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Preparing to Lead Change

Alan Thinks About Rapid-Fire Change And How To Lead

The times they are a-changinu2019

n

My father and mother were born in 1904 and 1908 respectively. In 1988 I interviewed them with a cassette recorder and I just found the tape. I had to scramble to find an old Walkman to listen to it. It was strange to hear their voices as they passed more than twenty years ago, but their answer to one question still amazes me.

n

u201cYou folks have seen so much technological change in your lifetime, what change had the biggest impact on your life?u201d

n

I donu2019t know what I was expecting. Cars? Airplanes? TV? Computers? After all, my mom was a computer programmer and my dad worked setting type at The Herald Traveler when the newspaper went from linotype to computer typesetting. But the both said in unison,

n

u201cRefrigeration!u201d

n

u201cRefrigeration?u201d I said. I was incredulous.

n

u201cAbsolutely! Having a refrigerator in your home was a life changer.u201d said my mother. u201cIn central Florida you had to shop every day. If you bought your meat before three ou2019clock in the afternoon it spoiled before dinner. Vegetables wilted. The only ice cream you could ever eat was from the drug store or maybe the bicycle ice cream man – if you caught him in the morning.u201d

n

u201cWe put the icebox on the front porch, u2018cause it faced north,u201d my father chimed in. u201cThe iceman came every day. You put your 25u00a2 or 50u00a2 card in the window. Heaven help you if you forgot to put it out.u201d

n

u201cBut when we got a u2019fridgeu2019 you could shop once a week!u00a0 Talk about freedom!u201d

n

I was surprised, but it made sense.

n

Technology changes and it changes peopleu2019s lives, sometimes for the better, sometimes, not-so-much.

n

I remember when my parents bought a set of Encyclopedia Britannica, I spent less time in the library, but I also put off longer term homework till the night before. Much later, I was working for the owner of Collieru2019s when encyclopedias went to CD Rom format from print. Talk about change. They started to make the transition and then sold to Microsoft for integration into Encarta. Of course, everything is online today. I get effusive thank you emails from Jimmy Wales for being in the small percentage of Wikipedia users who donate to the support of the platform.

n

Change. Thereu2019s a lot of that going around. If you look back one hundred fifty years and contemplate the change that has occurred it makes your head spin. Just picking two:

n

    n

  • Transportation: from walking and horseback to trains, planes, and automobiles, and bicycles, motorcycles, electric scooters and skateboards.
  • n

  • Communications: from face-to-face talking and print to telegraph, telephone, radio, film, TV, Internet Streaming, cell phones, VOIP, smart phones, Zoom, Skype, blogs, vlogs podcasts, etc.
  • n

n

Iu2019m not even touching how computers have evolved in my lifetime from warehouses full of vacuum tubes to the power of the Smart Phone to super-computers of quantum computers and generative Artificial Intelligence.

n

Reactions to change

n

These changes changed peopleu2019s individual lives and they changed how people interact locally and globally. The changes in transportation, communications, and the transfer of information shrunk the world. People started talking about u201cglobalization.u201d The export of communications and Entertainment products from the developed nations created a homogenization that some found offensive. There was a resurgence of identification with local identity, nationalism, in some cases a kind of tribalism.

n

Companies in developed nations started staffing and producing all over the world. Then during the Covid epidemic, extended international supply chains became a problem. Off-shoring became balanced by re-shoring.

n

Thatu2019s the thing about change; it produces reactions. Newtonu2019s Third Law, u201cEvery action produces and equal and opposite reaction,u201d applies to social systems as well as physical bodies. Pendulumu2019s swing: Growth and recession, innovation and improvement, fragmentation and consolidation, start-ups and acquisitions, progress and retrenchment.

n

Some people say this is because u201cpeople fear change.u201d But if that were absolutely true, no one would ever leave home, get married, have children, move their home or do anything difficult that might mean they might be a different person.

n

People donu2019t fear change; they fear loss – loss of job, power, status, whatever. Some people also see the potential for loss in the unknown more than others. Mostly, though people donu2019t like to be compelled to change. They donu2019t fear change; they fear your change. They fear potential loss when they donu2019t have a choice to make it their change.

