformation (when a
small group of senior
leaders decide what the
transformation needs to
be, how it will be done,
and communicates
through a series of
‘cascading’ initiatives to
the rest of the
organisation).
Setting a clear scoping
frame enables those that
get involved to be clear
about what’s fixed (they
can’t influence or change)
and what’s open (things
they can influence, shape
and take ownership of)
A client used the powerful metaphor of ‘Painting The
Future’ to set the frame for their strategic review. Each
question to be answered was framed as an artist’s
canvas with a Canvas Lead heading up the team of
artists. Each Canvas Lead was drawn from the
emerging talent pool, and a Gallery Curator (project
manager) led the overall programme. The MD was the
art buyer who saw all the canvases in an art exhibition
of recommendations at the end of the project and then
decided which ones he would ‘buy’.
Each canvas was clearly scoped with the Steering
Committee sponsor (the size and shape of the frame
indicated their remit and freedom to act) and each
Canvas Lead had full artistic license to use different
paints and brushes to create their canvas of
recommendations (the resources, people and budget).
2. What’s the size and shape of the
scoping frame?
6. Transformation programmes
commonly focus exclusively on
financial and business
performance and returns;
delivering stakeholder/
shareholder value, reducing
operating costs, increasing
ROCE (Return on Capital
Employed), and achieving the
cost benefits a transformation
programme will bring.
Research from McKinsey (Keller
and Price, 2011) discovered
those organisations that were
more successful with
transformation paid equal
attention to the health of the
organisation as well as the
performance. Health isn’t the
‘soft’ stuff often labelled as HR
initiatives; organisational health
is the ability to align, be agile
and responsive, to execute and
renew faster than the
competition to sustain
exceptional performance. It
includes core capabilities such
as leadership, external
orientation and attention to
culture, mindsets, and
behaviours.
The research shows that 50% of
any organisation’s long-term
success is driven by its health,
and executives focusing on
both performance and health
rated their transformation results
as 3x more successful than just
focusing on performance
alone.
Creating transformation
measures and indicators that
encompass performance and
health will keep your
transformation on track to
success.
3. Are you paying equal a@enAon to
organisaAonal performance AND
health?
7. Having five or six
appropriate guiding
principles about how the
work will be carried out
provides a compass for
the work. This can be
useful when things get
tricky and the scope
starts to shift. Guiding
principles may include:
• Accepting the process
is relational and that it
gives the chance to
build relationships
• Always being aligned
with the overall
question/scope of
transformation
• Involving as many
impacted people as
possible from all levels
of the organisation to
seek co-creation and
collaboration
• Having a rapid cycle of
experimenting, testing
and adjusting new
ideas
• Letting leaders lead
and giving people
freedom to act within
the defined scope
• Regularly reconnecting
to share learning
• Building internal
capability to reduce
dependency on
external consultants
4. What are your guiding principles
underpinning the transformaAon?
8. Organisations are increasingly
using business transformation as
an opportunity to accelerate the
development of future leaders
and build internal capability in
transformation and organisation
development approaches.
This can be done by identifying
the people who are most critical
and who represent the future
leadership of the business.
Use your talent process for initial
nominations before refining skills
and attributes needed to create
a diverse group who bring
different thinking and experiences
to your transformation agenda.
‘Canvas Leads’, ‘Changemakers’, ‘Change Champions’, and ‘Cultural Café
Barista’ are some of the many titles given to internal teams who have key roles
in transformation programmes.
Experienced external OD practitioners give personalised individual and team
support through OD Consultancy, ‘just in time’ OD Capability Building, and OD
Shadow Coaching.
Action learning approaches use ‘live’ issues to build organisational learning
and problem solving skills whilst the transformation programme unfolds
5. Where’s the development
opportunity for your high potenAals?
This group will be central to
your transformation
programme; the business-
critical senior leaders form a
steering group and sponsor
different workstreams; and
the talent pool will be
stretched and developed
‘real time’ by taking key roles
and leading different
aspects of the
transformation.
9. Large-scale change is difficult
and involves top down
direction balanced with
bottom up participation. This is
one area where it can be tricky
to get the balance right. Know
what’s top down and know
what’s bottom up and drive
both separately.
Senior leaders rationally
understand the benefits of
involving people in
transformation yet struggle to
put that into practice to
generate genuine
engagement through
participation. Often this is
given lip service by ‘town hall
meetings’ and ‘roadshows’
where people are asked for
their reactions and input into
something that has already
been decided.
If you truly believe you have
the ‘right’ answer and that your
people have nothing to add
then don’t follow a
participative approach. By
‘going through the motions of
engagement’ (pretending you
genuinely want to hear what
people think, and then ignoring
them by doing what you had
already decided to do) you’ll
do more damage to your own
reputation and engagement
scores than if you were honest
about setting direction and
telling people what you want
them to do.
Senior leaders tell me they’re
afraid they’ll lose control and
have to do whatever their
teams suggest to show that
they’ve listened and taken
things on board. It doesn’t
have to be like that if:
• You set a clear frame for the
conversation (what’s up for
discussion/influence and
what isn’t),
• You are open to being
shaped and influenced by
what people say,
• You listen and show you have
listened,
• You share how decisions will
be made
People will genuinely share
their insights, contribute their
ideas, and will understand that
you still hold the final decision
making responsibility and
accountability.
