Encyclopedia of Leadership

(sharon) #1

5.8


HUMAN TRANSITIONS: HELPING PEOPLE


WORK THROUGH MAJOR CHANGE


Inspired by William Bridges, Susan Campbell, and Virginia Satir.

Leaders often assume that if change is logical from a management perspective, people will


adjust. The process of change inside people, however, is more like distress and disruption than


adjustment. Before people can accept and adjust to change, they frequently go through a tran-


sition period. This period is often evidenced by low morale, increased stress, and decreased pro-


ductivity. This tool offers a practical, straightforward approach to help leaders minimize the


stress and downtime associated with human reactions and adjustments to change.


THE CRITICAL DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CHANGE AND TRANSITION


Change:



  • The actual physical move, restructure, or change of location, procedures, equipment,
    and so on.

  • This change takes place outside the person, and relatively quickly (e.g., being moved
    to another city, getting a new manager).


Transition:



  • The human reorientation that people go through in coming to terms with a change
    (e.g., coming to feel like a new city is home or that a new manager is a trusted col-
    league).

  • This inner transition often takes much longer than the outside or physical change. The
    transition is internal and emotional (i.e., feelings-based). It requires a new way of
    understanding and looking at things.


For example, your staff may have complained about their obsolete desktop computers and


software. Finally, you, their leader, have the budget and priority to have the Systems


Department make the change. The switchover—the change—is brief, often less than an hour


per desktop. But what do you, as their leader, hear after the change? Often complaints! This


time it’s about the new desktop systems: “The new keyboards don’t feel right and some keys


are in new places.” Or “The new operating system doesn’t look the same as the old one. Where


are my critical files?” And so on. Although the physical change was relatively quick, the emo-


tional transition that takes place inside of people—becoming proficient and feeling at ease


with the new equipment—may take a number of weeks. Given this situation, your initial reac-


tion, as their leader, might be to interpret staff complaints as ingratitude. But wait!


Understanding the nature of human transitions will help you accept these complaints as the


natural responses to change they are.


Downsizing and layoffs are all too common, and many people in the North American


workforce have had personal experience with this type of transition. Here is an example of how


one company managed this change and the human transition that accompanied it, with sen-


sitivity and respect for its workforce.


160 SECTION 5 TOOLS FORLEADINGCHANGE

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