n

Time keeps on slippin’ into the future

n

There are myriad challenges facing us. How will we respond to changes in the climate? Will we innovate our way out of the problem or reduce human behaviors that damage the environment, or both? How will we balance equity of basic needs and opportunity for growth with return on investment, and reward for assuming the risk of growth?

n

So as we look forward, we should expect change. Perhaps this has always been true. There is a story of a young prince, one Siddhartha Gautama who lived around 450 BCE. He became newly and thoroughly wise and was asked the secret of life. u201cIt changes,u201d said the one who came to be called the Buddha, (teacher).

n

As I look forward to the future and realize just how much change the next generation will need to adapt to I thought to write down some ideas for those who step up to lead.

n

Leading change

n

I often differentiate leaders from managers. Managers get the job done in a steady state. Leaders operate in abnormal circumstances like change, to provide direction and attract followers. I developed this description when I was delivering leadership workshops for senior or mid-level leaders engaged in change, because the question always came up. Of course, this is overly simplistic and ignores the fact that a leader and a manager are often the same person applying slightly different skills in different circumstances. The leadership rubric of direction and attracting followers is a good start, but not enough.

n

Max Depree, who was at one time the CEO of Herman Miller, the high design office furniture maker who made the Aeron chair that supports my back even as I write this, wrote two books, Leadership is an Art, and Leadership Jazz. These books are a description of Mr. Depreeu2019s philosophy of servant leadership passed down to him by his father. Iu2019m not sure which book itu2019s in, butu00a0 I wrote down Mr. Depreeu2019s words:

n

u201cThe first responsibility of a leader is to define reality; the last is to say thank you.u201d

n

Start with Why

n

Start with Why is the title of Simon Sineku2019s best-selling leadership book. Stating the compelling case for change and expressing gratitude are ways to attract followers, to enroll followers to make the change happen. There was a story that was told to me so many times during the British Airways privatization project in the 80s that I thought Iu2019du00a0 witnessed the meeting. Margaret Thatcher, the Prime Minister that privatized the airline,, said to the gathered executives, u201cGentlemen, please understand I will sell you. I can sell you off in little pieces, planes and routes one-by-one if I have to, or I can sell your stock in a public offering. Itu2019s your choice.u201d This was the first and maybe the best compelling case for change in my career.

n

Late in my career, I worked at another of Mrs. Thatcheru2019s privatizations, BP (shortened from British Petroleum). I helped with Continuous Improvement work focused on improving process safety. The compelling case for change was the accidents at the Texas City refinery, and the Deep Water Horizon drilling platform in the Gulf of Mexico. No one had to tell that story repeatedly; one only had to mention the name of the sites to focus everyone on improvement.

n

Begin with the end in mind

n

u201cBegin with the end in mindu201d is habit number two of Stephen R. Coveyu2019s book Seven Habits of Highly Effective People. u00a0It describes planning using outcomesu00a0 and work backwards, but also setting direction, vision, a clear and inspiring description of the desired future state.

n

Recognize that everyone will change

n

In the 1990s I wrote an article that rapid-fire change as a u201cspeed-learning crisis.u201d Change like we are experiencing was already visible. Now one might argue change is accelerating and it requires new knowledge and skills, new models for leading, and a perpetually adaptive mindset. At that point, I had watched Colin Marshall the Chief Executive of British Airways transform from a well-dressed toff barking demands for tea to a shirt sleeves colleague willing to listen and respond positively to his mid-level leaders driving the change. I heard a BA union rep respond to a rank and file complaint about the Money spent on privatization, u201cTrue, mate, but then we were re-educating our Chief Executive and you know how expensive that can be.u201d

n

u201cThe thing about change management,u201d says Dr. Nelson Repenning of MIT, u201cIs that nothing happens unless someone does something different.u201d New thoughts and new behaviors change you, make it impossible to be aloof or to delegate change. I changed tremendously over my thirty-seven years as a change consultant. Sometimes I changed slowly or reluctantly; sometimes I used my late-adopter persona as an excuse, but I changed and you will too.

n

So while the entrepreneurs and engineers bring on the transporter beams and tricorders, prepare to lead or follow, but decide what shouldnu2019t change no matter what.

n

u201cThe first responsibility of a leader is to define reality; the last is to say thank you. In between the leader is a servantu201d who ensures that no one is left behind and that followers learn and grow.

n

 

n

 

n

“,”tablet”:”

