Changing how you manage and communicate change: Focusing on the human side of change
By Naomi Karten
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About this ebook
People’s reactions vary depending on a number of factors, including personality types, misconceptions, their personal circumstances and the influences of their work and life experiences. This new book will enable you to recognise and accept these differences, and even harness them for the benefit of the business.
‘Changing How You Manage and Communicate Change’, written by speaker and consultant, Naomi Karten, is specifically for IT professionals and those working closely with IT. However, you will find that the experiences highlighted in this book apply equally to anyone in any industry who needs to lead change.
Naomi Karten
Highly experienced professional speaker and seminar leader, Naomi Karten has spent most of her career working in and with IT organisations. Drawing on her psychology and IT background, Naomi works with numerous organisations to help them improve customer satisfaction, manage change, and strengthen teamwork. Naomi has already delivered seminars and presentations to more than 100,000 people right around the world.
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Changing how you manage and communicate change - Naomi Karten
978-1-849281-27-0
ABOUT THE SOFT SKILLS FOR IT PROFESSIONALS SERIES
IT is often seen as a ‘hard-skill’ profession where there is no place for soft skills. Yet the importance of soft skills for the IT professional should not be underrated; they underlie all behaviors and interactions. Both IT and non-IT professionals need to work together and learn from each other for effective business performance. All professionals, be they in IT or elsewhere, need to understand how their actions and reactions impact on their behavior and working relationships.
This series of books aims to provide practical guidance on a range of soft-skills areas for those in IT and also for others, including those who deal with IT professionals, in order to facilitate more effective and cooperative working practices.
Each book is written by an experienced consultant and trainer. Their approach throughout is essentially practical and direct, offering a wealth of tried and tested professional guidance. Each chapter contains focused questions to help the manager plan and steer their course. The language used is jargon-free, and a bibliography is included at the end of the book.
Angela Wilde
IT Governance
FOREWORD
Communication is to managing change as air is to breathing. Nobody knows this better than Naomi Karten. We who work at the intersection of business and IT are fortunate that she has written this book.
We first met Naomi Karten in 1989 in Mt. Crested Butte, Colorado. Coincidentally, our professional interest in human change started that same year, when we worked as IT managers for a large aerospace company. From then on, our paths kept crossing. Every September we would meet again in Mt. Crested Butte. In 1992, Wayne started teaching Problem Solving Leadership workshops with Naomi. In 1995, Naomi became Eileen’s change consultant.
Here’s how Eileen tells the story:
I was CIO for an insurance company. We had just been forced to merge our local data center into a megacenter, 700 miles away. Although the hardware move went well, production performance was a disaster. The users, managers, and finally my boss, the company president, were all calling me with complaints. After numerous polite requests to the megacenter director, I finally lost it one day on the phone with him. He responded in kind. Even though I considered myself pretty good at managing human change, I knew that I was heavily invested in this change and that it would be wise to look for unbiased external help. I yelled out to Naomi for help. She did a masterful job of helping the megacenter director and myself acknowledge our issues, express our expectations, negotiate our way through the chaos together, and rebuild the trust between us.
Naomi is a consummate professional who has ‘been there, done that.’ Her IT experience has spanned 15 years, working in industry as both individual contributor and manager. Layer onto that her 20 years as seminar leader and consultant to IT organizations and you have in Naomi a wise sage you can believe. If that weren’t enough, her formal education in psychology and her extensive training in the methods of Virginia Satir, a pioneer in family systems therapy, add a special kind of credibility to her treatment of the human side of change.
Underneath her education and training, underneath her decades of IT experience, is an amazing woman with a huge heart and a great sense of humor. Naomi cares deeply that people struggle with change. Her caring and her humor come through in this book.
The advice in this book really works. We know it works because we use much of it in our consulting business. Our tag line is, ‘Helping companies change how they change so they can do it faster, better, and easier.’ We are hired by business executives to help them put troubled IT projects back on track. We most often find that failure to manage the human change is the biggest problem.
As heralds of change, you who work in and with IT will benefit from reading this book. You will better understand your own reactions to change and those of users, customers, employees, and suppliers. You will more confidently be able to explain why a one-size-fits-all change management plan doesn’t work and how to make it more flexible. You’ll understand more clearly why there is always a productivity drop when change is introduced and how to help people get up the learning curve more quickly.
This book is chock-full of useful models and tips that will increase your ability to deal with change more effectively, and help others do so as well. If you follow Naomi’s advice in this book, your communication during a change process will be as healthy and invigorating as a breath of cool, clean mountain air.
Eileen Strider and Wayne Strider
Strider & Cline, Inc.
PREFACE
Have you ever driven on the other side of the road? I don’t mean like in Boston, my hometown, where they do it for sport. I mean in a country where they drive on the opposite side of the road to what you’re used to. It’s an eye-opening experience when something as familiar as driving suddenly becomes unfamiliar.
That was my experience on a holiday in the UK with my husband, Howard. With confidence aforethought, he pulled right out into rush-hour traffic, as if he’d been doing other-side-of-the-road driving all his life.
For the first part of the day’s outing, I served in a support capacity, which consisted of screeching, ‘Keep left! Keep left!’ This I interspersed with high-decibel shrieking when I thought a car coming toward us was going to smack into us. I shrieked a lot that day.
