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Debunking the myths of organizational change management

Debunking the myths of organizational change management

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Page 1: Debunking the myths of organizational change management

Debunking the myths

of organizational

change management

Page 2: Debunking the myths of organizational change management

2Copyright © 2015 Accenture All rights reserved.

Moving beyond myths

Accenture Change Tracking

• 15+ years of research

• 250 change initiatives

• 150 organizations

• 50 industries

• 25 countries

• 850,000+ employees

The largest base of empirical change research

data ever developed dispels conventional myths

about organizational change

Copyright © 2015 Accenture All rights reserved. 2

Page 3: Debunking the myths of organizational change management

3Copyright © 2015 Accenture All rights reserved.

Myth: Change is a straightforward process that

moves from A to B to C―from the beginning of an

initiative to its end

Our research: Change is a non-linear

process with no beginning and no end

Many change programs take circuitous routes, sometimes

backtracking and often become stuck. Change programs do follow

predictable pathways however, whether through actions that lead

to failure or towards success. Our multi-dimensional change map

and navigation tools capture this predictability.

Page 4: Debunking the myths of organizational change management

4Copyright © 2015 Accenture All rights reserved.

Myth: Too much change, too fast, is destructive

Our research: The highest-performing

groups have more change taking place

at a very fast pace

The highest-performing organizations thrive on change. They

have more change taking place – 30 to 50 percent initially –

and at a faster pace than lower-performing counterparts. They

have a strong capability to drive ongoing change and achieve

greater benefits.

Page 5: Debunking the myths of organizational change management

5Copyright © 2015 Accenture All rights reserved.

Myth: Change causes organizations to go off track

Our research: Change does not

cause organizational dysfunction,

it merely exposes it

85 percent of groups with change programs that had gone off

track had major underlying issues before implementing their

initiative. People blame change initiatives for their problems, but a

dysfunctional culture and behaviors are typically ingrained in the

organization prior to the implementation of change.

Page 6: Debunking the myths of organizational change management

6Copyright © 2015 Accenture All rights reserved.

Myth: Change solutions can be boiled down

to a handful of simple rules

Our research: Successful change

requires a complex, coordinated strategy

of actions sustained across time

Change is among the most complex organizational processes.

Leaders should accept this complexity as an integral part of their

change initiatives, and plan coordinated actions sustained across

periods to ensure success.

Page 7: Debunking the myths of organizational change management

7Copyright © 2015 Accenture All rights reserved.

Myth: Change is driven from the top down

and is resisted by middle management

Our research: Change leadership radiates

out from the center, starting with leaders and

teams who want to change and eventually

reaching every corner of the organization

The role of the business unit leader―sitting between corporate

and team leadership―plays the most significant role in

implementing change, delivering business benefits and ensuring

ongoing business performance remains high.

Page 8: Debunking the myths of organizational change management

8Copyright © 2015 Accenture All rights reserved.

Myth: Business performance will dip during

the early stages of change

Our research: Business performance generally

increases throughout a change program

For high-performing groups, business performance—cost

management, customer service levels, and effectiveness—rises

continuously from the start of a change initiative to its end.

Page 9: Debunking the myths of organizational change management

9Copyright © 2015 Accenture All rights reserved.

Myth: People must suffer through the ‘valley

of despair’ as a normal part of change

Our research: People do not have

to experience negative feelings as part

of the change process

In high-performing groups, positive feelings and emotions

such as passion and drive remain high through all stages of

a change program.

Page 10: Debunking the myths of organizational change management

10Copyright © 2015 Accenture All rights reserved.

Myth: People need to understand changes before

committing to them

Our research: While this progression

is true for the lowest-performing groups,

it is reversed for high performers

In high-performing groups, trust in leadership is so high that

people are willing to get on the bus even before they know where

it’s headed. They first commit emotionally and are happy to find

out where they are going, as they move along.

Page 11: Debunking the myths of organizational change management

11Copyright © 2015 Accenture All rights reserved.

Myth: All change can be managed effectively

by applying universal best practices

Our research: A one-size-fits-all approach

to change will generally fail

Organizations often manage change by focusing on a few factors

that have produced results in the past. But there is no such thing

as a single list of actions or interventions, a single sequence of

events or a single method that will apply in all situations, or at

different stages of the same initiative.

Page 12: Debunking the myths of organizational change management

12Copyright © 2015 Accenture All rights reserved.

Myth: Organizations achieve the best results

by focusing on communication, training, team

leadership, and accountability

Our research: Other factors that are hidden

and difficult to define have a greater impact

on the outcome of a change initiative

Vision and direction – building understanding and gaining

agreement – is by far the most important factor in realizing

benefits from a change program, 3 to 4 times as important as any

other intervention. To drive improvements in business

performance, the most important factors are business leadership,

systems and processes and passion and drive.

Page 13: Debunking the myths of organizational change management

13Copyright © 2015 Accenture All rights reserved.

Myth: Charismatic and empathetic leaders build

trust through the quality of their one-to-one

relationships

Our research: One-to-one trusted relationships

are necessary but not sufficient. A system of

trust is needed at multiple levels of leadership.

High-performing groups build a ‘trust grid’ where each level of

leadership is dependent on other levels and the trust holds

together in an interrelated series of actions. The synergistic effect

of collective leadership goes well beyond what is possible from a

single level of leadership acting in isolation or in one-to-one

relationships.

Page 14: Debunking the myths of organizational change management

14Copyright © 2015 Accenture All rights reserved.

Myth: Focusing on emotions does not lead to

business outcomes. Ignore them and get on with

the tasks at hand

Our research: Both positive and negative

emotions have a huge impact on the benefits

realized from a change program

High levels of fear and frustration can result in a decline in

benefits realized by more than 20 percent, while a high level of

passion and drive can lead to an increase of 50 percent. These

differences can translate to millions of dollars to the bottom line.

Page 15: Debunking the myths of organizational change management

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Find out more:Read ‘Turning change upside down’ at:

www.accenture.com/MythsofChange

Read about ‘Big Change, Best Path’ at:

www.accenture.com/BigChangeBestPath

For more information contact:

[email protected]

Copyright © 2015 Accenture All rights reserved. 15

Page 16: Debunking the myths of organizational change management

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About Accenture

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We bring together our capabilities in

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Our focus on issues related to digital

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models, talent and leadership helps drive

both efficiencies and growth. For more

information, follow @AccentureStrat or

visit www.accenture.com/strategy.

Copyright © 2015 Accenture All rights reserved. 16