The times they are a-changinu2019

n

My father and mother were born in 1904 and 1908 respectively. In 1988 I interviewed them with a cassette recorder and I just found the tape. I had to scramble to find an old Walkman to listen to it. It was strange to hear their voices as they passed more than twenty years ago, but their answer to one question still amazes me.

n

u201cYou folks have seen so much technological change in your lifetime, what change had the biggest impact on your life?u201d

n

I donu2019t know what I was expecting. Cars? Airplanes? TV? Computers? After all, my mom was a computer programmer and my dad worked setting type at The Herald Traveler when the newspaper went from linotype to computer typesetting. But the both said in unison,

n

u201cRefrigeration!u201d

n

u201cRefrigeration?u201d I said. I was incredulous.

n

u201cAbsolutely! Having a refrigerator in your home was a life changer.u201d said my mother. u201cIn central Florida you had to shop every day. If you bought your meat before three ou2019clock in the afternoon it spoiled before dinner. Vegetables wilted. The only ice cream you could ever eat was from the drug store or maybe the bicycle ice cream man – if you caught him in the morning.u201d

n

u201cWe put the icebox on the front porch, u2018cause it faced north,u201d my father chimed in. u201cThe iceman came every day. You put your 25u00a2 or 50u00a2 card in the window. Heaven help you if you forgot to put it out.u201d

n

u201cBut when we got a u2019fridgeu2019 you could shop once a week! Talk about freedom!u201d

n

I was surprised, but it made sense.

n

Technology changes and it changes peopleu2019s lives, sometimes for the better, sometimes, not-so-much.

n

I remember when my parents bought a set of Encyclopedia Britannica, I spent less time in the library, but I also put off longer term homework till the night before. Much later, I was working for the owner of Collieru2019s when encyclopedias went to CD Rom format from print. Talk about change. They started to make the transition and then sold to Microsoft for integration into Encarta. Of course, everything is online today. I get effusive thank you emails from Jimmy Wales for being in the small percentage of Wikipedia users who donate to the support of the platform.

n

Change. Thereu2019s a lot of that going around. If you look back one hundred fifty years and contemplate the change that has occurred it makes your head spin. Just picking two:

n

    n

  • Transportation: from walking and horseback to trains, planes, and automobiles, and bicycles, motorcycles, electric scooters and skateboards.
  • n

  • Communications: from face-to-face talking and print to telegraph, telephone, radio, film, TV, Internet streaming, cell phones, VOIP, smart phones, Zoom, Skype, blogs, vlogs podcasts, etc.
  • n

n

Iu2019m not even touching how computers have evolved in my lifetime from warehouses full of vacuum tubes to the power of the smart phone to super-computers of quantum computers and generative artificial intelligence.

n

Reactions to change

n

These changes changed peopleu2019s individual lives and they changed how people interact locally and globally. The changes in transportation, communications, and the transfer of information shrunk the world. People started talking about u201cglobalization.u201d The export of communications and entertainment products from the developed nations created a homogenization that some found offensive. There was a resurgence of identification with local identity, nationalism, in some cases a kind of tribalism.

n

Companies in developed nations started staffing and producing all over the world. Then during the Covid epidemic, extended international supply chains became a problem. Off-shoring became balanced by re-shoring.

n

Thatu2019s the thing about change; it produces reactions. Newtonu2019s Third Law, u201cEvery action produces and equal and opposite reaction,u201d applies to social systems as well as physical bodies. Pendulumu2019s swing: growth and recession, innovation and improvement, fragmentation and consolidation, start-ups and acquisitions, progress and retrenchment.

n

Some people say this is because u201cpeople fear change.u201d But if that were absolutely true, no one would ever leave home, get married, have children, move their home or do anything difficult that might mean they might be a different person.

n

People donu2019t fear change; they fear loss – loss of job, power, status, whatever. Some people also see the potential for loss in the unknown more than others. Mostly, though people donu2019t like to be compelled to change. They donu2019t fear change; they fear your change. They fear potential loss when they donu2019t have a choice to make it their change.

n

Time keeps on slippin’ into the future

n

There are myriad challenges facing us. How will we respond to changes in the climate? Will we innovate our way out of the problem or reduce human behaviors that damage the environment, or both? How will we balance equity of basic needs and opportunity for growth with return on investment, and reward for assuming the risk of growth?