Then it was my turn to drive. ‘Just keep left,’ I told myself a few million times. After some initial shrieking – having excelled at it as the passenger, I kept it up as the driver – driving became more intuitive. Still, in focusing so intently on the left side of the road, we each veered too far left a few times, thereby grazing an assortment of immovable objects. And we went round and round in traffic circles, trying to summon the courage to exit.
The most striking part of the experience was how tiring it was. We were doing something that was totally familiar – driving – and yet so unfamiliar as to require intense concentration until new habits began to form. It reminded me of how mentally and emotionally demanding it can be to adjust to change. And how difficult it is not to make mistakes in learning new habits.
In the workplace, people on the receiving end of change often face uncertainty, self-doubt, confusion, and fear. At such times, what they need more than anything else is information, reassurance, encouragement, empathy, and feedback. Yet these are the very things that are most often lacking, as those in charge focus their attention on the technical aspects of the change and treat the people affected as an afterthought. And then they are puzzled when the people affected don’t immediately welcome the change, support it, and adjust to it.
Your change efforts will proceed much more smoothly and to a much more satisfactory conclusion if you give serious consideration to the people affected. In fact, doing just that is the smartest way to minimize the duration and intensity of the turbulence that so often accompanies change.
With that in mind, my goal in writing this book is to offer ideas, guidelines, and advice to help you implement change in a way that respects the people affected. In particular, I want to help you excel at using communication as a tool for guiding people through change.
Having spent most of my career working in and with IT organizations, I’ve written this book for IT professionals and those who work with IT. These groups are my primary audience and the context for most of my examples and stories. But everything in the book applies to any line of work, even if it doesn’t entail contact with IT.
And, of course, in addition to the never-ending changes at work, life is full of changes on the home front: marriage, divorce, illness, babies, children grown and leaving home (and these days, moving back), financial loss, and, of course, death of a loved one or pet. So, although the focus of this book is the workplace, everything I’ve written is relevant to your personal life as well.
In general, if you’ve ever experienced change in the past, or anticipate that you will in the future, this book is for you.
My approach to achieving my goal is:
1 To describe change efforts that backfired due to a failure to communicate and to suggest why communication is so often lacking during times of change. This is the focus of Chapter 1.
2 To present change models that offer insight into the experience of change. Chapters 2 and 3 describe these models.
3 To describe universal truths about the impact of change. This is what Chapter 4 addresses.
4 To highlight how people vary in their receptiveness to change and their response to it. Chapter 5 addresses these variations.
5 To guide you in reflecting on your own experiences in managing and coping with change. Chapter 6 offers self-assessment questions for this purpose.
6 To help you build a foundation that will support you when change arises. This is the subject of Chapter 7.
7 To offer suggestions for introducing change thoughtfully. Chapter 8 addresses this topic.
8 To provide guidelines for communicating to and with the people affected by change. This is the focus of Chapters 9 and 10.
9 To guide you in learning from your change experiences so that you become increasingly adept at managing and coping with change. Chapter 11 concludes the book with this topic.
Throughout the book, you’ll find examples and more examples. Although it’s probably not your workplace I’m describing in these examples, I predict that more than a few will sound familiar.
This book draws from my background in psychology, my technical and management experience in IT, and more than two decades serving IT organizations as a speaker, seminar leader, consultant, and author. I’ve worked in and with a vast number of IT organizations, as well as with the people who work with IT. I’ve seen a lot and learned a lot, and I’m happy to share it with you.
The great poet, Ogden Nash, master of humorous verses, once said, ‘Progress is fine, but it’s gone on long enough.’ Who hasn’t felt this way at times? I hope you find some ideas in this book that will help you to manage and cope with change successfully.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
As a highly experienced professional speaker and seminar leader, Naomi Karten draws from her psychology and IT background to help organizations improve customer satisfaction, manage change, and strengthen teamwork. She has delivered seminars and presentations to more than a hundred thousand people in such diverse locations as Amsterdam, London, Oslo, Brussels, Vancouver, Toronto, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Trinidad, Costa Rica, San Francisco, Chicago, and New York.
Naomi’s several service level agreement e-books, including How to Establish Service Level Agreements, have helped organizations worldwide establish successful SLAs. Her other books and e-books include Managing Expectations, Communication Gaps and How to Close Them, and How to Survive, Excel and Advance as an Introvert.
Naomi’s website, www.nkarten.com, features more than a hundred articles on a wide range of topics, including strengthening customer relations, managing expectations, improving communication, gathering customer feedback, enhancing teamwork, and building consulting skills.
Naomi’s newsletter, Perceptions & Realities, offers serious advice in a lively, chuckle-generating manner. Numerous issues of this newsletter are posted on her website. In addition, she has published more than 300 articles in print and online publications.
Before forming her training and consulting business, Naomi earned degrees in psychology and gained extensive IT experience in technical, customer support, and management positions.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Big hugs of appreciation to the following for your input, your stories and examples, your wisdom, your generous sharing of ideas, your offers of assistance, and your enthusiasm for the topic of this book. Thank you!
Szifra Birke
Fiona Charles
Dale Emery
Debbie Exner
Isabel Fenichel-Berg
Ellen Gottesdiener
Payson Hall
Sherry Heinz
Elisabeth Hendrickson