Kevin Pashuk

8 years ago · 2 min. reading time · ~10 ·

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Resistant to change? ... or saturated?

Resistant to change? ... or saturated?


Years ago, my bright, brilliant, beautiful wife looked me in the eye and said "Do you know what's wrong with you?"

If you have been married any length of time you know I had just encountered the mother of all questions that there is no right answer for.

If I start my response by denying there is anything wrong with me, I am sunk.

If I start listing the things I know ("I sneak chocolate bars at work") then I am probably sunk, since there's a good possibility that she isn't talking about my chocolate bar habit and then I've just given her more ammunition for a future discussion.

So I do the smart thing and say "Really? What might that be?" then get ready to settle in for a long discussion.

The kind you don't dare act as if they are not important.

Even if they are at midnight.

So here I was, ready to be enlightened, and she says: "Your problem is that you thrive on change!"

There it was.

It didn't seem like a such a big thing, and my chocolate bar secret was safe.

But the way she said it made it sound like it wasn't a particularly good thing.

One of the key responsibilities of a leader is to identify the direction a team or organization needs to go, and them implement the changes necessary to make it happen.

In our world, changing for the right reasons is a very good thing. It keeps us gainfully employed.

But my discussion with my wife brought out the other side of change that every leader needs to consider.

The changes you bring into an organization impact real people... some of which have a much reduced capacity for change than you do.

For some people (and organizations) there is such a thing as too much change, too soon.

People become overwhelmed.

They start resisting your efforts.

If there are any mistakes made during the implementation of the changes (and there always are), they become amplified and used as reasons why people can't do their jobs.

And it can all come back to you.

It's been said that if you are working to bring change into an organization and you don't encounter any resistance, you are not changing the right things.

While I have found this to be profoundly true, there is a corollary to this rule.

If all you are getting is resistance, then perhaps you are changing too much.

Before you undertake any change initiatives, be sure you understand your organization's capacity and tolerance for change.

You need to adjust the pace of change to get the best results in the shortest period of time.

But do it based on a pace set by your organization, not necessarily your personal capacity for change.

If the pace set by your organization is too slow to be competitive in the market, or to achieve a time sensitive strategic objective, then you may have to work on another area of change first - the one Jim Collins in his book Good to Great describes as "getting the wrong people off the bus, and the right people on the bus".

But that is a subject for another post.

How about you? How tolerant is your organization for the right kinds of change?

How have you dealt with a change resistant group? Leave a comment!

And don't worry. Your chocolate bar secret is safe with me.

About the Author:

Kevin Pashuk is Chief Information Officer for Appleby College, in Oakville, Ontario Canada, where his team is transforming the delivery of education through innovative application of technology.

Kevin is convinced that IT leadership needs to dramatically change how IT is delivered rather than being relegated to a costly overhead department.

In addition to transforming IT in his role as CIO, he looks for every opportunity to talk about this... writing, speaking and now blogging on BeBee, LinkedIn (https://ca.linkedin.com/in/kpashuk), ITWorld Canada, or at TurningTechInvisible.com.

He also is an avid amateur musician and photographer (but not at the same time).  Check out his photostream on Flickr  or on beBee hive: serious-amateur-photographers

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Comments

Ken Boddie

7 years ago #7

Sorry, Kev, but during my monologue below I forgot to say how much I enjoyed your buzz ..... I eat my chocolate, incidentally, late at night, when the wife's gone upstairs and left me at the keyboard with my bees and chews.

Ken Boddie

7 years ago #6

As National QA Manager, change is my business. You hit the hammer right on the nail, Kev, when you stated that many companies have a maximum capacity for change, but the secret is to keep raising the bar by continuing to get individuals to challenge their comfort zones and embrace the benefits of new procedures without doing a 'dummy spit'. Unfortunately (or fortunately) companies need to keep up with many changes (whether in markets, clients' needs or internal culture and ascending generational attitudes) in order to survive. If you don't believe me then read "Who Moved my Cheese?" by Spencer Johnson. People soon get over their initial annoyances and discomforts about joining the 'change train', but when the train takes them to Disneyland or Candyworld more quickly and efficiently than walking there in the rain in leaky boots, then the "No damned way I'm doing that"-ers soon start sucking back on the new system dummy. Incidentally, have you noticed how babies stop their crying when you change their nappies? Must be a parallel there somewhere? 👶 😤

Mohammed Abdul Jawad

7 years ago #5

When applying 'change' becomes a necessity, there's always a froth of curiosity and scary uneasiness. With initial exposure, there's both: welcome sign and hideous resistance. As an able leader, one ought to handle situations, people and people's feelings and responses in a just, wise and tactical manner.

Kevin Pashuk

8 years ago #4

#6
Thanks Don Kerr. Finding the right balance of prodding, pausing change is indeed an art form.

don kerr

8 years ago #3

All change creates loss. Everyone reacts to loss differently. Wise to consider before jumping into the deep end. Good post @Kevin Pashuk. Glad to hear your chocolate bars are safe.

Kevin Pashuk

8 years ago #2

#4
No, but I have had several users with your unique skill set. Breaking things in ways unimaginable. Teenagers seem to be particularly adept at this.

Kevin Pashuk

8 years ago #1

#2
Are you sure we didn't work together in a former career?

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