Change Whisperer – Gail Severini's Blog


The enlightened program manager—partnering with change management
June 13, 2013, 8:08 am
Filed under: - People Change Management

enlightened pmThere are three basic key players in strategy execution: the leader, the program manager and the change management lead.

What if we partnered?

It all starts at the beginning.

The reality in most organizations is that strategy is parsed into Strategic Business Units and/or Divisions and the leader assigns it to a program manager to organize (I am not endorsing this approach―I have other thoughts here). This cascade is often one-directional and the change management lead is buried deep in the project with very little access to the leader.

In transformational change, where ROI depends on people, at all levels, changing the way they think and what they do, change management takes on a heightened priority. These shifts in mindsets and behaviors, and sometime shifts in culture, cannot be dictated or taught. Rather, they must be led. The leader and the change management lead need to collaborate directly to achieve success.

Imagine what might happen if, when program managers resourced a project, they tee-ed up change management (CM) differently? What if:

1.  The program manager identified the senior change management practitioner he or she wanted to work with and introduced the person to the leader this way:

  • “We have identified a terrifically qualified CM practitioner. We just need you to sign off on one criteria: Is she a fit for you?
  • The CM practitioner’s role is to help all of us address the human risks involved in implementing change. The CM practitioner will be our guide in identifying issues and opportunities and in designing interventions. Often the interventions have to come from you to be most effective. The CM practitioner will be your coach, so it is important that you develop a close working relationship.
  • When can I schedule an interview for the two of you?”

2.  The CM practitioner entered the conversation with the leader this way:

  • “I have reviewed the initiative and I have significant related experience….
  • Based on that experience, and acknowledging that every organization and initiative is different, I expect that we will encounter issues such as….
  • This is likely to require activities from you such as….
  • Does this seem likely to you? What other issues do you anticipate?
  • The way I work is this… [spell out what you need to be successful as specifically as you can—have a look at this post from Daryl Conner “Addressing Sponsor-Agent Relationship Issues (free download)”]
  • What else do you need from me? How do you like to work?
  • Do we think we can partner up on this work?”

3.  Once retained, the relationships took on a deep partnering for success, including:

  • Information sharing,
  • Brainstorming,
  • Dynamic and collaborative decision making,
  • Testing and learning cycles, and
  • Feedback loops.

What if you sent this to your favorite program managers and asked them to take it into consideration next time around?

It might open productive conversations and whole new working relationships with them. They may want to negotiate a few parameters in the beginning to get comfortable with this dynamic, but that should be quite achievable.

What are you waiting for? Do you want to be successful? You already know what it takes. Require it.

Related Posts:

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Change Whisperer by www.gailseverini.com is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License.



The fight of our lives: innovation leadership

“America is NOT the greatest country in the world anymore…We are 7th in literacy, 27th in math, 22nd in science, 49th in life expectancy, 178th in infant mortality, 3rd in median household income, 4th in labor force and 4th in exports. We sure used to be. We stood up for what was right…We fought for moral reasons…We built great big things…We reached for the stars…We aspired to intelligence. We didn’t belittle it. It didn’t make us feel inferior…We didn’t scare so easy.” Excerpt from “Newsroom” (R-rated language).

innovation leadership There has been a lot of talk, in the last ten or twenty years, about innovation. And yet, it seems to take forever. Think:

  • -  Manufacturing (the North American auto industry had to face almost certain death before innovating)
  • -  Healthcare (only a sliver of health records are electronically stored)
  • -  Newspaper publishing
  • -  Big box retail (Radio Shack, Circuit City, Best Buy, J.C. Penney)
  • -  And look ahead to pharma (with patents expiring, it remains to be seen whether big pharma can re-invent its business models)
  • continue reading here



“You’re a little loopy when you’re hungry.” Working at the limits of change capacity

You're a little loopy when you're hungry graphicI always laugh when I see the new Snickers commercials—I admit it, I sometimes even rewind them.

They remind me that “You’re not yourself when you’re under the stress of change.”

Have you seen Robin Williams on your projects lately? This is the “Fourth and loopy” commercial where the usually very intense and focused coach is momentarily an incarnation of Robin Williams.

Very funny…because we can relate. continue reading here



Leading strategy? Vicarious rejuvenation. Post 3 of 3

 “The whales sing, not because they have an answer. They sing because they have a song.” —Andrew Stevenson

Endurance cropped with nameThere is no substitute for getting away from it all.

Displacement is a powerful rejuvenation technique.

For six hours on March 14th we forgot everything. We focused only on finding whales. I hope this story will “take you away” for a few minutes. continue reading here



Leading strategy? The three key ingredients for rejuvenation. Post 2 of 3

You can go to heaven if you want. I’d rather stay in Bermuda.” —Mark Twain

Castle IslandThere are, of course, many compelling reasons to take a vacation, but here is one that reconciles with your business objectives.

Go slow to go fast.

To bring our best selves forward to complex and high-pressure strategy, we need clear minds and fulsome spirits.
continue reading here



Leading strategy? The business case for rejuvenation. Post 1 of 3

“Going faster and faster leads either to immediate lift off or eventually to a grinding halt. Slow down to go faster.”—Gail Severini

whale fluke March 14 with citationExecuting strategy is exhausting―both physically and emotionally.

It requires double-timing at very stressful and often long-term initiatives.

Everyone needs to find ways to re-charge, re-fresh, re-juvenate.

continue reading here



Optimizing internal and external change management (presentation and tip sheet)

At the Association of Change Management Professionals’ annual  conference last week, I participated on and moderated a panel of four great practitioners titled “Perks and Perils -  Optimizing Internal & External Change Management”.

ACMP logoWe developed a condensed 10-minute summary that would quickly convey our perspectives on:

  • 1. The current trend toward building in-house change management capabilities
  • 2. The nature of typical internal change management entities (3 models and 2 break through options)
  • 3. The different roles that external practitioners play
  • 4. Scenarios for optimizing internals and externals
  • continue reading here



“Organ rejection” and other reactions to consultants

“The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.”—Aristotle

yin and yang2.pngA couple of years ago I was working with a great team of consultants (externals) on a major strategic change for a national bank.

It wasn’t going well. Two change management practitioners had tried and failed before me to help the project get traction.

In a team meeting, one of the consultants complained, “It’s like organ rejection: they need us, we can help them, but they keep rejecting us.” continue reading here



Breakthrough innovation is uncomfortable―get through it. Post 2

“Be careful what you ask for cause you just might get it.” Refrain from “When I Grow Up” by The Pussycat Dolls

peppersMany organizations are chasing the “innovation” strategy.

We want all of the benefits, don’t we?

We want the shiny design, the “loyalty” of our clients, the envy of our competitors, and the bountiful revenue.

This is “hot” change. Maybe uncomfortably hot.

What price is the organization willing to pay?

What price are you, the leader, willing to pay? How about you, the employee? continue reading here



Breakthrough innovation is “simplicity on the far side of complexity.” Post 1

“I wouldn’t give a fig for simplicity on this side of complexity, but I would give my right arm for the simplicity on the far side of complexity.”―Oliver Wendell Holmes

the new murphy bedWhat does breakthrough innovation look like?

Let’s start with a common reference point. Say, something boring made stunning.

Something you thought you would never use, like, or buy that you suddenly reconsider.

A friend sent me this great video of modular, multi-purpose furniture. “Yawn,” you say? Look again.

continue reading here




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