n

So as we look forward, we should expect change. Perhaps this has always been true. There is a story of a young prince, one Siddhartha Gautama who lived around 450 BCE. He became newly and thoroughly wise and was asked the secret of life. u201cIt changes,u201d said the one who came to be called the Buddha, (teacher).

n

As I look forward to the future and realize just how much change the next generation will need to adapt to I thought to write down some ideas for those who step up to lead.

n

Leading change

n

I often differentiate leaders from managers. Managers get the job done in a steady state. Leaders operate in abnormal circumstances like change, to provide direction and attract followers. I developed this description when I was delivering leadership workshops for senior or mid-level leaders engaged in change, because the question always came up. Of course, this is overly simplistic and ignores the fact that a leader and a manager are often the same person applying slightly different skills in different circumstances. The leadership rubric of direction and attracting followers is a good start, but not enough.

n

Max Depree, who was at one time the CEO of Herman Miller, the high design office furniture maker who made the Aeron chair that supports my back even as I write this, wrote two books, Leadership is an Art, and Leadership Jazz. These books are a description of Mr. Depreeu2019s philosophy of servant leadership passed down to him by his father. Iu2019m not sure which book itu2019s in, but I wrote down Mr. Depreeu2019s words:

n

u201cThe first responsibility of a leader is to define reality; the last is to say thank you.u201d

n

Start with Why

n

Start with Why is the title of Simon Sineku2019s best-selling leadership book. Stating the compelling case for change and expressing gratitude are ways to attract followers, to enroll followers to make the change happen. There was a story that was told to me so many times during the British Airways privatization project in the 80s that I thought Iu2019d witnessed the meeting. Margaret Thatcher, the Prime Minister that privatized the airline,, said to the gathered executives, u201cGentlemen, please understand I will sell you. I can sell you off in little pieces, planes and routes one-by-one if I have to, or I can sell your stock in a public offering. Itu2019s your choice.u201d This was the first and maybe the best compelling case for change in my career.

n

Late in my career, I worked at another of Mrs. Thatcheru2019s privatizations, BP (shortened from British Petroleum). I helped with Continuous Improvement work focused on improving process safety. The compelling case for change was the accidents at the Texas City refinery, and the Deep Water Horizon drilling platform in the Gulf of Mexico. No one had to tell that story repeatedly; one only had to mention the name of the sites to focus everyone on improvement.

n

Begin with the end in mind

n

u201cBegin with the end in mindu201d is habit number two of Stephen R. Coveyu2019s book Seven Habits of Highly Effective People. It describes planning using outcomes and work backwards, but also setting direction, vision, a clear and inspiring description of the desired future state.

n

Recognize that everyone will change

n

In the 1990s I wrote an article that rapid-fire change as a u201cspeed-learning crisis.u201d Change like we are experiencing was already visible. Now one might argue change is accelerating and it requires new knowledge and skills, new models for leading, and a perpetually adaptive mindset. At that point, I had watched Colin Marshall the Chief Executive of British Airways transform from a well-dressed toff barking demands for tea to a shirt sleeves colleague willing to listen and respond positively to his mid-level leaders driving the change. I heard a BA union rep respond to a rank and file complaint about the money spent on privatization, u201cTrue, mate, but then we were re-educating our Chief Executive and you know how expensive that can be.u201d

n

u201cThe thing about change management,u201d says Dr. Nelson Repenning of MIT, u201cIs that nothing happens unless someone does something different.u201d New thoughts and new behaviors change you, make it impossible to be aloof or to delegate change. I changed tremendously over my thirty-seven years as a change consultant. Sometimes I changed slowly or reluctantly; sometimes I used my late-adopter persona as an excuse, but I changed and you will too.

n

So while the entrepreneurs and engineers bring on the transporter beams and tricorders, prepare to lead or follow, but decide what shouldnu2019t change no matter what.

n

u201cThe first responsibility of a leader is to define reality; the last is to say thank you. In between the leader is a servantu201d who ensures that no one is left behind and that followers learn and grow.

n

“,”phone”:”

n

The times they are a-changinu2019

n

My father and mother were born in 1904 and 1908 respectively. In 1988 I interviewed them with a cassette recorder and I just found the tape. I had to scramble to find an old Walkman to listen to it. It was strange to hear their voices as they passed more than twenty years ago, but their answer to one question still amazes me.

