bizlife Column One
By Nido Qubein
If a company is going to stay in business, it has to change, and that
can be scary. Many people see change as threatening. To them, it is
the destroyer of what is familiar and comfortable rather than the creator
of what is new and exciting. Unfortunately, comfort can be the enemy
of excellence. It can even lead to corporate death.
A Navy aviator once told me that many pilots have died because they
stayed with their disabled aircraft too long. They preferred the familiarity
of the cockpit to the unfamiliarity of the parachute, even though the
cockpit had become a death trap and the parachute had become a ticket
to life.
Many businesses have died because their people preferred the familiar
but deadly old ways to the risky but rewarding new ways. We must teach
them that to stand pat is to perish.
The secret to successful change is to make it controlled change. If
the change is well-planned and under control, the people affected will
have a sense of stability amid change, and that can be reassuring.
One of the most important things you can do is to explain the reasons
for the change. Change is easier to take when people can see a rationale
behind it.
Another way of easing anxiety is to show how advance planning minimizes
risks. Let people know what to expect, step by step. No surprises, no
alarm.
Rank-and-file employees need to know that management is fully behind
the change. If they 're learning to do things a new way, they need assurance
that somebody up the management ladder won 't come by later and say "That 's
the wrong way." Commend and recognize employees who master the new way.
Planned changes usually move through three stages: softening, reshaping
and restabilizing.
During the softening stage, employees have to unlearn old habits. During
the reshaping phase, new ways must be implanted. During restabilization,
these new ways must become new habits.
You can smooth the way toward change through pilot projects that enable
employees to go through trial runs before "going live." You can also
find people who are familiar with the new ways and let them model them
for the rest of your people.
I 've learned, through consulting with companies implementing change,
that the job is never finished. Successful companies look for ways to
institutionalize change. When a company 's people are oriented to change
and educated in effective ways to bring it about, it 's geared up for
the future.
ARTICLE TAGLINE FOR Nido Qubein
Nido Qubein is an international speaker and consultant.
Visit his website at www.nidoqubein.com,
write to Creative Services, Inc.,
P. O. Box 6008, High Point, NC 27262
or call 1-800-989-3010.
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