Organizational change
Communicating organizational change
- Communication
is the foundation to successful management of organizational
change.
- The goal of communication during organization change is to deliver
information that changes behavior in front-line employees.
Getting “buy
in” represents 90% of the effort needed to accomplish any change
effort. Many managers are embracing e-mail, intranets, and other technological
innovations as efficient solutions to the high communication demands
during times of change. However, simply
making information available is not the same as communication.
During organizational change employees are often in turmoil, fearing loss
of employment security and loss of loyalty to seemingly uncaring employers.
For all its capacity, information technology provides only limited relief for
the anxieties and frustrations of human resources burdened by change.
Factors in communicating organizational change
During organization change perception equals reality: The
level of stress an employee feels during organizational change is
proportional to the level of perceived threat. Managers need to anticipate
and adjust their communication to minimize the perception of threat during
change.
Organizational change trust and credibility: A message
is as credible as the highest credible source that will state it. Trust
is the single most important factor in the perception of a threat.
To gain the advantages of trust, managers must understand the basis of trust.
• Honesty and openness
• Competence and expertise
• Dedication and commitment
• Caring and empathy
Organization change Perceived control: Research shows that
when we feel we have some control over an event it is perceived as less
threatening.
Making sure employees have a voice in decisions, in an appropriate manner
is critical to their sense of control and therefore acceptance of organization
change. It does not constitute a vote or a veto. What employees need is assurance that their point of view has been heard,
reasonably considered and responded to before the decision is made.
Personal benefit: A change that has a definable level of benefit is not seen
as threatening as one that does not.
Organizational change more communication tips
Emphasize what matters
to the employee, not the company. Studies
have shown that what employees want to know is what the future plans of the
company are relative to their local work area.
Communicate Performance. By
letting people know where they stand it becomes clear to them that what they do matters.
Communicate
in person. Communication about important changes
needs to be made face-to-face. Supervisors should bring
communications directly to the people that matter, when they need it
most - when they ask a question.
Organizational change: systems and policies
Assess, as early as possible, which organization systems
and policies might need to be developed during the change process.
Organizational change keynote presentation: Communicating change
Making the Most of Difficult Situation
Changing Markets, Changing Times
This funny, insightful program combines communication skills with no-fluff
motivation and change to deliver real solutions in uncertain times. Professional
speaker and business relationship expert, Garrison Wynn , examines the challenges
we face and shows how we can laugh at our problems while using them as catalysts
for success. This session covers a lot of ground and provides no-cost, easily
implemented, proven solutions that your managers can use right away.
- Building
trust, credibility,and Loyalty
- The secret to successfully change management: maximizing strengths and
minimizing weaknesses
- Listening like a leader
- How to stay motivated in difficult situations
- Managing Your Mouth: Your Most Valuable Business Asset
- Getting good results when people are scared
- Better communications before during and after transitions
- Why the smartest people are not in charge: the geniuses work for the risk
takers
- Reducing the fear of failure
- Action creates opportunity
- Increasing employee accountability when you need it the most
Garrison Wynn Biography | Testimonials | Client
list
Organizational change training workshop: Communicating change
Communication in Action
Communication Skills for successfully managing organizational change
This insightful one-day program combines Wynn Solutions’ research of
5,000 top communicators in 323 organizations and 11 industries, with specific
strategies for building trust and gaining agreement. Going beyond best practices,
this session will show how employees can achieve their goals without stepping
on the toes of their co-workers.
Suggested agenda
- How to make people feel important, so you and what you have to offer will
be important to them: creating an effective environment
- How to overcome resistance to change
- Make sure processes are consistently implemented
- How behavior can cause skills and knowledge to lose impact
- Communicating change: how to move positive ideas through the company
- Dealing with difficult coworkers
- The truth about trust: how to make sure people feel heard
- How to get people to listen to you: believability and clarity
- How to get people to agree with you: managing expectations and emotions
- The five things you should never say to a customer or coworker
- One-on-one communication skills: connecting with your team
- The secret to success: maximizing strengths and minimizing weaknesses
- How to stay motivated in difficult situations
- How engaged employees drive customer loyalty
- Accountability: How to avoid blame distribution
- How to manage your boss
Additional training
programs provided by Wynn Solutions for sales, customer service and presentation
skills
Pre-training assessments for organizational change workshops available
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