Change Management Checklist – Give Your Change Program a Quick Health Check
Approach to Change
How is your change initiative going? Are managers and employees singing from the same hymn sheet or are you seeing constant bickering and recriminations? Are positive results emerging for all to see or is your organization’s performance going backwards? Is your program meeting targets and deadlines or is money and time being continually sucked into a black hole?
Whether you are implementing a new local accounting system in your department or your organization is embarking on a comprehensive culture change program, it makes sense to take a breath and review how you are traveling. Here is a quick eighteen-point checklist that you can use on your current change project. You can either answer the questions on your own, or better still, get your team in to discuss the answers as a group.
The following questions are based on the CHANGE Approach © to managing change in organizations. This approach recognizes that a disciplined process is required for leading and managing change, from the initial good idea to eventual institutionalization of the new way of working. These six phases of the change process are:
Create tension
Articulate why change needs to happen and why it needs to happen within the planned timeframe.
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Harness support
Get on board the key decision-makers, resource holders and those with the potential to subvert the change process.↓
Articulate goals
Define in specific and measurable terms the desired organizational outcomes.↓
Nominate roles
Assign responsibility to specific individuals for the various tasks and outcomes.↓
Grow capability
Build organizational systems and people competencies necessary for affecting the change.↓
Entrench changes
Institutionalize the change to make it “the way we do things around here”.
The checklist questions act as a quick diagnostic by surveying
the critical activities in each phase. Neglect in one or more areas
will likely result in the change program suffering.
The Checklist
Create tension
- Is there a clear and compelling reason for adopting this change program?
- Is the objective data needed to convince the skeptics available?
- Do people feel the urgency to change?
Harness support
- Do we know what are the motivators for each stakeholder group?
- Does the senior executive team support this change?
- Are all stakeholders engaged in the change process?
Articulate goals
- Do stakeholders take ownership of the vision and goals?
- Are people involved in devolving the goals to lower levels of the organization?
- Are performance measurement and reporting systems set up?
Nominate roles
- Are change management and new operational accountabilities clear?
- Are the right people selected for the right roles?
- Are project management principles and methods being used?
Grow capability
- Is the training plan sufficiently scoped and adequately resourced?
- Are teams being developed and supported for high performance?
- Is support in place ensuring transfer of training to the workplace?
Entrench changes
- Are performance results reported and successes celebrated?
- Are remuneration, rewards and recruitment systems aligned with the change objectives?
- Do managers and supervisors lead by example?
How does your program measure up? If you get your team together, the actual answers are not the most important thing. The resulting discussion amongst the group should highlight where you will need to direct your future efforts. You will get the most benefit from this checklist if you check progress with your team and review the checklist every few weeks.
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