Organizational Change

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The American Community Schools of Athens

Organizational Change Stefanos Gialamas, Ph.D. Director


Not much happens without a dream. And for something great to happen, there must be a great dream. Behind every great achievement is a dreamer of great dreams. Much more than a dreamer is required to bring it to reality; but the dream must be there first. ---Robert Greenleaf, Servant Leadership---


3i Dynamic Model of

Organizational Change LEADERHIP (Vision)

influence

EXTERNAL CONDITIONS

influence

influence

ORGANIZATIONAL

STRUCTURE


LEADERSHIP PHILOSOPHY Leadership as a Partnership with Bounded Flexibility.

VISION ACS Athens becomes a premiere jk-12, International Institution embracing the American educational philosophy, principles and values


ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE

Three Schools The office of academic and student affairs The Optimum Match Learning Center The office of Athletic Affairs The office of enrollment management The office for administrative services The registrar The Library


EXTERNAL CONDITIONS

Demographic changes Social, and Cultural changes Political, and Economic Changes Technological advancement Globalization Competition from other private institutions Government rules and Regulations


Challenges

Enrollment Management Curriculum, Instruction and Assessment Student Success Student Services Faculty Recruiting, training and development Functional Areas Academic Leaders Facilities and Technology Resources


The 3i D Model

3-way influence Dynamic Model of Leadership „

The 3i Dynamic Model of Leadership posits that there is a dynamic, 3-way influence, between the Leader, the Environment, and the Followers


3i Dynamic Model of Leadership (Hilentzaris & Gialamas)

LEADER

influence

ENVIRONMENT

influence

influence

FOLLOWERS


What makes up the leader?

Traits Needs Behaviors Expertise Knowledge Associate influence Effects from the Environment Effects from Followers Experiences


What makes up the Environment?

Organization culture, structure, mission, vision Economic setting Social setting Political setting Legal setting Current trends Technology Information Competition


What makes up the followers?

Traits Needs Perceptions- what can they ask for? Role model alliances Aspirations for future behaviors Effects from environment Effects from associates Effects from leadership Experiences Expertise Knowledge


The Leader and the Vision

The leader in order to lead, has to first “dream”, establish the vision, know where he/she wants to go

The leader after establishing the vision, needs to be continuously scanning the environment and the followers, to sense, understand and decide which strategies will be more effective in moving the organization in the right direction, towards the vision


VISION

LEADER

STRATEGY ENVIRONMENT

FOLLOWERS


Understanding the status quo Set of routines= comfort zones/baseline behaviors Set of routines =organizational culture „

„

Set of routines are our comfort zone/baseline behavior- at the personal level Set of routines are the organization’s culture- at the organizational level


How our comfort zones are perpetuated into baseline behavior

Current Comfort Zone

Encounter New data

Confirming Data

Baseline Behavior

Comfortable routines allow us not to test everything we do all the time, but also constrain us and inhibit our thinking about trying new things


How most people deal with disconfirming data Hurt Or Pain Current Comfort Zone

New Data

DisConfirming Data

Deny Distort Discount Ignore

Baseline Behavior

Dis-confirming data is a challenge to our self-concept because it says that what we used to do doesn’t work anymore Takes us out of our comfort zone It can be scary, threatening, intimidating


The General change process James G. Clawson, Darden Graduate School of Business, University of Virginia Confirmation

Experiment

New Data

New Baseline Behavior Dis-confirming data

Search for alternatives Hurt Or Pain

Enthusiasm Engagement Learning

Current Comfort Zone

New Data

DisConfirming Data

Deny Distort Discount Ignore

C h a n g e F r o m b a s e li n e

New Baseline Behavior


The role of outside help (leader, consultant, friend) in managing change „

„ „

I

Assessing and presenting the dis-confirming data Assistance in identifying alternatives Interpreting the data


Where Leaders (L) Can Affect the Change Process James G. Clawson, Darden Graduate School of Business, University of Virginia Confirmation

New Baseline Behavior

L Experiment

New Data

Dis-confirming data

L Search for alternatives Hurt Or Pain

L Enthusiasm Engagement Learning

L Current Comfort Zone

New Data

DisConfirming Data

L

L

Deny Distort Discount Ignore

C h a n g e F r o m b a s e li n e

Baseline Behavior

If you understand this process, you can have a great impact on change ! ! !


Leading the change process and managing change steps ¾

Given the possible points of leader influence in the change process, and that the leader has established the vision, we can list certain steps in managing change

Identifying what needs to be changed (knowing the disconfirming data)

Building a team that will lead the change

Designing and managing change experiments

Recognizing progress towards the vision and reinforcing effective behavior


Roles in the change process

Change Leader- initiates change Change Agent- actually causes change Change Manager-day-to-day responsibility Change Model-exemplifies change Changee- person who is being asked to change


TYPICAL CHANGE CYCLE

Complacency

Turbulence

Resistance

Small Wins

Consolidation

New Baseline


The four P’s of change

Purpose Picture Plan Part

Mission Vision Strategy Employee

why we are here where do we want to go how are we going to get there what is my role in achieving the vision


The MIT change management skill set

Persuasive communication Participation Use of expectations Role modeling Using extrinsic rewards Making structural and organizational changes Coercing The MIT team also argues that efforts fail because we fail to see resistance to change-instead of enforcing one view why we are changing as an organization, allow and encourage diverse perceptions to change…


John Kotter’s Model of Change Harvard School of Business

Create a sense of urgency Create a guiding coalition Create a clear vision and strategy Overcommunicate Reorganize to remove barriers to change Celebrate short-term wins Consolidate little wins into initiatives Incorporate changes into the culture


It’s not the critic who counts. It’s not the man who points where the grown man stumbles, or how the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who actually is in the arena, who strives violently, who errs and comes up short again and again, who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, and spends himself in a worthy cause, who if he wins knows the triumph of high achievement, but who if he fails, fails while daring greatly, so his place will never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat. -----Theodore Roosevelt, 26th President of the United States---

EXCELLENCE IS A JOURNEY NOT A DESTINATION


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