Campaign management may be the critical competency in managing the complex transition to that coveted future state. After all, the goal of all campaigns is Agreement, and without agreement, things can get very different without getting the desired Change. But how do you know the campaign is making sense?
2. Solving The Right Problem
Management is the key to success, right? But even though organizational changes are explicitly managed,
some changes fail. Complexity is certainly a typical culprit. But one cause of failed changes that may be even
more important can be neglecting what is really most necessary to manage in the change: transition.
Managing the transition, from the current state to the desired future state, is sometimes overwhelmed by a
cult of results: a preoccupation with an endpoint and with the compromises of it that may occur due to
complexity in the effort. This focus on the endpoint increases the risks that shortcuts and exceptions will be
employed in reaction, without a disciplined connection to other key factors, effectively corrupting the
transition. The consequence is that the intended change is unstable and does not actually survive.
Bringing the focus back to the transition itself re-establishes the point of view that gives the most important
perspective. Namely, when a departure from the current state is being attempted, what differences are
expected or occurring, that inhibit or encourage progress towards the target future state? How should the
differences be treated in order to fortify a good logic of the transition, or to overcome a bad logic?
The following descriptions and sketches survey the perspective of managing differences, not outcomes. The
point is not to discount the importance of achieving good results, but instead to highlight the role and goal
required to specifically manage change.
3. Point A to Point B: the logic of the transition
We are all familiar with the strong but sometimes ironic nature of a legal trial. The institution and process
that is employed to render judgment spends as much time protecting its own integrity as it does on anything
else. The importance of that self-referential attitude is in its ability to assure that the result of the process is
“valid”, regardless of what the specific result turns out to be.
The same emphasis on procedural integrity exists, of course, in the scientific method. No principle is more
important than that the experiments and tests serving as the foundation for a claim or discovery can be
repeated by a disinterested third party to provide the same accountability of whatever results occur. In fact,
it is not unusual that such a repetition of process may not come up with the same result but will carry the
same, if not better, degree of accountability.
A final familiar reference to the focus on procedure is the common experience of playing ordinary games by
their rules. Although it is never the case that two games unintentionally duplicate each other, they can
wholly share the same rules and objectives – and each game’s progress is always governed by the effect of
the rules on their intermittently occurring events.
So it is that managing a trial, managing an experiment, or managing a game exhibits the essential paradigm
for managing change. Independent of the results, the validity of the procedure is paramount, while also
establishing the basis for comparisons, improvement, and prescribed effectiveness.
4. The Concept Of A “Valid” Change
A “change” is typically thought of as a future state
intended to allow or cause an opportunity or a
capability. But the real change is in getting there.
WHAT
differences are
targeted
The future state is represented by a description of
what will be different, where the difference will be
driven within the institution itself, and how the
institution will provide the means for effecting the
change. The description is expected to be accepted
or rejected, based on those goals and concerns.
The description argues that the means (HOW) will
enable conformity to the position and predisposition
(WHERE) that the institution agrees should allow or
cause the future state (WHAT).
The logic of the argument prescribes a premeditated
alignment of those goals and concerns. The
alignment must be reasonable and sustainable.
The goal of the logic itself is to validate the likelihood
of the success of change. Change Management
instantiates the argument, not the future state.
MANAGEMENT
HOW
WHERE
differences are
enabled
differences are
promoted
6. Stakeholder Justifications
To bring about the proposed change,
Stakeholders and participants must embrace
the concept of the future state as their
common goal.
WHAT
differences are
targeted
Justifications drive the motivation of the
different parties to take on the needed
operational responsibilities of supporting
change.
Without relevant motivation, the momentum
of the status quo is unlikely to allow enough
opportunity to coordinate enough review of
the proposed change.
Without enough review, there is insufficient
determination of possible impacts.
In effect, without clear distinctive high-level
justifications, it is unlikely that a basis will
form for accepting the particular view of the
future as being necessary.
HOW
WHERE
differences are
enabled
differences are
promoted
7. Stakeholder Guidance
With Justifications
Value
&
Roadmap
A successful change is not an event but
an enduring condition.
The endurance of the condition is a
logical result of the condition having a
good host.
To be a host, the enterprise does not
merely experience the change; instead
it literally incorporates the change.
This incorporation can occur when a
good combination of justifications and
guidance exists for the participant
actors at an operational level.
Guidance shows the actors what is
needed in structural terms, and
justification shows why that is
beneficial and important to them.
Organization
&
Implementation
Governance
&
Support
8. Managing Co-Operation
The future state proposed by a change is always
compared directly against existing ways of getting things
done. Therefore, the argument in favor of change must
specify its necessary operational conditions and also
identify how those conditions are realized.
WHAT
differences are
targeted
The logic for adequately sustaining the future
state calls out key participants and stakeholders,
who will then need to evaluate what operational
differences are proposed versus the status quo.
Those proposals model the demand for
management activities. In the model, differences
become manageable by coordinating
requirements, quality and programs. Participants
and other stakeholders are the suppliers of the
mechanisms for providing requirements, quality
and programs.
Defining requirements begins with assessments and
prioritizing; the quality of the environment for related
activities relies on agreeing areas and types of assurance;
and a program is used for maintaining delivery of the
capability to operate both appropriately and sustainably,
so that the delivery is continual.
requirements
HOW
WHERE
differences are
enabled
differences are
promoted
9. Aligning Justifications of the
Proposed Change
The definition of the proposed
change will identify what change
will occur, where its assurance will
be internally driven, and how it
will be enabled.
Strategy
Transformation
The responsible parties will need
to cooperate. The cooperation
will be modeled, in ways that are
shared through plans.
The primary plans will show that the
interests of the different parties are
reconciled for the benefit of making the
future state attainable and sustainable. The
Plans provide the parties with a common
reference for them to pursue and track the
alignment of their enabling efforts.
The key plans modeling the reconciled interests in the
change are Strategy, Transformation, and Architecture.
These plans reflect the distinctive disciplines that shape
the environment into the culture and the host of the change.
Architecture
13. or·ches·trate
verb (used with object), verb (used without object), or·ches·trat·ed, or·ches·trat·ing.
1.
to compose or arrange (music) for performance by an orchestra.
2.
to arrange or manipulate, especially by means of clever or thorough planning or maneuvering:
to orchestrate a profitable trade agreement.
-- Dictionary.com