Perspectives in Change Management. Why is it difficult to enact change in organizations?

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Why is it difficult to enact change in organizations?  Whether the need for change is due to increased global competition, shifts in consumer preferences, or stricter corporate ethics – change is inevitable. Organizations are faced with many forces of change: external forces such as demographic characteristics, advancements in technology, customer and market changes, social and political pressures, as well as internal forces such as low productivity and high turnover. Managers of today are faced with many challenges, none of which is seemingly more difficult to navigate than leading and facilitating organizational change successfully.

People are creatures of habit. Because of this basic human characteristic – they find trying new ways of behaving, difficult. They are often resistant to change for several reasons: individual predisposition to change, surprise and fear of the unknown, exhibiting a climate of mistrust, fear of failure, loss of status or job security, peer pressure, disruption of cultural traditions or group relationships, personality conflicts, lack of tact or poor timing, nonreinforcing reward systems, and past successes.

People are often more concerned with the implications of a change for themselves and their own interests, rather than taking the success of the business into consideration. Inadequate information or miscommunication can also affect a person’s willingness to accept change easily. Their need for security and stability may override their willingness to accept change. There may also be disagreements between people as to the advantages and disadvantages of a proposed change process.

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Along with the variety of reasons people resist change, there are several reasons why change processes just don’t succeed. Allowing too much complacency, failing to build a substantial coalition, not understanding the need for a clear vision, failing to clearly communicate the vision, permitting roadblocks against the vision, not planning for short term results and not realizing them, declaring victory too soon, and failing to anchor changes in corporate culture create great difficulty in the encouragement, promotion, and facilitation of change within an organization.

Kaizen is a Japanese life philosophy that assumes every aspect of our life deserves to be ...

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