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Change
Management MGMT625
VU
LESSON
# 13
THEORIES
OF CHANGE IN ORGANISATIONS
4.
Evolutionary Theory of
Change
First
thing we know is that it is
also the concept of evolution
which is also equated with
change.
Darwin,
the famous biological scientist is known
as the leading protagonist of this
theory. The term
organic
evolution means how a living
organism grows and shrinks over time. We
are also familiar
with
the debate between mechanistic versus
organic organization. Therefore the
question is; are
organization
like living organism follow
principles of natural evolution?
The metaphor is borrowed
from
biology, and as in biological evolution
change proceeds through a
continuous cycle of
variation,
selection and retention. In context of
organization these terms have the
following
meanings:
Variation
refers to the creations of novel forms of organisations
are often viewed to emerge
by
blind
or random chance. Variation may be
strategic or structural or operational in nature
for e.g.
Innovation
in organisational functional areas.
Implied here is the relationship of
organization and its
environment
changes over a period of
time. Changes in strategy and structural
activities
characterise
this relationship or in other words,
organizations continue to define and
redefine its
relationship
with environment. Therefore
external change leads to
change in strategy which
eventually
culminates in change of structure. For
example, growth (opportunity) in
industry (part of
environment)
will result in the growth
objective (increase in sales) of
organization, will lead to
in
manpower
(HR) and hence will
lead to change in management
form/practices. Imperative might
be
the
transformation of autocratic style to
participative style of decision
making. In other words a
single
organization cannot grow indefinitely and
still maintain its original
form. Variation is
bound
to
be there and this variation depends on
adaptive capacity varies (of
technology, capital,
trained
personnel,
etc)
Selection
of organisation occurs principally
through the competition of scarce
resources and the
environment
selects entities that best
fit the resource base of an
environmental niche.
Some
organisms
or variants perform better as
changes occur in environment while
other die or become
extinct.
Retention
involves forces (including
inertia and persistence) that perpetuate
and maintain certain
organisational
forms. Retention serves to counteract the
self-reinforcing loop between selection
and
variation.
The
same concept is known as
evolutionary thinking. Now
change managers, CEOs and
consultants
want
to make organization as an evolutionary
organization. The evolutionary
thinking is described
to
entail the following features:
1.
All
events are time
bound
2.
No
such thing/phenomenon is absolute
3.
Focus
on historical particular for
explaining causation
4.
Study
of context is important
5.
The
theory also accounts for
diversity of the organic
world.
6.
Account
for variations in organizational strategy
and its structure
Therefore
evolution explains change as a recurrent,
cumulative, and probabilistic progression
of
variation,
selection and retention of organisation
entities (forms and practices).
Organization
mutates;
mutation in biological terms
means change in genetic character
which means
transformation
in genetic codification. Change in
genetic character is a matter of random
variation
(chance).
In context of organizational innovation
in different functional areas of
organization
(managers
in various departments) in a random
manner discover efficient and
effective ways of
management.
The discovery of such
changes could relate to two
broader categories; systemic
change
and operational change. Systemic change
addresses the issue of effectiveness
while
33
Change
Management MGMT625
VU
operational
level change is concerned
with efficiency improvement.
Typically organizations have
growth
as strategic objectives; and the relationship between
control and growth is more
pronounced
according
to most of the management consultants.
This is considered to be inversely
related with
each
other. For higher level
growth organization control
has to be relaxed and
decentralized.
Another
way to look at an evolving
organization is to study entrepreneurship
especially how do
smaller
organizations transform themselves
into a large organization?
Organizations cannot grow
with
single or constant management
style or organization structure and hence
variation in
organization
and organization structure is bound to
occur.
The
same thinking is related
with what is known as concurrent
engineering. By going
for
management
audit one tends to evaluate
forms and practices which
are needed and those which
are
considered
redundant and futile, in production or
manufacturing process.
There
are two theoretical
approaches further within the
evolutionary school which differ in
terms of
how
traits are inherited, the rate of
change and unit of analysis. One is
Darwinian approach which
believes
that organization traits are
inherited through inter-generational
processes. Darwinian
theorists
believe in continuous and gradual
process of evolution. While there
are scholars who
follow
Lamarckian line, and argue that
traits are acquired within a
generation through learning
and
imitation.
Most analysts believe that
Lamarckian view is more applicable and
appropriate than strict
Darwinism
in context of organisation and
management, especially on the acquisition
of traits. This
is
more in line with learning
capability of an organization.
Unit
of Change
Evolution
theories operate on multiple entities,
that is on intra-organisational,
organisational,
population,
communities as against OLC and
teleological theories which operate
within single
entity.
Evolutionary forces are
defined in terms of the impact
they have on populations and have
no
meaning
at the level of the individual
entity.
Mode
of Change
Evolutionary
theories incorporate a prescribed mode of
change, which is of continuously
evolving
character.
Evolutionary theories rely on the
statistical accumulation of small
individual events to
gradually
change the nature of the larger
population.
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