HRM & CHANGE MANAGEMENT (BLOG - 9)
Figure
1: HR & Change Management: Beyond the Kotter Model
Harvard
professor John Kotter developed what is probably the most influential model of
change. However, seasoned change management professionals are often
dissatisfied with the model. In this article, we will look at the pros and cons
of the Kotter model. We’ll discuss why it’s become popular, where its
weaknesses lie, and how HR professionals can still use it to manage change in
their organizations.
The
Kotter model
John
Kotter writes beautifully about change. His book Leading Change (1996) should
be on every HR professional’s reading list. Kotter summarizes his approach to
change in a simple eight-step model, which is shown in the diagram below:
Figure
2: KOTTER’S 8 STEP CHANGE MODEL
It’s sensible, easy to understand, and seems to promise a map to guide HR professionals through the dangerous jungle of a change project. It’s one of those models that HR professionals are expected to know. If you are in a meeting and the model comes up, you don’t want to say, “Just a moment, let me Google that”. You want to have a few of the steps in your head.
Notice how the model suggests
that you don’t actually start changing anything until midway through the
project (i.e., Step 5: Empower people to act on vision). That’s a smart
insight; if you try to change things before the organization is ready, then you
will create a lot of resistance that could have been avoided.
Geoff Matthews’ reflections on the Kotter model
Before we start critiquing the Kotter Model, let’s be fair about
it and recognize that many of the problems come from how people use the model.
But let’s look at six flaws that Geoff Matthews, an experienced
practitioner and lecturer on change management, sees in the model:
1. A false sense of urgency
Mathews’ first concern about the Kotter Model is right in the
first step: Create a sense of urgency. This is often framed as the need to
create a burning platform. That colorful idea comes from Daryl Conner, another
change guru and author of the book Managing at the Speed of
Change (1992). The image comes from the true story of men
on an oil platform on the North Sea. They took the extraordinary decision to
jump off the high platform down into the frigid waters of the sea below. What
drove that remarkable action? Well, the oil platform was on fire.
It can be exciting for a manager to try to whip up support for
change by painting a dire picture of what will happen if the change does not
happen right away. However, generating fear also generates stress or even
paralysis. If there were only one change effort every five years or so, that
might be okay. But if change is frequent (and it is), this repeated appeal to
fear grinds people down. It risks burning out the very people you are relying
on to make change successful.
The other downside of whipping up a sense of urgency is that
people will become cynical if it’s overdone. Leaders will lose credibility.
Yes, it may be true that changes to a process may be important. But the message
that the organization will be in trouble if it’s not done this quarter will
simply not be believed.
It might be better to say that the first step is to create
an appropriate sense of urgency. Help people understand why a
change is essential. Explain the priority of this change versus all the other
urgent things employees are being asked to do, and how the organization will
support them in making this change.
2. The implication that the change
process is linear
The model implies that you simply
need to work through these eight steps, one after the other. Then, you’ll end
up with a permanent change that has been institutionalized in your
organization. Matthews cautions that in practice, things don’t necessarily work
out that way.
Perhaps you get to step six of
creating short-term wins only to find that the vision was incomplete or that
you need different stakeholders in your guiding coalition. At that point, you
cycle back to these earlier steps and start again.
It’s also possible that you need
to start with a quick win (step six) so that you can get the support of a
guiding coalition (step two). In other words, you may jump around between steps
rather than follow them in a linear manner.
Notice that the steps are still
useful things to do. The problem is that if a change leader tries to follow the
linear sequence laid out in the model, they may get into trouble.
3. The assumption the change is start
and stop
One of the earliest models of
change, and one that still haunts HR, is Kurt Lewin’s model of
Unfreeze-Change-Refreeze. It assumes the organization is a stable place that
goes through a change and then returns to being a stable place. Lewin’s model
is embedded in Kotter’s eight steps. The first steps are all about preparing
the desired change – unfreezing, the middle steps about changing, and the final
step of refreezing is about institutionalizing the change.
The problem, as anyone who has
lived in a modern organization knows, change is not start and stop; it is
dynamic. The change leader who thinks they can work through this neat change
model and then relax will be thrown off balance as the vision—or more
granularly the goals that need to be achieved—keep changing.
Matthews points out that this
means the parameters for any given change may alter as business and other
conditions shift. As a result, the vision, the guiding coalition,
communications, and so on may be much more dynamic. In a sense, you never
really complete a step. You have to keep all the balls in the air since – in a
VUCA world – change may have to be far more fluid in response.
4. The
assumption that there is only one change at a time
Closely related to the idea that
change is dynamic is the idea that it is also continuous. Today, few
organizations make one change at a time. More likely, multiple changes are
occurring simultaneously. Before one change has ended, others are underway.
Even as you are creating a sense of urgency, five other
managers are busy telling employees that their change is more critical than
your one. Even as you are sending out clear communications about the change,
employees are finding their inboxes flooded with clear communications about
many other change efforts. They may not even have time to read what you have
sent them.
