2 Things about managing through change (and 3 things others are asking)
Research has suggested there is another side of change that is given less attention— how managers and organizational members interpret the changes as they unfold


Recently I observed a top management team introduce a proposed new compensation plan to their board of advisers, a select group of employees to whom this new plan would apply. Despite the carefully crafted policy, the advisers did not seem to embrace the new policy wholeheartedly. They had questions, concerns and implementation suggestions. Was the top team annoyed by the reactions? Did they have mixed emotions about their hard work being second guessed? Not sure, but I do know this:"ƒI witnessed a change gap in real time.
There are two things managers and executives should know.
Initially there are the rumors and suspicions that something might change. Will we get a new CEO, is there a new strategic direction or major product shift at the company, which new HQ location will be selected?
Then, once the change is confirmed, more questions arise. My work suggests that, consistently, there are three questions on people’s minds through its stages:
As the change takes hold, individuals want to understand the impact on their work and how they do their jobs. Will I have more resources or fewer? Will my work become easier or harder?
And once the change is well underway, each of us begins to ask the question of “Was the change worth it?"
As we started the summer and the outlook was brighter for the ending of the pandemic, we were all beginning to ask and answer that final question.
The fascinating aspect of change as interpretation is that it is never finished.
The other fascinating aspect of change interpretations is that we are not all at the same stage.
Those at the top of organizations who are living and breathing a change — long before some of us — learn of the change and are ahead in their interpretation cycle. Those of us hearing the change for the first time are asking different questions and needing different answers: the change gap at work.
For the advisory group described at the beginning of this article, they were all trying to figure out what it meant personally to them. The top team was already into how it would affect their work and why the change was worth it.
First Published: Sep 08, 2021, 12:52
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