Change management: lessons from Japan
When it comes to
evolution, “it is not the strongest or the most intelligent who will survive
but those who can best manage change,” maintained naturalist Charles Darwin.
So it is with
modernizing and changing operating models within organizations. This can often
be met with resistance by employees and exasperated further by cultural
influences. In Japan, consensus building is a strong part of the culture and
change management programs fail primarily from employee resistance at the
second level beneath the CEO and teams.
To combat this, one
newly installed CEO – brought in to make changes at a Japanese consumer
products company – immediately formed a team that would reach Level 2
employees. He handpicked younger people more likely to change and adapt and did
not include disinterested veteran leaders.
Two significant things
happened. First, the CEO spent considerable time educating the new team on the
journey ahead, explaining how the organization would function so they could
envision the company’s future. Second, by handpicking a younger team, the
message to company veterans was that something important was happening, and
leaders who accepted these new changes would be part of the company’s success.
A few core elements
helped this organization achieve the right results:
·
Inspirational and effective change leaders.
·
A “change story” with real meaning to
convince leaders and employees to be open to new ways of working.
·
The chance to change mindsets and behaviors.
·
The need to orchestrate change via an
expanding and self-sustaining wave throughout the organization.
Our experience
supporting change efforts in Japanese organizations suggests we find success
when more attention is paid to culturally attuned principles, as in the above
example.
For similarly
consensus-oriented organizations, here are four practical ways to drive change.
1. Define the end state in detail and provide a roadmap much
earlier.
While a western company would launch a transformation
based on a vision and engage the broader organization to define it, leaders at
consensus-oriented organizations need a detailed description of the new model
on which to engage and establish a fresh consensus early on. “Building a plane
as we fly” is never an easy mission, but it is a nonstarter in these
organizations.
2. Engage the front line very early and create opportunities
to endorse change.
Spend time in the field – on the factory floor, with the
sales force, etc. – to define the details of the new model; anticipate issues;
and permit the sharing of frustrations, aspirations, and other emotional
reactions. Identify and support champions of change in the front line from the
start. Do not assume that “immediate followers” in the second level of the
organization will spontaneously follow the guidance from the top.
3. Map the organizational network and tackle change
blockers.
Organizational network mapping, which analyzes the
networks that employees rely on in their work, is used frequently to identify
and empower change agents. Identifying and mapping potential “blockers” is not
difficult and even more important for a successful change. Actions can be taken
to convert or neutralize change blockers early in the process.
4. Expose top management extensively, broadly and directly.
Town hall meetings, Q&A sessions and other
opportunities that expose top management to large audiences prove the most
effective ways to sell change to employees. These events sacrifice intimacy,
but they also break through an organization’s vertical walls, override internal
factions and convey a call to action that directly engages each member of the
organization.
Establishing a
purposeful team upfront helps sustain change and embeds the new procedural and
cultural elements in the new model. In this context, the so-called “third
generation” of leaders – those roughly 35-45 years in age who realize they have
a future to build, not a legacy to protect – is becoming an important source of
change energy because they’re more risk-seeking.
Staying culturally
attuned promises to make a big difference in whether organizations in Japan or
elsewhere succeed in their change management mission
August 6,
2018 – by Andre Andonian, Naoyuki Iwatani and Michele Raviscioni
https://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/organization/our-insights/the-organization-blog/change-management-lessons-from-japan?cid=other-eml-alt-mip-mck-oth-1808&hlkid=58a74968cf5c46b1b03db61a4150e419&hctky=1627601&hdpid=a73eb51f-5c34-4b52-8146-e68301dba77c
No comments:
Post a Comment