Managing multiple simultaneous
change programs means that change leaders need to coordinate their efforts to
make sure they are not overwhelming employees and that these changes don’t
operate at cross-purposes. Senior leaders will have to make decisions about
which programs have priority at a particular moment in time.
In the end, the change management
process is a lot messier than the Kotter model would lead you to believe. You
have to be very aware of what else is going on in the organization as you work
to navigate your own project forward.
5. The overly
top-down nature of Kotter’s Model
Matthews points out that the
Kotter model implies that change is primarily driven from the top. It presumes
a leader who can foresee precisely what needs to happen and orchestrates the
change. This leads to two problems:
·
It completely overlooks
how much positive change is driven by actions and ideas that bubble up from the
bottom of the organization. Suppose you want an organization that is
continuously handling multiple change challenges effectively. In that case, you
need to find ways to support this bubbling up of initiatives from the bottom of
the organization. An over-reliance on the Kotter model will blind you to this.
·
It creates overconfidence
that the needed change as initially defined by a leader’s vision is correct.
This can lead to change management projects that ignore insights arising as the
project proceeds, which, in turn, leads to failure.
These two problems won’t always
exist. However, they exist often enough to leave people wary of an overreliance
on the Kotter Model.
6. The
assumption that resistance is irrational
One other hidden assumption often
associated with the Kotter model is that resistance to change is irrational. It
presumes employees won’t want to change and that leaders, who, due to their
superior insight, see the need for organizational
transformation, have to find a way to convince employees to get on board.
The idea that employees resist
change and that this resistance is irrational is a half-truth. For example, if
you offer employees the chance to move from a cumbersome paper expense form to
an easy online one, you expect many will embrace the change. If they don’t
embrace the change, it might be because they are technologically illiterate
(something less and less likely these days). It could also be that there is a
problem with the online process that leaders are unaware of.
Matthews advises that, at the
very least, change leaders should assume that there may well be a logical
reason why employees are resisting change. Make sure you learn what their
reasons are before pushing employees to adopt a change.
Why are there these shortcomings in the Kotter change model?
Dr. Kotter is an experienced and
wise professor, so why do the shortcomings of the model exist? The fundamental
problem is that the reality of change is too complex to show in any tidy model.
A more complex model would be hard to explain and wouldn’t catch on.
It’s also worth bearing in mind
that the model appeared at a time when many organizations were going through
major top-down changes (such as M&A and business process reengineering).
So, it made sense for leaders then. But the nature of changes today (such
as digital transformation) is often different and calls for more participation
and experimentation to make them successful.
What
to do about the shortcomings
Just because a model has
shortcomings doesn’t mean it isn’t useful. You can see that most of the
problems arise when leaders take the model too literally. Instead, understand
Kotter’s model as a set of suggestions, not a fixed recipe to follow. You
should see the linear sequence of steps as a useful way to teach the model, not
to predict how a change project will actually unfold. Feel free to ignore
(parts of) the model if it doesn’t fit your context.
The best way to use the Kotter
model is a checklist. You can see it as eight issues you should think about as
you are leading a change initiative. Checklists are an excellent tool. If we
see the model as a checklist, if we take everything with a grain of salt, we
will benefit from the model while avoiding its pitfalls.
HR’s
role in change management
First, we should recognize that
all managers should have some knowledge of and skills in change management
regardless of their function. However, who in the organization should be the
experts on change? HR is the one function that is required to have the deepest
theoretical depth of understanding of change. In a sense, it is the center of
excellence.
Assuming that HR has that
expertise, then it can play several different roles in supporting the change.
It can be:
·
An active member of a
change management team
·
A coach to a manager who
is leading change
·
Providing training on
change management
·
Helping to build a process
the organization follows for change management
·
And of course, an HR
leader needs to be able to lead change in the HR function
Unless your organization is very
large, there won’t be HR professionals who specialize in change the way one
might specialize in recruitment or learning. Instead, it’s likely to be the HR
leadership and some of the HRBPs who are expected, in addition to their other
areas of expertise.
Figure
3: KOTTER’S 8 STEP CHANGE MODEL
Conclusion
It all leads to one
conclusion. Change is never done alone. It takes the interactivity
of every aspect of an organization (leaders, individual contributors, tools) to
make change management successful.
References
Gonnella, S. (2023, 4 20). MANAGEMENT OF CHANGE:
CONCLUSION. Retrieved from www.fullsailpartners.com:
https://www.fullsailpartners.com/fspblog/fspblog/bid/358397/management-of-change-conclusion
www.aihr.com. (2023, 4 20). HR
& Change Management: Beyond the Kotter Model. Retrieved from
www.aihr.com: https://www.aihr.com/blog/hr-change-management/
Good work. Nicely presented. Great contents.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing thoughts. contents are clear and understandable.
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