6. Where’s the balance between top
down and bo@om up approaches?
10. Paying attention to the human
dynamics of transformation can
help you avoid becoming one
of the 70% of transformation
programmes not achieving its
intended impact. The
significant human dynamics are
employees being resistant to
change, and management
behaviour not being supportive
to change.
Engagement is the key fuel of
transformation; it can be
generated by involving those
impacted by or needing to
implement the transformation,
and can reduce resistance.
Although, resistance is often
about people’s loss, and that
needs to be listened to.
Engagement is the big factor
that decides whether
transformation will be successful
or not. Generating
engagement involves:
• Widening the circle of
involvement, everyone’s
voice counts and everyone
wants to make a difference
• Working systemically to
connect people to each
other, bringing representative
parts of the whole system
together to share different
perspectives, collectively
sense make, generate ideas,
and move to action
• Working in large groups to
build engagement and
accelerate change
• Going slow to go fast’ - going
slowly to start with to help
people ‘get it’ and
contribute, then the
implementation will happen
faster. Although don’t forget
to slow down to check how
things are really going as the
transformation progresses.
Some wisdom on engagement
from OD academic/
practitioners that underpin this:
• People will support what they
help to create (Weisbord)
• People don’t resist change,
they resist being changed
(Beckhard)
7. How can you widen the circle of
involvement for those impacted?
11. Leaders have a key role to play in transformational conversations and can be
multipliers of these types of conversations. Leadership is inherently relational and
people seek to belong, relate to, follow, and make sense of things with others.
Leaders can purposefully guide the way towards transformation by setting
examples of how they behave through their day-to-day interactions; by role
modelling desired behaviours and mind-sets; and by enlisting help from
influential employees at all levels to mirror these conversations and behaviours
across the organisation.
“What you do is so loud; I can’t hear what
you’re saying”
Ralph Emerson
A dialogue-based approach to changing the organisation by changing
conversations (what gets talked about, where conversations happen, and how
conversations take place) generates energy and commitment whilst
introducing new habits, routines and ways of working during transformation. In
this way change and transformation happens one conversation at a time.
Organisations are made up of series of conversational and behavioural
interactions that people have everyday. We relate to each other, multiple
times, in multiple ways, every day and are shaped by, and shape others,
through these interactions and conversations. Used well, these can result in the
creation and adoption of new behaviours necessary for transformation.
8. How skilled are your leaders at
transformaAonal conversaAons?
12. A transformation programme will generate a pace and momentum
of its own. This gets accelerated when some of the suggested
approaches to engagement from this article get adopted. A
rhythm can help to shape and sustain momentum and can be built
into the fabric and structure of a programme from the outset.
Some ways to do this include:
• Regular communication - don’t wait until everything is finalised
before you communicate, share where you are and when you
anticipate having more information or a clearer picture. People
feel anxious because they don’t know what’s going on. If there’s
no information then human nature takes over and speculation
starts, resulting in things being made up based on rumours and
hearsay.
• Create and stick to a pattern of communication – use a range of
media to communicate, communicate, and communicate
again
• Use regular pulse checks to test out people’s reactions and
responses to what’s going on. Publish a ‘word cloud’ to track
progress from 3 quick questions (good and bad) and make visible
adjustments
• Supporting the Transition – so people feel safe to explore the
impact of what’s happening during the transformation
• Be clear about what’s staying the same and what’s
changing
• Test readiness for change against the change impacts
• Develop change capability skills in leaders to support
emotional responses to the shifts that are taking place
• Build organisational resilience and adaptability
• Create space (physically and emotionally) for conversations
to happen
Monthly Steering Group + Quarterly ‘Change Champion’ and
‘Change Ambassador’ meetings were introduced to set the
rhythm and cadence for transformation in a global telecoms
company. This not only provided an underlying rhythm to the
transformation it also became a great platform for the teams to
share their stories of successes, failure, learning, and work
collaboratively to generate solutions to common issues.
9. What’s the rhythm of your
transformaAon?
13. Transformation isn’t complete
when you’ve got the new
organisation structure chart in
place. On the contrary, that’s
when it really starts. It’s easy to
be seduced by a nice new
organisation chart that can be
captured on a single page; it’s
all logical and rational in neat
boxes and lines.
However, what makes a
transformation successful is the
accompanying change in
behaviour and ways of working
that go alongside new
processes and structures, in
other words, the culture.
Without a change to the
culture then a restructure won’t
succeed, as culture is the glue
that holds structures together.
At best, short-term
performance improvements
last a while then the informal
relationships and deeply held
cultural patterns, habits, and
ways of relating short cut and
bypass many systems and
processes that structure charts
set up.
Culture change takes longer
than anyone anticipates, or
wants, so it often gets put into
the ‘too hard’ box.
10. How fixated are you with
organisaAonal structure charts?
14. I’d love to hear how you get on and hear
your stories of transformation.
Please get in touch...
Gwen Stirling
Founder + Director
Tel:07850 678595
theseedsoftransformation@gmail.com
All of the preceding points in this article are designed to
help support the cultural shifts needed for a successful
transformation, although it’s not a pick and mix
approach.
Be conscious and deliberate about exclusion and
inclusion as all ten are systemically connected.