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9. Accelerate Change
Every organization must be prepared to abandon everything it
does to survive in the future.
—Peter F. Drucker
My role as a leader is always—
always
—to keep my
people cheered up, optimistic, and ready to play full-out
in the face of change. That’s my job. Most managers do
not see this as their job. They see their job as being
babysitters, problem-solvers, and firefighters. And so they
produce babies, problems, and fires all around them.
In the face of change, this dysfunction is most pain-
fully revealed. Therefore, it’s important to anticipate the
psychological reaction to change in your employees and
to see how it follows a predictable cycle.
Your employees pass through these four stages in the
cycle, and you can learn how to manage this passage:
The Change Cycle
1. Objection: “This can’t be good.”
2. Reduced Consciousness: “I really don’t
want to deal with this.”
3. Exploration: “How can I make this change
work for me?”
4. Buy-in: “I have figured out how I can make
this work for me and for others.”
Sometimes the first three stages in the cycle take a
long, long time for your people to pass through. Produc-
tivity and morale can take a dizzying dip as employees
resist change. It is human nature to resist change. We all
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