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Thursday, 25 May 2017

Whats the Best Transformation Leaders Do. HBR Article

https://hbr.org/2017/05/what-the-best-transformational-leaders-do


I found this article to be very good. It is research based and can therefore be taken seriously. For those with little time here are extracts that summarize the essence of the findings:


They Strategically Pursue Two Separate Journeys

a.Success requires re-positioning the core business while actively investing in the new growth business
b.“Apple serves as the classic model of such “dual transformation.” With the iMac and iBook, Steve Jobs reinvigorated the core Macintosh franchise by injecting a new sense of design and rethinking what computers would be used for in the age of the internet. On a separate track, he launched the device and content ecosystem, starting with iPod and iTunes, that would become the company’s new growth engine”

They Use Culture Change to Drive Engagement

a.“In the old world (Microsoft required), large teams would work for years on the next major version of a franchise program like Windows and Word, leading to a risk-averse environment. In the new world of “infrastructure on demand,” dozens of new features and improvements would need to be introduced per month ... This required a culture of risk taking and exploration”

They Communicate Powerful Narratives About the Future

a.“To change the culture and move into new growth areas, the CEO needs to become “the storyteller in chief,” says Aetna’s Mark Bertolini. That means telling different aspects of the same transformation narrative to all the constituencies and stakeholders in the company”
b.It’s easy to underestimate the amount of communication that is needed... You have to be tireless about it, consistent and persistent...”

They Develop a Road Map Before Disruption Takes Hold

a.“Many of the most notable disrupted companies — from Blockbuster, to Borders, to Blackberry, to Kodak — ran into their deepest troubles a decade or more after some of the first warning signs appeared. None of their leaders developed effective transformation plans in time to halt the decline”

Friday, 5 May 2017

Change Management 101


Often we need to have a short introduction to change management and what it is. I have prepared this animation for you, using Video-scribe.NB! Play in at least 360p on your screen with sound on.

If you need a higher resolution just message me, and I will let you have a Dropbox link. In terms of attribution:

  • From my side. no copyright. Just a reference for potential work
  • The concept at the end of the video is from
  • "Managing Organizational Change during SAP Implementations: Efficiently implement SAP related change 1st Edition by Luc Galoppin (Author), Siegfried Caems (Author)"






Thursday, 4 May 2017



Nancy Duarte has a simple but extremely effective structure to analyse and deliver a great story. Something that could help change consultants and managers tremendously. I also uploaded a one slide presentation that shows the use in the MLK "I Have a Dream" speech.


Both the slide and the video are included in this post.






Wednesday, 3 May 2017

Myth the Highest Form of Story Telling



Because myth is (in my opinion) the highest form of story telling it also needs to considered when change is initiated. All change lead to cultural change (they way we do things here), especially in transformation change should we therefore consider contexts, which are reflected in the symbols, rituals and stories relevant to the organization, community and eventually society.

Maybe the deciphering of context, and creation of new context is the first task of the change leader.

Devutt illustrates this wonderfully in the video. Here are two quotes to captivate your attention:

"If you understand the difference between 'the world' and 'my world,' you understand the difference between logos and mythos. 'The world' is objective, logical, universal, factual, scientific. 'My world' is subjective. It's emotional. It's personal. It's perceptions, thoughts, feelings, dreams. It is the belief system that we carry. It's the myth that we live in"

"Depending on the context, depending on the outcome, choose your paradigm. You see, because both the paradigms are human constructions. They are cultural creations, not natural phenomena. And so the next time you meet someone, a stranger, one request: Understand that you live in the subjective truth, and so does he. Understand it. And when you understand it you will discover something spectacular. You will discover that within infinite myths lies the eternal truth. Who sees it all? Varuna has but a thousand eyes. Indra, a hundred. You and I, only two. Thank you. Namaste"




Andrew Stanton: The Clues to a Great Story (Applicable to Change)

Here is a pic that can be used in a slide show, to communicate what need to be communicated at different levels of the organization during change. It is an extension of the previous post, where the video is embedded.




Tuesday, 2 May 2017

A Masterclass in Story Telling in 20 Minutes

A brilliant view of story telling, and so much relevant for organisational change!



A few quotes from the video clip:


  • "Frankly, there isn't anyone you couldn't learn to love once you've heard their story”
  • “It's knowing your punch line, your ending, knowing that everything you're saying, from the first sentence to the last, is leading to a singular goal, and ideally confirming some truth that deepens our understandings of who we are as human beings”
  • “It’s fundamentally making a promise. It's making a promise to you that this story will lead somewhere that's worth your time”
  • “So we're all learning all the time. And that's why change is fundamental in story. If things go static, stories die, because life is never static”
  • “Another fundamental thing we learnt was about liking your main character”



Whats the Best Transformation Leaders Do. HBR Article

https://hbr.org/2017/05/what-the-best-transformational-leaders-do I found this article to be very good. It is research based and can th...