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Change Management
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Change management is the structured study of how organizations plan, execute, and sustain significant shifts in strategy, structure, processes, or culture. It appears across business school curricula in courses on organizational behavior, operations management, and strategic management, among others. The topic draws academic interest because organizational change is both inevitable and notoriously difficult — companies must adapt to competitive pressures, technological shifts, and internal transformation while managing the human dimensions of disruption. Papers on this subject frequently engage with how resistance among employees shapes outcomes and why implementation so often falls short of intention.

The archived papers approach change management from several distinct angles. Some take a theoretical or model-building perspective, asking students to develop or critically evaluate change frameworks. Others are case-study driven, using real organizations — including Toyota and Nissan's Revival Plan — to test how contingency and systems perspectives explain outcomes. A smaller set focuses on project-level implementation, such as the Navy Marine Intranet project, while others examine leadership figures like Rosabeth Kanter to understand how individual agency influences organizational transformation. Comparative and evaluative approaches are common throughout.

A strong essay on change management begins with a focused thesis that connects a specific change process to a clear outcome or problem, rather than surveying the topic broadly. Evidence drawn from organizational case studies, process data, or established change models tends to carry the most analytical weight. The most common pitfall is treating resistance as a minor obstacle rather than a central variable — strong papers treat employee response to change as substantive evidence that needs explanation, not a complication to be briefly acknowledged and set aside.

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Paper Doctorate
ERP System Deployments: China vs. North America Compared
Analysis of New it Systems Deployments in China vs. North America
Paper Doctorate
Organizational management principles and practices
Southwest Airlines has established themselves as the best low-fare airline in the business. They have done this by building a culture that is focused first on their employees, second on their customers and third on their stockholders. This attitude that comes from the top down within the organization is what sets them apart from everyone else in the business.
Thesis Undergraduate
Personality factors and individual differences
One well-known author and leadership coach begins each public presentation making it very clear that having a leadership position and being a leader are not the same thing. Leadership and management are quite different even though often used synonymously. A "position" is something one is hired into, or appointed – whether that results in leadership is dependent on the qualities of the individual. Some leaders rise from relative obscurity, and lead from below; some managers never learn to lead
Research Paper Undergraduate
Human Resources Change Management Change Management Involves
Change management involves thoughtful planning and sensitive implementation, and above all, discussion with, and involvement of, the people affected by the changes. If a company forces change on people in general…
Essay Doctorate
Project Management Maturity Key Best Practices: According
According to the text by Kerzner (2006), one of the most critical paths to refining key best practices is the establishment of a positive and effective company culture. It is the orientation of the organisation and its…
Research Paper Doctorate
Change Management Change in Organization:
Organizations function within a changing environment. Political, Economic, Social and Technical - PEST factors have an effect on an organization. Change is unavoidable and the difficulty managers face how to control…
Paper Masters
Organizational Change the Adage \"Different
The adage "different strokes for different folks" may seem to be apropos only to people; however, looking at the matter in depth, it is apparent that the same goes true for various organizations.
Paper Doctorate
Starbucks Is the Leader of the Coffee
Starbucks is the leader of the coffee and coffee based beverages industry across the world, having transformed the simple act of drinking coffee into a valuable and memorable experience. The business model implemented by the firm is based on the creation of various coffee and coffee based beverages, of a multitude of flavors and sold in pleasant stores across the globe. The Starbucks stores integrate relaxing and modern ambiance, free wireless internet, pleasant music and they are the fashionable place for young adults to meet and share enjoyable experiences.
Essay Doctorate
Groupware Implementing Groupware: Comparing Costs and Benefits
There are many varying definitions of groupware yet all share a common attribute or characteristic of enabling collaboration, sharing knowledge and providing work teams with greater insight and intelligence into operations. The intent of groupware is to create a scalable, reliable and agile platform for sharing information and knowedlge, both tacit and implicit, throughout distributed enterprises (Kline, 2001). Best practices in groupware encompass interdepartmental, intradivisional and enterprise-wide integration of content and knowledge management processes and systems (Corbitt, Martz, 2003). The benefits of such a pervasive platform for information and knowledge sharing has shown to deliver quantifiable gains in corporate-wide productivity and performance, leading to greater profitability as well (Lukosch, 2004) (Meroño-Cerdán, 2008). With so many benefits and contributions of groupware, it's surprising that more organizations don't adopt these series of technologies to attain their corporate-wide information and knowledge management strategies. In reality implementing groupware is exceptionally difficult because it forces people in companies to change how they work (Chen, Hao, 2002) (Ellis, Gibbs, Rein, 1991). It takes an exceptional level of trust in the implementation and leaders of the implementation to make groupware projects translate into long-term change within any enterprise (Corbitt, Martz, 2003). The technology is the easy part; getting people to change is hard. This paper compares the costs and benefits of groupware, deciding if it is worth it as an enterprise strategy.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Change management principles and implementation strategies
Change Management in Large and Small Firms: Response Recommendation