5.4
LEADING CHANGE: SMALLWINS
OR BREAKTHROUGHS?
Inspired by Michael Hammer, James Champy, Robert Schaffer, and Karl Weick.
Change in organizations is a complex phenomenon; no single approach will work consistent-
ly over a wide range of change situations. Leaders need to consider the magnitude of any given
organizational change and whether it can be introduced in chunks or must be completed in
one quantum leap. Note that in some change situations you may be able to strategize an all-
or-nothing change yet implement it in manageable pieces, thereby reconciling the two
approaches contrasted here and gaining the benefits of both while avoiding the problems of
both.
SECTION 5 TOOLS FORLEADINGCHANGE 147
Other phrases used:
➠ Incremental change
➠ Continuous improvement
➠ Adaptation
➠ Chunking
➠ Simplification
✔ Start with subprojects that are likely to succeed. Build
success on success.
✔ Small changes allow the system to absorb the overall,
larger change.
✔ Small changes allow people to adapt and adjust
emotionally, enabling them to become better prepared
for additional changes.
✔ It is easier to involve people in small, specific changes.
✔ Have an overall goal and strategy, then implement
small projects and move incrementally to attain that
overall goal.
In the small wins corner
From High-Impact Consultingby Robert Schaffer:
To avoid one of what Schaffer calls the “Five Fatal Flaws” of
consulting:
“Instead of aiming for ‘one big solution’ that will require a long
cycle time and huge up-front investment, high-impact consulting
divides projects into increments, with rapid cycle times, for
quicker results.”
The small wins approach
Other phrases used:
➠ (Radical) Transformation
➠ Discontinuous change
➠ Reinvention
➠ Frame-breaking
➠ Reengineering
✔ Improvement is more than the sum of its parts. You
can’t tinker your way to breakthrough change.
✔ With a quantum leap change, no one can cling to the
past.
✔ Change is better introduced as one large change, rather
than “death by a thousand cuts.”
✔ You must look at the whole system. Most large-scale
changes fail because the recommended change wasn’t
supported by the other systems it needed to interact
with.
In the all-or-nothing corner
From Reengineering the Corporationby Hammer and
Champy:
“Reengineering, we are convinced, can’t be carried out in small
and cautious steps. It is an all-or-nothing proposition that pro-
duces dramatically impressive results. Most companies have no
choice but to muster the courage to do it. For many, reengineer-
ing is the only hope for breaking away from the ineffective, anti-
quated ways of conducting business.”
OR The breakthrough approach
Goal Goal
Time Time
Quantum Leap