Culture’s Critical Role in Change
Management
Culture’s reputation as being among
the “softer” instruments of management might lead you to conclude that it’s a
luxury—something that gets attention in buzz-conscious Silicon Valley but occupies
more of a background position everywhere else.
Yet
culture is critical to business success, according to the results of our
2013 Culture and Change Management
Survey.
When we recently surveyed more than 2,200 global businesspeople to get their
take on culture’s role in business, we saw that culture is widely seen as more
important than companies’ strategies or operating models. This view of culture’s
importance holds true around the world.
Nonetheless,
corporate culture often doesn’t get the attention executives suggest it
deserves. Only 53% of businesspeople say culture is an important part of the
leadership agenda at their company. Even fewer people (35%) say their companies
do an effective job of managing culture.
Our
own work suggests that the problem is one of mind-set. Companies facing
cultural challenges often think the answer is to try to transform their
cultures by using traditional change-management tactics. But cultural
situations are complex and rarely lend themselves to change through the same
mechanisms or at the same pace as other parts of an organization.
We’d
argue that those who work with
and within their existing culture to change critical behaviors have more success than those who try to change
their culture. Said another way, it is easier to act your way into a new way of
thinking than it is to think your way into a new way of acting.
While it is resistant to change
itself, culture can be a great enabler of organizational change—whether
the change involves digitization, faster product development, or a systematic
lowering of costs. Overall, change initiatives are only adopted and sustained
about half the time, our survey shows. But when companies tap into the energy
and emotional commitment that are bound up in their cultures, change
initiatives are far more sustainable.
In any major change initiative, it
is the job of management and the people affected by the transition to figure
out how to harness the strong cultural attributes of their company to build
momentum and create lasting change. Companies that are able to do so—to take
what we call a “culture led” approach to change—substantially increase the
speed, success, and sustainability of their transformation initiatives. Based
on our survey findings, the odds of success are about twice as high with
culture-led change than with more conventional change-management approaches.
http://www.strategy-business.com/blog/Cultures-Critical-Role-in-Change-Management?gko=a3f98
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