n

u201cYou folks have seen so much technological change in your lifetime, what change had the biggest impact on your life?u201d

n

I donu2019t know what I was expecting. Cars? Airplanes? TV? Computers? After all, my mom was a computer programmer and my dad worked setting type at The Herald Traveler when the newspaper went from linotype to computer typesetting. But the both said in unison,

n

u201cRefrigeration!u201d

n

u201cRefrigeration?u201d I said. I was incredulous.

n

u201cAbsolutely! Having a refrigerator in your home was a life changer.u201d said my mother. u201cIn central Florida you had to shop every day. If you bought your meat before three ou2019clock in the afternoon it spoiled before dinner. Vegetables wilted. The only ice cream you could ever eat was from the drug store or maybe the bicycle ice cream man – if you caught him in the morning.u201d

n

u201cWe put the icebox on the front porch, u2018cause it faced north,u201d my father chimed in. u201cThe iceman came every day. You put your 25u00a2 or 50u00a2 card in the window. Heaven help you if you forgot to put it out.u201d

n

u201cBut when we got a u2019fridgeu2019 you could shop once a week! Talk about freedom!u201d

n

I was surprised, but it made sense.

n

Technology changes and it changes peopleu2019s lives, sometimes for the better, sometimes, not-so-much.

n

I remember when my parents bought a set of Encyclopedia Britannica, I spent less time in the library, but I also put off longer term homework till the night before. Much later, I was working for the owner of Collieru2019s when encyclopedias went to CD Rom format from print. Talk about change. They started to make the transition and then sold to Microsoft for integration into Encarta. Of course, everything is online today. I get effusive thank you emails from Jimmy Wales for being in the small percentage of Wikipedia users who donate to the support of the platform.

n

Change. Thereu2019s a lot of that going around. If you look back one hundred fifty years and contemplate the change that has occurred it makes your head spin. Just picking two:

n

    n

  • Transportation: from walking and horseback to trains, planes, and automobiles, and bicycles, motorcycles, electric scooters and skateboards.
  • n

  • Communications: from face-to-face talking and print to telegraph, telephone, radio, film, TV, Internet streaming, cell phones, VOIP, smart phones, Zoom, Skype, blogs, vlogs podcasts, etc.
  • n

n

Iu2019m not even touching how computers have evolved in my lifetime from warehouses full of vacuum tubes to the power of the smart phone to super-computers of quantum computers and generative artificial intelligence.

n

Reactions to change

n

These changes changed peopleu2019s individual lives and they changed how people interact locally and globally. The changes in transportation, communications, and the transfer of information shrunk the world. People started talking about u201cglobalization.u201d The export of communications and entertainment products from the developed nations created a homogenization that some found offensive. There was a resurgence of identification with local identity, nationalism, in some cases a kind of tribalism.

n

Companies in developed nations started staffing and producing all over the world. Then during the Covid epidemic, extended international supply chains became a problem. Off-shoring became balanced by re-shoring.

n

Thatu2019s the thing about change; it produces reactions. Newtonu2019s Third Law, u201cEvery action produces and equal and opposite reaction,u201d applies to social systems as well as physical bodies. Pendulumu2019s swing: growth and recession, innovation and improvement, fragmentation and consolidation, start-ups and acquisitions, progress and retrenchment.

n

Some people say this is because u201cpeople fear change.u201d But if that were absolutely true, no one would ever leave home, get married, have children, move their home or do anything difficult that might mean they might be a different person.

n

People donu2019t fear change; they fear loss – loss of job, power, status, whatever. Some people also see the potential for loss in the unknown more than others. Mostly, though people donu2019t like to be compelled to change. They donu2019t fear change; they fear your change. They fear potential loss when they donu2019t have a choice to make it their change.

n

Time keeps on slippin’ into the future

n

There are myriad challenges facing us. How will we respond to changes in the climate? Will we innovate our way out of the problem or reduce human behaviors that damage the environment, or both? How will we balance equity of basic needs and opportunity for growth with return on investment, and reward for assuming the risk of growth?

n

So as we look forward, we should expect change. Perhaps this has always been true. There is a story of a young prince, one Siddhartha Gautama who lived around 450 BCE. He became newly and thoroughly wise and was asked the secret of life. u201cIt changes,u201d said the one who came to be called the Buddha, (teacher).

