Abstract
This paper summarizes three articles. The first two pertain to organizational change and the last one to human resources with respect to the global organization. The first article provides a history of organizational change as a discipline, some statistics that illustrate the challenges associated with organizational change, and some of the best practices for how to make organizational change successful in an organization. The second article is specific to McDonald's, highlighting that company's struggles to effect organizational change. Management's view of what change looks like is not really aligned with the views of the franchisees, and in general this has left the franchisees critical. This is a case study is how not to implement a successful organizational change program. The third article is about the role that human resources plays in the development of the global organization, in particular with respect to training.
Outline
Change Statistics
McDonalds
HR Role in Cultural Intelligence
Change Statistics
The Change Missionaries article appears in Human Capital, and it provides almost an infographic-style overview of strategic change initiatives, using material from several different sources. The article notes that change management came into fashion as a discipline in the 1980s, and it was enterprise that formed the early adopters, seeking to resolve a pain point around making organizational changes happen.
The seminal work in change management was published in 1996 by John Kotter, and this research revealed that only 30% of change programs succeed. By the 2000s, organizational change was formalized as a discipline, and fully accepted in business., but despite this, and increased training, the statistic of roughly one-third of change programs succeeding continued to hold true.
The paper then covers some statistics around change management. One of these is that 14.9% of money spend on change initiatives is lost due to failed efforts. Because of the high failure rate of change initiatives. One of the major issues is that many within the organization are simply not sufficiently motivated to change. As an example, it takes at least 75% of the leadership of the organization to accept that business as usual is no longer acceptable in order for a change initiative to succeed. Leadership buy-in, therefore, has been identified as a key part of change management.
The paper also contains a number of different case studies, mainly from enterprise, highlighting some of their change efforts and views on change efforts. The next section covers the benchmark practices...
References
Goodman, N. (2011) Cultivating cultural intelligence: The better a training department can capture, retain and disseminate its acquired cultural intelligence throughout the organization, the greater the strategic value it will bring. Training. Vol. 2 (2011) p.38. In possession of the author.
No author (2014) The change missionaries. Human Capital. In possession of the author.
Peterson, H. (2015) McDonald's franchises say the brand is in a deep depression and facing its final days. Business Insider. In possession of the author.
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