Saturday, May 23, 2020

Managing a Team Turn the Small Changes Into Small Wins Marla Gottschalk

Managing a Team Turn the Small Changes Into Small Wins Marla Gottschalk Im a huge fan of small wins when it comes to organizational change. (I believe Kotter is as well. Read his iconic article here). Ive watched small wins reignite hope and forge forward progress. Im also a fan of Seth Godin. (If you know me well, this isnt a much of a secret.) Not a professor of organization theory, or a psychologist â€" he has an uncanny ability to distill a semesters worth of readings concerning organizational topics into a few profound paragraphs. I suspect he has an innate sense that allows him to fully understand human beings. Here is an except from a recent blog post: Chronic The worst kind of problem is precisely the kind of problem we’re not spending time worrying about. It’s not the cataclysmic disaster, the urgent emergency or the five-alarm fire. No, the worst kinds of problems are chronic. They grow slowly over time and are more and more difficult to solve if we waitSeth Godin You see it is the small things â€" those micro-events that repeat over and over again â€" that define an organization. It is the small things that speak volumes about a brand, to clients, customers and employees. Conversely, it is the small things that can become chronic points of contention. They are the overlooked bad habits of your team or organization. The less than stellar experiences that leave your organization weakened. It is also the small things that offer us a tremendous opportunity to build trust and devotion among our customers clients. These seemingly small events, can offer the possibility of growth and connection. They allow an organization to build a more worthy foundation. A stronger future. My opinion concerning the smalls things isnt random. It developed after years of observing the repeated ineffectiveness of top-down organizational change efforts. There are clear reasons that 70% of transformation efforts fail. Deeply connecting people to change is one looming abyss that we must consider. Why should they invest â€" if they feel they arent a part of the solution? The small things are not a detached, heavily engineered project that must be monitored, poked and prodded, to affect change. They are simple. They are owned by your team. Those that know the work. These small things are a gift. These small things â€" can become the small wins that matter. The wins that drive positive change. I challenge you (your team, your department) to identify 5 small things that would make a huge difference to your customers, your employees, your patients. Find a way to transact these opportunities into a re-imagined reality. Build that new habit, which changes the entire game. You see, the small things â€" really arent small at all. Have you applied this technique? Share your experience with our community. Dr. Marla Gottschalk is an Industrial/Organizational Psychologist. She is a charter member of the LinkedIn Influencer Program. Her thoughts on work life have appeared in various outlets including Talent Zoo, Forbes, Quartz and The Huffington Post.

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