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Leading through Change

After you’ve replaced inertia with imperatives and communicated the change effectively, you need to ensure you light a fire under your employees to keep that forward momentum. Employees put up resistance because they are afraid, change will affect their mutual agreements. They also sometimes make hasty assumptions about the change implications. The antidote to both of these sources of resistance is effective communication. To keep employees motivated about change, you can also use several other approaches

A leader can take steps to actively remove a number of obstacles as they arise. Once removed, the way will be clear for change momentum

Once you’ve drummed up support for your change initiative, communicated the change to everyone involved, and removed any obstacles, you’ll want to aim for a few early successes. This will improve morale and confidence, and dispel lingering doubts about the change. If you’re finding resistance in the form of pessimism among employees, arrange for some short-term wins to feed the faith in the change. Accomplishing some early victories will

Try to focus on tasks that can be completed quickly and will provide positive results with maximum visibility. Once you’ve managed to get some drive behind your change and secured an early win, it’s crucial to sustain the momentum. Unless you actively cultivate a culture of change in your organization, your initial success will wither and the support structure for change will cave in. Once people return to business as usual, you too are back to square one – trying to replace inertia with imperatives and overcome resistance. You can’t assume everyone is fully on board with the change. Don’t assume that they’re eager for the next wave, or that they have internalized the culture of change. Your actions must reflect forward motion, building on the momentum. You need to show you have a plan for the next step and a continued passion for the change.

When leading a change, you set yourself up on a solid foundation by replacing inertia with imperatives and communicating the change effectively. Then, to follow through, you’ve got to actively remove obstacles to change as they arise, aim for early successes, and sustain the momentum. When actively removing obstacles, make sure you combat a lack of knowledge by providing adequate information to diminish negativity. Make changes to policies to reflect change goals and get around limiting policies. If you’re experiencing an obstacle like lack of leadership support, work to turn that leader around and, if that fails, remove the person altogether. Also, manage your team to be sensitive to those who aren’t geographically close. Aiming for small successes will emotionally reward staff members, diminish pessimism and critical feedback, and add to momentum. Finally, don’t let momentum wane. You must maintain passion for the change and have a plan prepared. Key traits for leading change are

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