Andreas Bohman, Chief Information Security Officer Eric ... C… · Agenda for presentation •...

Preview:

Citation preview

Andreas Bohman, Chief Information Security Officer Eric Cheney, Chair, Faculty Senate Gail Farmer, Equal Opportunity, Professional Development & Training

Agenda for presentation

• Defining change management • Change Management, Project

Management & Leadership • Best Practices in Change Management • ADKAR- 5 Building Blocks of successful

change • Who is involved in Change Management • A special look at Sponsorship

Change management is:

The process, tools and techniques to manage the people side of

change to achieve the required business results.

Change management and project management

Technical side of the project

People side of the project

Currentstate

Transitionstate

Futurestate

Project management

Change management

All three elements must be present for project success

The Prosci® Project Change Triangle (PCT) is a trademark of Prosci, Inc. All rights reserved.

Prosci® PCTTM Model

Organization

Individual

Current state

Transition state

Future state

Current state

Transition state

Future state

Organizational change can be represented as three states of change

How I do my job today

How I will do my job after the change is

implemented

How things are done today

How things will be done

tomorrow

How to move from current to

future

The organization’s future state is actually the collection of many individual future states

Organization

Individuals

Future state

Current state

Transition state

Future state

Current state

Transition state

Future state

Current state

Transition state

Future state

Current state

Transition state

Future state

Current state

Transition state

Future state

Current state

Transition state

Future state

Prosci® Change Management Best Practice Research

17%

49%

80%

95%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

Poor(n=177)

Fair(n=441)

Good(n=561)

Excellent(n=107)

Per

cent

of r

espo

nden

ts th

at m

et

or e

xcee

ded

proj

ect o

bjec

tives

Overall effectiveness of change management program

Correlation of change management effectiveness to meeting project objectives

© Prosci. From Prosci’s 2012 Best Practices in Change Management benchmarking report

*Data from 2007, 2009 and 2011

Prosci correlation analysis

16%

34%

57%

75%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

Poor(n=215)

Fair(n=532)

Good(n=679)

Excellent(n=116)

Per

cent

of r

espo

nden

ts th

at w

ere

on o

r ahe

ad o

f sch

edul

e

Overall effectiveness of change management program

Correlation of change management effectiveness to staying on schedule

© Prosci. From Prosci’s 2012 Best Practices in Change Management benchmarking report

*Data from 2007, 2009 and 2011

Research results When to start change management

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90%

Project closure

Project implementation

Project design

Project planning

Project initiation

Percent of respondents

When did you start CMactivities this time?

When would you start CMactivities next time?

© Prosci. From Prosci’s 2009 Best Practices in Change Management benchmarking report

Consequences of not managing the people side of change

• Lower productivity • Passive resistance • Active resistance • Turnover of valued employees • Disinterest in the current or future state • Arguing about the need for change • More people taking sick days or not showing up • Changes not fully implemented • People finding work-arounds • People revert to the old way of doing things • The change being totally scrapped • Divides are created between ‘us’ and ‘them’

• Lower productivity • Passive resistance • Active resistance • Turnover of valued employees • Disinterest in the current or future state • Arguing about the need for change • More people taking sick days or not showing up • Changes not fully implemented • People finding work-arounds • People revert to the old way of doing things • The change being totally scrapped • Divides are created between ‘us’ and ‘them’

Prosci® Flight Risk Model

Mitigating Negative Consequences

With change, you can expect a decline in productivity and an increase in resistance.

1st communication or1st rumor

Incr

easi

ng re

sist

ance

Dec

reas

ing

prod

uctiv

ity

Time

Worry / uncertainty

Comfort / security

Risk / flight

Prosci® Flight Risk Model

The reality is that change creates instability and introduces risk to the organization.

1st communication or1st rumor

Incr

easi

ng re

sist

ance

Dec

reas

ing

prod

uctiv

ity

Time

Worry / uncertainty

Comfort / security

Risk / flight

Prosci® Flight Risk Model

Multiple changes within the organization aggravate and compound this risk.

1st communication or1st rumor

Incr

easi

ng re

sist

ance

Dec

reas

ing

prod

uctiv

ity

Time

Project 1

Project 3

Project 2

Prosci® Flight Risk Model

• Increase probability of project success • Manage employee resistance to change • Build change competency in the organization

Primary reasons for applying change management

The five building blocks of successful change Awareness

Desire

Knowledge

Ability

Reinforcement®

ADKAR and “Awareness Desire Knowledge Ability Reinforcement” are a registered trademarks of Prosci, Inc. All rights reserved.

© 2012 Prosci and Bill Cigliano

1. Effective Communications 2. Active and Visible Sponsorship 3. Engaged and Informed Coaching 4. Effective Training 5. Carefully Directed Resistance Management

In order to achieve each building block of ADKAR

5 Change Management Activities

Connecting ADKAR® and the current, transition and future states

R A K D A

Current state

Transition state

Future state

Who is involved in managing change

Project team

Changemanagement

Senior leaders

Managers and supervisors Employees

Communicate Directly

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80%

Other

Change management team leader

Change management team member

Project team leader

Project team member

Human Resources representative

The employee's supervisor

Department head

Senior manager

Executive manager

CEO/President

Percent of respondents

Business messagesPersonal messages

© Prosci. From Prosci’s 2012 Best Practices in Change Management benchmarking report

Three primary roles of sponsors

• Participate actively and visibly throughout the project

• Build a coalition of sponsorship and manage resistance

• Communicate directly with employees

A project or change management team member can develop the plans, but senior leaders must carry out the activities of sponsorship

33%

53%

68%

78%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

Little or no accessthroughout project

Inadequate access -difficult to get on

calendar

Adequate access -scheduled meetings

More than adequateaccess - open door

Per

cent

of r

espo

nden

ts th

at

met

or e

xcee

ded

obje

ctiv

es

Level of sponsor access

Correlation of sponsor access to meeting project objectives

© Prosci. From Prosci’s 2012 Best Practices in Change Management benchmarking report

36% 40%

73%

85%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

Sponsor was veryineffective (average

score < 2)

Sponsor wasineffective (average

score between 2 and3)

Sponsor was effective(average score

between 3 and 4)

Sponsor was veryeffective (average

score between 4 and5)

Correlation of sponsor effectiveness to meeting project objectives

Sponsor effective rating average

Per

cent

of r

espo

nden

ts th

at m

et

or e

xcee

ded

proj

ect o

bjec

tives

© Prosci. From Prosci’s 2012 Best Practices in Change Management benchmarking report

Do sponsors understand their role?

According to 2009 study data, 56% of sponsors did not have an adequate understanding of their role!

© Prosci. From Prosci’s 2009 Best Practices in Change Management benchmarking report

Sponsor role understanding

0% 10% 20% 30% 40%

1 - No understanding of what sponsorship means

2 - Slight understanding

3 - Some understanding

4 - Adequate understanding

5 - Complete understanding of roles and responsibilities

Percent of respondents

20092007

Summary Change management: • focuses on the ‘people side’ of organizational

change • involves both an individual and an organizational

perspective • requires action and involvement by leaders and

managers throughout the organization • is much more than communication • is most effective when it is launched at the

beginning of a project and integrated into the project activities

Recommended