And In Last Place.....People

At the start of 2018, ITSM.tools asked its readers to vote for the IT service management (ITSM) topics that they felt would be the most important for the website to cover in 2018.

I didn’t see any major surprises in the results but was disappointed that there was no mention about increasing our understanding of how we are going to support our people in a world in which change is constant. With “people” topics taking a backseat to the process and technology.

Read More
Karen FerrisComment
Kill the Hierarchy! - Rapid Decision-Making

In a hierarchy decisions can take a long time due to the layers through which information has to flow before a decision is made. When organisations need to respond quickly to changing priorities, opportunities, competition, threats etc. the ability to make decisions quickly will be essential for success. Therefore the hierarchy has to be flattened so that there are less decision-making hoops through which to jump.

Read More
Karen FerrisComment
Kill The Hierarchy!

In this post I discuss the need to kill the hierarchy.

The only way to enable a ‘faster’ organisation that can respond to constant change is to flatten the structure. It needs to move away from a structure of hierarchical control to a flatter structure that removes the bureaucracy that slows organisations down.

It not about having no structure at all and having no hierarchy – I think there will always be an element of hierarchy.

Read More
Karen FerrisComment
Game On! - Support - Coaches and Players

In this post I explore support – the relationship between the Coaches and the Players.

Coaches need to provide unrelenting support for the Players.

Players are operating in times of instability and uncertainty, which is not going to change anytime soon. They need the ability to remain highly effective under intense pressure.

Read More
Karen FerrisComment
It's All About the People

I recently wrote an article for ITSM.tools about why organisational change management is so important but also why it needs to change itself.

It’s not about the technology, it’s not about the processes, it’s all about the people. 
Without a focus on the latter, the former have no worth.

Read More
Karen FerrisComment
Game On! - Engagement - Players and Managers

Engagement consists of four activities – educate, communicate, facilitate and alleviate. Change resilience can be achieved through engagement. When excessive amounts of change are taking place, employees can become disengaged.

A HBR article (2010) summed up constant change. It said

 “The companies most likely to be successful in making change work to their advantage are the ones that no longer view change as a discrete event to be managed, but as a constant opportunity to evolve the business."
Read More
Karen FerrisComment
Book Review - Lean Change Management

Are you passionate about bringing meaningful change into your organization? If the answer is yes, then this book is for you.

If you want to add to your change management toolkit with ideas from Agile, Lean Startup, neuroscience, psychology, and organizational development, then this is a must read.

Read More
Karen Ferris
Game On! A New Change Management Strategy

Change is now constant and complex. There is no time to take breath and wait for one change to be embedded before moving on to the next. Changes are hitting us like an automatic rifle. The old scattergun effect of dealing with change is dead.

In this post, I would like to explore the roles we need in the organisation to manage in a VUCA world.

Read More
Karen FerrisComment
Karen's Conversations #30

The tables get turned in Karen's Conversations #30 when Breed Barrett chats to Karen about her change in direction and her focus on organisational change. Karen describes how the organisational change management world needs a major shake-up and wake-up if organisations are going to survive.

Read More
Karen FerrisComment
Constant Change is the New Black!

Constant change is the new norm.

We do not have the capacity to “manage” people through three phases of transition in a world that is now described as VUCA – volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous, in which change is constant.

The existing approaches to organisational change management are simply not suited to a VUCA world.

Read More
Karen FerrisComment