managing change & conflict
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A guide on Managing Change & Conflict.TRANSCRIPT
Managing Change and Conflict
Chapter 14 Ready Notes
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Chapter Objectives
1. Identify and describe four types of organizational change according to the Nadler-Tushman model.
2. Explain how people tend to respond differently to changes they like and those they dislike.
3. List a least six reasons why employees resist changes and discuss what management can do about resistance to change.
4. Describe how the unfreezing-change-refreezing analogy applies to organization development (OD).
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Chapter Objectives (cont’d)
5. Describe tempered radicals and identify the 5Ps in the checklist for grassroots change agents.
6. Contrast competitive and cooperative conflict styles, and identify five conflict resolution techniques.
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Change: Organizational and Individual Perspectives
• Types of Organizational Change– Anticipatory changes: planned changes based on
expected situations.
– Reactive changes: changes made in response to unexpected situations.
– Incremental changes: subsystem adjustments required to keep the organization on course.
– Strategic changes: altering the overall shape or direction of the organization.
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Change: Organizational and Individual Perspectives (cont’d)
• Tuning– The most common, least intense, and least risky type
of change.
– Also known as preventive maintenance and kaizen (continuous improvement).
– Key is to actively anticipate and avoid problems rather than waiting for something to go wrong.
• Adaptation– Incremental changes that are in reaction to external
problems, events, or pressures.
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• Re-Orientation– Change that is anticipatory and strategic in scope and
causes the organization to be significantly redirected.
– Also called “frame bending” (Nadler and Tushman).
• Re-Creation– Intense and risky decisive change that reinvents the
organization.
– Also called “frame breaking” (Nadler and Tushman).
Change: Organizational and Individual Perspectives (cont’d)
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Individual Reactions to Change
• How People Respond to Changes They Like– Three-stage process
– Unrealistic optimism
– Reality shock
– Constructive direction
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Individual Reactions to Change (cont’d)
• How People Respond to Changes They Fear and Dislike– Stages
– Getting off on the wrong track
– Laughing it off
– Growing self-doubt
– Buying in
– Constructive direction
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Why Do Employees Resist Change?
• Surprise– Unannounced significant changes threaten
employees’ sense of balance in the workplace.
• Inertia– Employees have a desire to maintain a safe, secure,
and predictable status quo.
• Misunderstanding and lack of skills– Without introductory or remedial training, change may
be perceived negatively.
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Why Do Employees Resist Change? (cont’d)
• Emotional Side Effects– Forced acceptance of change can create a sense of
powerlessness, anger, and passive resistance to change.
• Lack of Trust– Promises of improvement mean nothing if employees
do not trust management.
• Fear of Failure– Employees are intimidated by change and doubt their
abilities to meet new challenges.
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• Personality Conflicts– Managers who are disliked by their managers are
poor conduits for change.
• Poor Timing– Other events can conspire to create resentment about
a particular change.
• Lack of Tact– No showing sensitivity to feelings can create
resistance to change.
Why Do Employees Resist Change? (cont’d)
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• Threat to Job Status/Security– Employees worry that any change may threaten their
job or security.
• Breakup of Work Group– Changes can tear apart established on-the-job social
relationships.
• Competing Commitments– Change can disrupt employees in their pursuit of
other goals.
Why Do Employees Resist Change? (cont’d)
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Overcoming Resistance to Change
• Strategies for Overcoming Resistance to Change– Education and communication
– Participation and involvement
– Facilitation and support
– Negotiation and agreement
– Manipulation and co-optation
– Explicit and implicit coercion
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Making Change Happen
• Two Approaches to Organization Change– Organization Development (OD)
– Formal top-down approach
– Grassroots Change
– An unofficial and informal bottom-up approach
• Change Agent Characteristics– Foresight
– Responsiveness
– Flexibility
– Adaptability
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Planned Change Through Organization Development (OD)
• Organization development (OD) – Planned change programs intended to help people
and organizations function more effectively.
– Applying behavioral science principles, methods, and theories to create and cope with change.
– OD creates fundamental change in the organization, as opposed to fixing a problem or improving a procedure.
– OD programs generally are facilitated by hired consultants,
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Planned Change Through Organization Development (OD) (cont’d)
• Objectives of OD– Deepen the sense of organizational purpose.
– Strengthen interpersonal trust.
– Encourage problem solving rather than avoidance.
– Develop a satisfying work experience.
– Supplement formal authority with knowledge and skill-based authority.
– Increase personal responsibility for planning and implementing.
– Encourage willingness to change.
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Planned Change Through Organization Development (OD) (cont’d)
• The OD Process (Kurt Lewin)– Unfreezing, changing, and refreezing social systems
– Unfreezing: neutralizing resistance by preparing people for change.
– Changing: implementing the planned change
– Refreezing: systematically following a change program for lasting results.
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Unofficial and Informal Grassroots Change
• Grassroots Change– Change that is spontaneous, informal, experimental,
and driven from within.
• Tempered Radicals– People who quietly try to change the dominant
organizational culture in line with their convictions.
– Guidelines for tempered radicals– Think small for big results.
– Be authentic.
– Translate.
– Don’t go it alone.
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Managing Conflict
• Conflict– Incompatible behaviors that make another person
less effective
• Dealing with the Two Faces of Conflict– Competitive conflict: parties are pursuing directly
opposite (win-lose) goals.
– Cooperative conflict: a mutually reinforcing experience (win-win) that serves the best interests of both parties.
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Managing Conflict (cont’d)
• Conflict Triggers– Conflict trigger: any factor that increases the chances
of conflict.
– Types of triggers – Ambiguous or overlapping jurisdictions.
– Competition for scarce resources.
– Communication breakdowns.
– Time pressure.
– Unreasonable standards, rule, policies, or procedures.
– Personality clashes.
– Status differentials.
– Unrealized expectations.
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Managing Conflict (cont’d)
• Resolving Conflict: Conflict Resolution Techniques– Problem solving
– Superordinate goals
– Compromise
– Forcing
– Smoothing
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Career Advancement Behaviors
• Best Behaviors– Perspective taking
– Creating solutions
– Expressing emotions
– Reaching out
• Worst Behaviors– Avoidance
– Winning at all costs
– Displaying anger
– Demeaning others
– Retaliating