n

As I look forward to the future and realize just how much change the next generation will need to adapt to I thought to write down some ideas for those who step up to lead.

n

Leading change

n

I often differentiate leaders from managers. Managers get the job done in a steady state. Leaders operate in abnormal circumstances like change, to provide direction and attract followers. I developed this description when I was delivering leadership workshops for senior or mid-level leaders engaged in change, because the question always came up. Of course, this is overly simplistic and ignores the fact that a leader and a manager are often the same person applying slightly different skills in different circumstances. The leadership rubric of direction and attracting followers is a good start, but not enough.

n

Max Depree, who was at one time the CEO of Herman Miller, the high design office furniture maker who made the Aeron chair that supports my back even as I write this, wrote two books, Leadership is an Art, and Leadership Jazz. These books are a description of Mr. Depreeu2019s philosophy of servant leadership passed down to him by his father. Iu2019m not sure which book itu2019s in, but I wrote down Mr. Depreeu2019s words:

n

u201cThe first responsibility of a leader is to define reality; the last is to say thank you.u201d

n

Start with Why

n

Start with Why is the title of Simon Sineku2019s best-selling leadership book. Stating the compelling case for change and expressing gratitude are ways to attract followers, to enroll followers to make the change happen. There was a story that was told to me so many times during the British Airways privatization project in the 80s that I thought Iu2019d witnessed the meeting. Margaret Thatcher, the Prime Minister that privatized the airline,, said to the gathered executives, u201cGentlemen, please understand I will sell you. I can sell you off in little pieces, planes and routes one-by-one if I have to, or I can sell your stock in a public offering. Itu2019s your choice.u201d This was the first and maybe the best compelling case for change in my career.

n

Late in my career, I worked at another of Mrs. Thatcheru2019s privatizations, BP (shortened from British Petroleum). I helped with Continuous Improvement work focused on improving process safety. The compelling case for change was the accidents at the Texas City refinery, and the Deep Water Horizon drilling platform in the Gulf of Mexico. No one had to tell that story repeatedly; one only had to mention the name of the sites to focus everyone on improvement.

n

Begin with the end in mind

n

u201cBegin with the end in mindu201d is habit number two of Stephen R. Coveyu2019s book Seven Habits of Highly Effective People. It describes planning using outcomes and work backwards, but also setting direction, vision, a clear and inspiring description of the desired future state.

n

Recognize that everyone will change

n

In the 1990s I wrote an article that rapid-fire change as a u201cspeed-learning crisis.u201d Change like we are experiencing was already visible. Now one might argue change is accelerating and it requires new knowledge and skills, new models for leading, and a perpetually adaptive mindset. At that point, I had watched Colin Marshall the Chief Executive of British Airways transform from a well-dressed toff barking demands for tea to a shirt sleeves colleague willing to listen and respond positively to his mid-level leaders driving the change. I heard a BA union rep respond to a rank and file complaint about the money spent on privatization, u201cTrue, mate, but then we were re-educating our Chief Executive and you know how expensive that can be.u201d

n

u201cThe thing about change management,u201d says Dr. Nelson Repenning of MIT, u201cIs that nothing happens unless someone does something different.u201d New thoughts and new behaviors change you, make it impossible to be aloof or to delegate change. I changed tremendously over my thirty-seven years as a change consultant. Sometimes I changed slowly or reluctantly; sometimes I used my late-adopter persona as an excuse, but I changed and you will too.

n

So while the entrepreneurs and engineers bring on the transporter beams and tricorders, prepare to lead or follow, but decide what shouldnu2019t change no matter what.

n

u201cThe first responsibility of a leader is to define reality; the last is to say thank you. In between the leader is a servantu201d who ensures that no one is left behind and that followers learn and grow.

n

“}},”slug”:”et_pb_text”}” data-et-multi-view-load-tablet-hidden=”true” data-et-multi-view-load-phone-hidden=”true”>

The times they are a-changin’

My father and mother were born in 1904 and 1908 respectively. In 1988 I interviewed them with a cassette recorder and I just found the tape. I had to scramble to find an old Walkman to listen to it. It was strange to hear their voices as they passed more than twenty years ago, but their answer to one question still amazes me.

“You folks have seen so much technological change in your lifetime, what change had the biggest impact on your life?”

