Essay Topic Hub

Change Management
Essays

629+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

629 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

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.

Sort by:
Paper Doctorate
TQM Framework for Shell Services in Defining
In defining their own quality management framework named the Shell Services Quality Framework (SQF) Shell Services sought to create a framework that could encompass people, processes and quality as they related to serving the customer. Shell also wanted to defined a framework that would deliver the greatest accuracy in terms of their own standards, targets and metrics of performance. Tracking metrics over time by quality management initiative and creating a knowledgebase of results was also a critical success factor for the development of the framework. The design objectives included having a high degree of simplicity, completeness, harmonization and exclusivity within the structure, allowing for rapid adoption and use. Shell envisioned the framework being a core part of their culture going forward. Best practices in quality management require that the organizational culture changes to adopt and actively rely on the core foundational elements of a quality management framework if it is to be effective (Kujala, Lillrank, 2004). This is precisely why Shell designed their own unique quality management framework with the four attributes mentioned above. The four components of Processes, Process Control, Customers and Business Excellence Model all contribute and support the SQF framework. This relative simplicity of design allowed for Shell to adapt the framework quickly to many varying needs and initiatives.
Paper Undergraduate
Accounting Information Systems
XRBL and Electronic Government Initiative
Paper Doctorate
Myth, Ritual, Language the Relationships
The relationships between myth, language and ritual are often complicated and interesting and to a large degree culturally. Thinking of how concepts of each; myths, language and ritual all evolve over time is an…
Paper Undergraduate
Cornwall County School System Narrative
Cornwall County School District is in trouble. Their schools are in desperate need of proper maintenance. The following case analysis presents an overview of the problems associated with the school system.
Paper Doctorate
Net-Centric Computing and Information Systems
In the 10 Principles of Effective Information Management James Robertson outlines ten key principles to ensure information management activities and strategies are effective (Robertson, 2005). The author's approach to defining these 10 principles is heavily focused on best practices of implementing technology in complex enterprises. In the article he discusses how these 10 principles make technology implementation, change management, and ongoing strategic attainment of objectives demanding orchestration the most challenging of any enterprise software or technology implementation. He also captures the paradox of how critical it is for companies to continually plan to improve their information systems and technologies (Minard, 1987) while also being mindful of how difficult it is to manage change (Sharratt, McMurdo, 1993). He also implies that transformational leadership is critical for any change management program to be successful. It is the core set of transformational leadership skills, from the ability to be highly empathetic and able to listen (Nasir, 2005)
Paper Undergraduate
Failure of it Systems Evaluation
Evaluation of the Failure of Information Systems in Managing Customer Relationships
Paper Undergraduate
Public Administration British Petroleum BP
BP is one of the world's major energy companies. It supplies its customers with fuel for transportation, energy for heat and light, retail services and petrochemicals products for everyday living.
Paper Undergraduate
Electronic Health Records the Development
The development and growing adoption of Electronic Health Records (EHRs) presents a variety of issues, with parties on all sides of the debate (patients/consumers, physicians, regulators, health insurers/payors) having…
Paper Doctorate
Transformational vs. Transactional Leadership Theory
The intent of this analysis is to evaluate how best to define the overarching leadership approach for managing IS system implementation in a healthcare provider. The benefits of transactional versus transformational leadership are defined, in addition to examples of how an IS implementation in a healthcare provider can excel with change management as a key criterion.
Paper Undergraduate
Business case analysis and implementation strategies
– Teleford and Ivey James are the second-generation owners of a family-owned manufacturer of premium chocolates started by Teleford's father in 1964. James Confectioners has grown during its 50 years into a large and modern factory with sophisticated equipment and annual sales of almost $4 million. They are above the industry standard in pricing, but not at the top range for the quality they produce. The James' are quite concerned of late about rising costs of base chocolate because it is grown in South America and Africa. Additionally, there are escalating costs from milk and sugar which, in combination, are squeezing the company's margins.