FOREWORD
Kaveh Naficy, Partner, Lakida LLC, and Leadership Coach
Like any other label, âchangeâ has been understood, described, experienced, and monetized in numerous ways. And the most obvious reason is that different audiences have different needs, and the author and her book are vessels to fulfill those needs.
Change is one of the most ancient and natural phenomena of our planet. After all, what doesnât change? The rate of change, which is already mind-numbing, continues to accelerate. Consider that between the end of the 1930s and the introduction of the microchip in 1971 (the Intel 4004), transformational innovations in office technology might have included the easy correcting typewriter, the HP calculator, or the Xerox copying machines. Since then, however, the rate of change has occurred at such a dizzying pace that it is difficult to predict what the office technology will have in store for us one year hence.Â
So why are so many of us fearful and uneasy with it?
Most of us associate our sense of identity and worth with our vocations and careers. So, it is only natural that when discontinuous changes appear at the workplace, the primitive part of our brain starts to send fight or flight signals. We experience loss of control, confidence, competence, and comfort, which in turn lead to fear, anxiety, and stress-survivalist warnings to our bodies.
These feelings are magnified when we donât know how to respond and take control over our lives by understanding the change, processing it, planning for it, and having the courage and support to address it appropriately.Â
The autonomous systems already here, such as AI that fuel faster, continuous learning and improvement, only exacerbate our sense of helplessness and loneliness. Â
And yet we know that the most agile, informed, and courageous will prosper most in the 21st century.
What Impedes Successful Change?
During a career spanning nearly 50 years, I have led and participated in numerous change initiatives and built the Ernst & Young European strategic change practice in the late 90s. What I witnessed was that most change methodologies and tools suffer from one or more of the following:
- Improper balance of heart and backbone. They are either mechanistic, process-driven, and formulaic, or focus predominantly on emotional and psychological aspects of change, such as resistance, checking out, loss of motivation, and inclusivity.
- Top-down and hierarchical. Mandates, strategies, approaches, etc., are cascaded down the organization, assuming senior management knows best how to move the organization from its current position on the change agenda to the desired (by executive management) state. Most successful change initiatives embed the perspectives and involvement of a broad slice of the organization to understand and plan for the repercussions and inevitable differences of perspectives that will show themselves at execution.
- Too complex to understand or too simplistic. Either lots of reading and study of theories and books on change (usually by the company hired to manage the change) or too simplistic, as in the âwho moved the cheeseâ model that was popular in the late 90s and early 2000s.
- Loss of momentum. Enormous excitement exists for the program during the initial communication and roll out, followed by a loss of energy and backing by key change sponsors and ambassadors during the more detailed and grueling execution phases.
Why read this book?
Cementing Change addresses many of these shortcomings. The 4Cs Change Framework™âClarity, Connection, Caring, and Courageâand the underlying 12 Principles of Prosperity provide the reader with practical language, a proven framework, and steps to understand and execute change. Â
Absent clarity of what is to change in language that people can understand and react to, most change initiatives will usually result in wasted effort and unfulfilling outcomes. Successful programs ensure that every person affected by the change understands clearly how it will be manifested in their workspace. Cementing Change provides the reader with the framework for ensuring clear communication of the change agenda.
When change sponsors design change programs founded on connection and caring, they allow diverse perspectives and feelings embedded in the organization to surface early in the change journey so that they can be understood, processed, and addressed. The targets of change programs are human beings who are energized and motivated when they feel heard, supported, and cared for, and NOT cogs in the wheel at the whim of the absent powerful.
Finally, leading or responding to change is fueled by courage. Those experiencing change have to be able to step into it with hope, excitement, and a sense of adventure. However, most will need more than blind faith. The fear of the unknown may well overtake their courage to experiment. They will need an infrastructure of support, tools, and practice. This book provides the ingredients for those on a change journey to shrink the risk into manageable outcomes and steps.
This book reminds us emphatically of the importance of these âsofter âcritical components of change leadershipâlistening with curiosity, empathy for others and their perspective, and supporting others while they undergo experiential learning implicit in change.
After reading the framework and concepts in Cementing Change, I have gained a better appreciation for the power of the places in which organizational and personal change intersect and the importance of applying the concepts and principles of this book at both levels.