I don’t know what I was expecting. Cars? Airplanes? TV? Computers? After all, my mom was a computer programmer and my dad worked setting type at The Herald Traveler when the newspaper went from linotype to computer typesetting. But the both said in unison,

“Refrigeration!”

“Refrigeration?” I said. I was incredulous.

“Absolutely! Having a refrigerator in your home was a life changer.” said my mother. “In central Florida you had to shop every day. If you bought your meat before three o’clock in the afternoon it spoiled before dinner. Vegetables wilted. The only ice cream you could ever eat was from the drug store or maybe the bicycle ice cream man – if you caught him in the morning.”

“We put the icebox on the front porch, ‘cause it faced north,” my father chimed in. “The iceman came every day. You put your 25¢ or 50¢ card in the window. Heaven help you if you forgot to put it out.”

“But when we got a ’fridge’ you could shop once a week!  Talk about freedom!”

I was surprised, but it made sense.

Technology changes and it changes people’s lives, sometimes for the better, sometimes, not-so-much.

I remember when my parents bought a set of Encyclopedia Britannica, I spent less time in the library, but I also put off longer term homework till the night before. Much later, I was working for the owner of Collier’s when encyclopedias went to CD Rom format from print. Talk about change. They started to make the transition and then sold to Microsoft for integration into Encarta. Of course, everything is online today. I get effusive thank you emails from Jimmy Wales for being in the small percentage of Wikipedia users who donate to the support of the platform.

Change. There’s a lot of that going around. If you look back one hundred fifty years and contemplate the change that has occurred it makes your head spin. Just picking two:

  • Transportation: from walking and horseback to trains, planes, and automobiles, and bicycles, motorcycles, electric scooters and skateboards.
  • Communications: from face-to-face talking and print to telegraph, telephone, radio, film, TV, Internet streaming, cell phones, VOIP, smart phones, Zoom, Skype, blogs, vlogs podcasts, etc.

I’m not even touching how computers have evolved in my lifetime from warehouses full of vacuum tubes to the power of the smart phone to super-computers of quantum computers and generative artificial intelligence.

Reactions to change

These changes changed people’s individual lives and they changed how people interact locally and globally. The changes in transportation, communications, and the transfer of information shrunk the world. People started talking about “globalization.” The export of communications and entertainment products from the developed nations created a homogenization that some found offensive. There was a resurgence of identification with local identity, nationalism, in some cases a kind of tribalism.

Companies in developed nations started staffing and producing all over the world. Then during the Covid epidemic, extended international supply chains became a problem. Off-shoring became balanced by re-shoring.

That’s the thing about change; it produces reactions. Newton’s Third Law, “Every action produces and equal and opposite reaction,” applies to social systems as well as physical bodies. Pendulum’s swing: growth and recession, innovation and improvement, fragmentation and consolidation, start-ups and acquisitions, progress and retrenchment.

Some people say this is because “people fear change.” But if that were absolutely true, no one would ever leave home, get married, have children, move their home or do anything difficult that might mean they might be a different person.

People don’t fear change; they fear loss – loss of job, power, status, whatever. Some people also see the potential for loss in the unknown more than others. Mostly, though people don’t like to be compelled to change. They don’t fear change; they fear your change. They fear potential loss when they don’t have a choice to make it their change.

Time keeps on slippin’ into the future

There are myriad challenges facing us. How will we respond to changes in the climate? Will we innovate our way out of the problem or reduce human behaviors that damage the environment, or both? How will we balance equity of basic needs and opportunity for growth with return on investment, and reward for assuming the risk of growth?

So as we look forward, we should expect change. Perhaps this has always been true. There is a story of a young prince, one Siddhartha Gautama who lived around 450 BCE. He became newly and thoroughly wise and was asked the secret of life. “It changes,” said the one who came to be called the Buddha, (teacher).

As I look forward to the future and realize just how much change the next generation will need to adapt to I thought to write down some ideas for those who step up to lead.

Leading change

I often differentiate leaders from managers. Managers get the job done in a steady state. Leaders operate in abnormal circumstances like change, to provide direction and attract followers. I developed this description when I was delivering leadership workshops for senior or mid-level leaders engaged in change, because the question always came up. Of course, this is overly simplistic and ignores the fact that a leader and a manager are often the same person applying slightly different skills in different circumstances. The leadership rubric of direction and attracting followers is a good start, but not enough.

