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Source: ASQ
An incredibly high percentage of the changes introduced in business
organizations do not reach their full potential—that is, they’re not
fully implemented or do not produce the benefits envisioned by their
sponsors.
Changes usually don’t fail because of technical reasons, such as
something inherently flawed about the change itself. They usually fail
for human reasons: The promoters of the change did not attend to the
healthy, real and predictable reactions of normal people to disturbance
of their routines.
It’s often said that people don’t resist “change” so much as they
resist “being changed.” So the job of change management is clear: In a
nutshell, you have to explain why the affected people should want to
change, and thereby cultivate readiness instead of resistance.
Excerpted from Brien Palmer, Making Change Work: Practical Tools for Overcoming Human Resistance to Change, ASQ Quality Press, 2004, pages xv-xvi, 7-9.
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