COLUMN -
Change Management
Coping With
Type I Change
The Second Column in "The 3 Shades of
Change" Series
Type I Change which is done to us.
Type II Change which we do to
ourselves.
Type III Change which we do to others.
While there are several questions we might
ask when a Change is presented to us, there one which
trumps all others. Do we have any control over this
Change? While this seems to call for simple a "Yes" or
"No", if we look a bit deeper, things get complicated. The
question is about what we believe, and how that belief
matches reality.
|
|
In Reality
We have no control |
In Reality
We have Control |
|
We Believe we have no control
|
Type I.a
Normal Grief Cycle... and we work
through it.
Healthy
|
Type I.b
Normal Grief Cycle... and we work
through it.
Healthy
but... we can miss opportunities, some
minor, some huge.
|
|
We Believe we have control
|
Type I.c
Very frustrating -unrealistic
doomed to failure
Unhealthy |
Type I.d
Empowering
Life affirming
stimulates growth
the stuff of heroes
Very Healthy
|
It would be incredibly naοve to suggest it
is an easy task to find the right cell to inhabit even in
this simplistic 2x2 diagram. Properly aligning our beliefs
with reality is either a result of deep wisdom... or
uncanny luck... and often a mixture of both.
There aren't too many events over which we
have no control. Death is the only one which comes to
mind. (Taxes are avoidable to some degree!) Sooner or
later, we have to recognize the reality of Death and cope
with it. The sooner we accept there is nothing we can do
to bring back a loved one, the sooner we can put it behind
us, and move forward with our lives. This is a clear
example of a healthy Type I.a Change.
Other examples of Type I Change are more
open to discussion. If we're laid off because of a merger,
downturn in business, bankruptcy, fired with or without
cause etc. etc. Then it becomes more difficult to decide
how much control we really have. The question "Is there
something I can do about this?" is a persistent one, often
with no clear answer.
Finding ourselves in Type I.b is not
necessarily the end of the world. Believing we have no
control, even if we could do something to affect our
course, is the path of least resistance. The question we
must ask ourselves is, "Are we content to let others make
decisions for us?" The answer is inextricably tied to
another question; "Can we trust them to make decisions in
our best interest?" If the answer is yes, then accepting
Type I.b isn't too uncomfortable... If the answer is no,
then we might want to drop down into Type I.d.
Type I.c Change is our most unhealthy of
choices. The phrase, "Tilting at windmills" comes to mind.
To believe we can seize control of a situation distinctly
out of our control is a recipe for madness, at the very
least it results in a tremendous amount of wasted effort.
On the other hand, we must believe we can
control a Change in order to place ourselves in the most
powerful of places... Type I.d. All who have achieved
great things believed from the start, it was in their
power to Change something, even when, especially when,
everyone around them said they were crazy, that they could
not succeed.
The personal challenge is to determine
whether we are falling into the abyss of Type I.c or stand
at the brink of Type I.d greatness. The only way to ensure
we are making the right decision is to;
a) know ourselves as
objectively as possible; our strengths and weaknesses.
b) know and understand, as intimately as possible,
the Change taking place.
When attempting to implement a Type I
Change, as management we have two complementary strategies
at our disposal;
i) Communicate the Change as clearly as
possible so that people are correct in their beliefs
regarding how much control they have over the process. You
don't want people in the Type I.c box if they could move
up to I.a or across to I.d.
ii) Wherever possible, and it's nearly
always possible, give some control of the Change to those
who must respond to it. The more we can let our people
operate in the Type I.d. space, the more they are
empowered.
©
2004, Peter de Jager Peter is a Change Management
Consultant, Seminar Leader and Speaker. Visit him at
www.technobility.com or contact him at
pdejager@technobility.com
|