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Change
Management MGMT625
VU
LESSON#
6
TRANSACTIONAL
VS. TRANSFORMATIONAL
LEADERSHIP
Transactional
This
means an approach going by legal contract
or agreement, job-description, and
hence no concern
with
employees or managers beyond contract. It is
considered a bureaucratic or mechanistic way of
organizational
life, essentially a fragmented approach
followed by most of the developed
world states,
and
societies are known as
litigious societies.
Transformational
Organizational
life goes beyond legality
and bureaucratic administrative values. Effective
organizations
are
those where leadership is inspirational,
role model, learning &
grooming of followers.
Individuals
feel
involved because of humane
concern of their leaders and
hence become more productive.
Contrary
to the transactional
style of management this is considered
organic, holistic & more
comprehensive
approach, to leadership
and management. Asiatic style of
management and learning is
considered
transformational
while that of Western is more
transactional. For example
viz. role of teacher should
he
be bound by
his legal contract and a role
which is just limited to
class room or he is considered an
overall
role model, inspiring leadership and
ethical values.
Continuous or
First - order change
Two
frameworks in which change
can occur; continuous or first
order change and the other
is
discontinuous
or second order change.
Change that occurs in a
stable system that itself
remains
unchanged.
These changes and variations
are necessary for business
to grow and thrive in a
competitive
environment.
Evolution theories describe the
first-order changes that
industries experience. Natural
selection
mechanism views the entry and
exit of firms in an industry as the
primary method of
evolution.
(Changes within particular
stage of organisational life
cycle). In other words this refers
to
gradual
changes in organization such as
refining existing processes and
procedures
Discontinuous
or second-order change
Change
that occurs when fundamental
properties or system itself
has changed, for example,
the fall of
communism in
Europe and former Soviet
Union. Or
revolutionary changes in technology,
competition,
socio-economic
conditions like in telecommunication,
banking, health-care, and electronics
are
considered
discontinuous change as it leads
restructure these industries, relocate
industries and change
the bases of
competition. Change of
stage on organisational life
cycle is a discontinuous one. Quantum
change is
perceived better to make
organizations High Performing
Organization (HPO)
Middle
order change
It is
defined by one author as a compromise
between the two; the magnitude of change
is greater than
first-order,
yet it neither affects the critical
success factors nor is strategic in
nature
Micro-changes
Another
practical classification is owing to the
difference in degrees e.g. modifications,
improvements,
enhancements
& upgrades
Mega-changes
These
refer to the differences in kind a
structural one, for example
when we refer to a new
system.
Human
Capital
18
Change
Management MGMT625
VU
Is learning
(knowledge creation) a personal or
individual phenomenon or is it a
social/collective
phenomenon
(discourse/dialogue)? Its answer
will lead to the definition of human and
social capital.
Human
capital refers to the full range of
knowledge, skills & abilities an
individual can use to produce
a
given
set of outcomes. Practically at
upper echelon manager are
able to scan
internal/external
environment,
solve problem, seize
opportunities, etc. Firm-specific human
capital means knowledge
of
one's
own operation, strengths,
weaknesses, tacit knowledge,
operational personnel and
communication
styles etc.
General human capital deals
with knowledge of and about
larger environment, competitors,
suppliers,
customers, stake holders, and
about dealing with human
capital
Social
capital
Is learning
essentially a social phenomenon? It refers to the
linkages between social actors,
the strengths
of those
linkage, and resources that
flow from them (networking).
The key dimensions include
structural
(relationship
pattern among actors), relational
(trust, norms, obligations, ethics
that thru the
relationship
flow), and
cognitive (shared beliefs and languages).
Linkage between upper echelon and Board
of
Directors
(BOD) in the form of information,
advice, trust, and other organization
processes like
problem-solving,
decision-making, coordinating. A very
thought provoking and interesting
question
would be
what if organization has human
capital minus social capital, and
vice-versa?
Four
types of organisational change
1. Power
culture
Following
are the attributes of power
culture. In such organizations
individual is told what to
do, power
is exercised by
leaders about changing
behaviour, extraneous pressures to
perform role and
extrinsic
motivation
results are focussed.
2. Role
culture
Where
individual acts within the
limits of job-description. For e.g.
stenographer in public sector
refuse
to learn or
do the job such as fax or
e-mail as per his job-description
(narrower interpretation of a
job)
3.
Task/ achievement culture
Individual
acts in a suitable way to complete
tasks. People are motivated
intrinsically (autonomy and
sense of
satisfaction
4. Person/Support
culture:
Individual uses own
initiative
Organisation
Development
OD is a
system wide process of data
collection, diagnosis, action planning,
intervention, and
evaluation
aimed
at:
1. Enhancing
congruence between organisation structure,
process, strategy people and
culture;
2.
Developing new and creative
organizational solutions;
3.
Developing the organization's
self-renewal capacity
The
difference between OD and change
management is difficult to delineate as
it is overlapping but OD
context
essentially deals with
internal aspects of organization
while change management
tends to be
broader in
its scope and concerns with
both internal and external
aspects of organization.
19
Change
Management MGMT625
VU
Organisational
meme
Definition:
Any of the core elements of
organisational culture, like
basic assumptions,
norms,
standards,
and symbolic systems that
can be transferred by imitation from one
human mind to the next.
In simpler
words it is the replicating or copying
behaviour. It is very fundamental
way of learning
borrowed
from child psychology.
Individual learns from other
by following him as a role
model. For
example
students getting admissions in
any one popular subject or profession at
any given time; be it
medical,
engineering, information technology,
just because of imitating
behaviour. This is also
known
as band
wagon effect or mass movement. In
consumer behaviour the same
thing known as life style
or
fashion.
Bench marking at organisational level
represents mimicry especially
when one organization
(industry
leader) does something new
and all tend to follow the
same. Even states follow
other states in
terms of
economic and development policies considered
successful such as export
promotion, FDI,
trade-liberalisation,
nationalisation, import-substitution
policy, or entrepreneurship promotion
etc.
Scholars
have different opinions in advocating the
efficacy of mimetic process as
some believe in
favour and
for others the process could
be imperfect in transferring knowledge,
and hence lead to
genetic
distortion.
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