Where are we and how do I fit in? Change Management Communication for the Stakeholder

Successful change management communication informs stakeholders of the time and place for their work.

Time-

is the relationship of stakeholder work and participation to the total amount of time for the initiative, the time frame of the phase(s) they are included in and the period they will need to accomplish their tasks.

Place-

is the relationship of that work to participation and tasks that occur before and after their own (and possibly a connection of importance to the bigger picture).

Well of course this is simple time and project management right? If we communicate what is happening then we are doing a good job.

Sorry, but no.

This is one of those subtle areas of change management that no one seems to notice. Most communication for project management and change management is a snapshot of the responsibilities of the guiding team. Add to that the delivery of “how things are going” and you have communication that simply satisfies the need of the team to check off tasks and verify “forward” movement. It does not address the stakeholders needs (and those fulfilled needs are the seeds for motivation).

What you want is the core end state description, clear phases and tasks that fall within those areas. With that you can create a rough timeline (with the pieces and relationships, but not necessarily exact timeframes) to use as the initial communication. That delivers a big picture. The phases themselves can have their own timelines and the tasks can be linked to each of the frozen “places” on the path. With that core visual built on solid up front planning you have an anchor to address changes within the process.

As you move through the timeframe of the initiative you can change the visual relationships on the timeline to re-jigger the frozen places for stakeholders.

Below is a simple timeline for the contents of a white paper I am writing. The paper moves through a knowledge buildup for the reader to get to a new understanding. With an initiative there is a layering of the right skills at the right time to get to the end state. Both can have those frozen places that rely on something previous and prepare for something to come.

As a stakeholder/reader I can see I am at the 5 W’s which I have arrived at after  a summary, background and languaging. As I move forward I will begin to understand High Level Change and make the connection to action. The dark grey signifies completion, the green the frozen place, the numbers phases or parts and the titles description tags. The bright green dot, pick your favorite color, is the end state.

image

So often practitioners blame the lack of awareness on the deletion of messages.

Shouldn’t that be a signal that something might be wrong?

Planning for Change from the Beginning- Change Management for fast growth companies

  Plan ahead for levels of growth by structuring your organization with a change component.

Each layer of growth in a firm typically adds a layer of titles; each new title has the potential to create a new silo. Eventually it becomes difficult to move the organization fast enough to grow [...]

One future of Change Management- Up high, partly inside and boutique

Trends I am seeing that will influence change management’s future-

Stakeholders get it- often more so than their leaders
Executives are trying to establish control over the various organic change movements within their organizations
External consultants are endlessly debating the definitions of project management (PM) and Organizational Change Management (OCM)
The Big 3+ firms are subbing [...]

The most important word for the leadership of Change Management? Empathy

Empathy (just in case you missed that)

The path of least resistance- powerful change

In a previous “life” I was a rafting guide.

I used to marvel at the patterns that took place in the flow of the river. There was always a path where the water moved the swiftest and the smoothest. When it encountered the resistance of rock or sand bar it would move over the top [...]

End State- Change Management’s Pot of Gold

At the End State lies the alignment of vision, process and people/behavior change to business objectives. There you will find a Pot of Gold full of capital for the next initiative-if you can navigate the change path. It is winding, meandering and typically only the first leg is clear. To smooth out the journey [...]

C-level leverage of your Change Management Trusted Advisor

You do have one?

Placing an external change management resource high in an organization is incredibly powerful. Leveraging that power in a way that is honest and effective is an approach few C-level executives choose to use. I will make the assumption that this is a tool at the bottom of the box that you did [...]

End State back- The Change Management Path

The ideal way to lay out a change management process is to come to a description of the end state and work back toward the present. This gives a view of what will have changed to get there. Knowing what will change can help determine the resources, the new behaviors and any new structure to [...]

Change Management Resistance (grrr)- Maybe that frog needs a “kiss”

I am not thrilled, as you know if you have read previous posts, with using the word resistance. In this case let’s say that is what those forcing change see. What they need to see is a harmless frog probably waiting to don the crown. For change management no one is lucky enough to [...]

Honoring the status quo- or not..

Tampering with tradition, common practice and “we have always done things this way” is fraught with complications. Unwillingness to delve into that difficult area is a recipe for change “failure”. How then as the executive owner do you place yourself into the fire?

Acknowledge your own tie to organizational traditions
Do the same for others
Use external influence [...]