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Change
Management MGMT625
VU
LESSON
#21
FOOTNOTES
TO ORGANISATIONAL CHANGE
The
leading management scholar James
March's study dealt with the
leading attribute of
organizational
change. Following are the
excerpts and selection from
his famous article footnotes
to
organizational
change published in one of the leading
management research journal,
Administrative
Sciences
Quarterly in 1981.
He
suggested five footnotes on
organization change as they
emphasize the relation between
change
and
adaptive behavior which
highlights the prosaic nature of
change.
Foot
Note 1
Organizations
are continually changing,
routinely, easily and responsively,
but change within
them
cannot
be controlled arbitrarily. Organizations
rarely do exactly what they
are told to do.
Foot
note 2
Changes
in organizations depend on a few stable
processes. Theories of change emphasize
either
the
stability of the processes or the changes
they produce, but serious understandings
of
organizations
require attentions to
both.
Foot
note 3
Different
theories of change are in fact
different ways to depict different
theories of action. Most
changes
in organization reflect simple
responses to demographic, economic,
social and political
forces.
What we identify as political, economic
societal and technological (PEST) analyses
are
connected
with different parts of
environment?
Footnote
4
Although
org. response to environmental
events is broadly adaptive and
mostly routine-based, the
response
takes place in a confusing world. As a
result prosaic (characterless) processes
sometimes
have
surprising outcomes.
Footnote
5
Adaptation
to changing environment involves
and interplays of rationality and
foolishness.
Organization
foolishness is not maintained as
conscious strategy, but
embedded in such
organisational
anomalies as slack, managerial incentives,
symbolic action, ambiguity
and loose
coupling.
Stable
Processes of Change
One
view is that change fails
not because organizations
are rigid and inflexible but
they are
impressively
imaginative. According to Aldrich in
most organization failure occur
early in life
when
organizations are small and
flexible, not later. There
is considerable level of stability
in
organization
and organisations are remarkably adaptive
as enduring institutions, respond to
volatile
environments
easily, though not
optimally
We
are inclined to look for
most dramatic explanations for
change, is our common mistake.
Most
changes
in organizations result neither
from organization processes or forces,
nor from uncommon
imagination
but from relatively stable,
routine processes that
relate organization to
their
environments.
Many of the most stable procedures in an
organisation are procedures
for responding
to
economic, social and political contexts. The
routine processes of organisational
adaptation are
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Change
Management MGMT625
VU
little
complex, and a theory of change
must take into account
how these processes can
produce
unusual
patterns of action. Therefore
theory of organization change
should not be different from
a
theory
of ordinary action.
Therefore
research on organization as routine
adaptive systems emphasize
six (06) basic
perspectives
for interpreting organization
action which are as
under:
1.
Rule following
2.
Problem solving
3.
Learning
4.
Conflict
5.
Contagion
6.
Regeneration
1.
Rule Following
Application
of standard operating procedures
(SOPs), duties, obligation, roles, rules, and
criteria
evolve
through competition and survival, and
those followed by organizations
that survive, grow
and
multiply come to dominate the
pool of procedures
2.
Problem Solving
Action
can be seen as problem
solving. The underlying
process involves choosing among
alternatives
by using some decision rule
that compares alternatives in
terms of their expected
consequences.
It is the rational actor model which
prevails in organizations. Managers
make
rational
choice under certain conditions of
risk and cost-benefit
analyses.
3.
Learning
Action
can be seen as stemming from
past learning. The
underlying process is one in which
an
organization
is conditioned through trial and
error to repeat behaviour
that has been successful
in
the
past, and to avoid that has
been unsuccessful. Learning is
what can be identified as
experiential
in
nature.
4.
Conflict
Action
can be seen as resulting
from conflicting among individuals or
groups representing diverse
interests.
The underlying process is one of
confrontation, bargaining and coalition,
in which
outcomes
depend on the initial preferences of
actors weighted by their
power. Edgar Schein talked
of
negotiated order to exist in
context of organization. Changes
result from shifts in
the
mobilization
or in the resources managers' control.
This change is again a
negotiated one by
different
members of organization who
want to adjust policies as per their
understanding view and
influence
in organization. This model is the one
based on politics. Members of
organization interact
in
a political manners and change
results in a politically negotiated
settlement amongst them.
Another
view relates to the pecking
order in organization explains the
existence of hierarchical or
top
down order in
organizations.
5.
Contagion
Action
can be seen as spreading from one
organization to another. The
underlying processes is one
in
which variations in contact among
organizations and in the attractiveness of the
behaviour or
beliefs
being imitated affect the rate and
pattern of spread.
6.
Regeneration
Action
can be seen as resulting
from the intentions and competencies of
organization actors.
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Change
Management MGMT625
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Turnover
in organization introduces new members
with different attitudes,
abilities and goals. This
resembles
organization life cycle approach
and is quite like birth,
growth, maturity and
decline.
An
organization uses rules, problem-solving,
learning, conflict, contagion,
and regeneration to
cope
with
its environment and actively adapt to
it. The processes are
conservative that is they
tend to
maintain
stable relations, sustain
existing rules, and reduce differences
among organizations. The
above
six processes are neither
esoteric (mysterious), complicated
nor mutually
exclusive.
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