Max Depree, who was at one time the CEO of Herman Miller, the high design office furniture maker who made the Aeron chair that supports my back even as I write this, wrote two books, Leadership is an Art, and Leadership Jazz. These books are a description of Mr. Depree’s philosophy of servant leadership passed down to him by his father. I’m not sure which book it’s in, but  I wrote down Mr. Depree’s words:

“The first responsibility of a leader is to define reality; the last is to say thank you.”

Start with Why

Start with Why is the title of Simon Sinek’s best-selling leadership book. Stating the compelling case for change and expressing gratitude are ways to attract followers, to enroll followers to make the change happen. There was a story that was told to me so many times during the British Airways privatization project in the 80s that I thought I’d  witnessed the meeting. Margaret Thatcher, the Prime Minister that privatized the airline,, said to the gathered executives, “Gentlemen, please understand I will sell you. I can sell you off in little pieces, planes and routes one-by-one if I have to, or I can sell your stock in a public offering. It’s your choice.” This was the first and maybe the best compelling case for change in my career.

Late in my career, I worked at another of Mrs. Thatcher’s privatizations, BP (shortened from British Petroleum). I helped with Continuous Improvement work focused on improving process safety. The compelling case for change was the accidents at the Texas City refinery, and the Deep Water Horizon drilling platform in the Gulf of Mexico. No one had to tell that story repeatedly; one only had to mention the name of the sites to focus everyone on improvement.

Begin with the end in mind

“Begin with the end in mind” is habit number two of Stephen R. Covey’s book Seven Habits of Highly Effective People.  It describes planning using outcomes  and work backwards, but also setting direction, vision, a clear and inspiring description of the desired future state.

Recognize that everyone will change

In the 1990s I wrote an article that rapid-fire change as a “speed-learning crisis.” Change like we are experiencing was already visible. Now one might argue change is accelerating and it requires new knowledge and skills, new models for leading, and a perpetually adaptive mindset. At that point, I had watched Colin Marshall the Chief Executive of British Airways transform from a well-dressed toff barking demands for tea to a shirt sleeves colleague willing to listen and respond positively to his mid-level leaders driving the change. I heard a BA union rep respond to a rank and file complaint about the money spent on privatization, “True, mate, but then we were re-educating our Chief Executive and you know how expensive that can be.”

“The thing about change management,” says Dr. Nelson Repenning of MIT, “Is that nothing happens unless someone does something different.” New thoughts and new behaviors change you, make it impossible to be aloof or to delegate change. I changed tremendously over my thirty-seven years as a change consultant. Sometimes I changed slowly or reluctantly; sometimes I used my late-adopter persona as an excuse, but I changed and you will too.

So while the entrepreneurs and engineers bring on the transporter beams and tricorders, prepare to lead or follow, but decide what shouldn’t change no matter what.

“The first responsibility of a leader is to define reality; the last is to say thank you. In between the leader is a servant” who ensures that no one is left behind and that followers learn and grow.

 

 

The post Preparing to Lead Change appeared first on Wisdom from Unusual Places.

Originally Published on https://wisdomfromunusualplaces.com/blog/

Alan Cay Culler Writer of Stories and Songs

I'm a writer.

Writing is my fourth career -actor, celebrity speakers booking agent, change consultant - and now writer.
I write stories about my experiences and what I've learned- in consulting for consultants, about change for leaders, and just working, loving and living wisely.

To be clear, I'm more wiseacre than wise man, but I'm at the front end of the Baby Boom so I've had a lot of opportunity to make mistakes. I made more than my share and even learned from some of them, so now I write them down in hopes that someone else might not have to make the same mistakes.

I have also made a habit of talking with ordinary people who have on occasion shared extraordinary wisdom.

Much of what I write about has to do with business because I was a strategic change consultant for thirty-seven years. My bias is that business is about people - called customers, staff, suppliers, shareholders or the community, but all human beings with hopes, and dreams, thoughts and emotions.. They didn't teach me that at the London Business School, nor even at Columbia University's Principles of Organization Development. I learned that first in my theater undergraduate degree, while observing people in order to portray a character.

Now I'm writing these observations in stories, shared here for other Baby Boomers and those who want to read about us.

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