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Dennis Hightower Case The Situation. Disney Europe was successful but corporate HQ thought they could be more successful Euro community changing Dennis Hightower selected Hightower’s background Military (Europe) Consulting. The Situation (contd.).
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Dennis Hightower CaseThe Situation • Disney Europe was successful but corporate HQ thought they could be more successful • Euro community changing • Dennis Hightower selected • Hightower’s background • Military (Europe) • Consulting
The Situation (contd.) • Disney wants to increase profitability of their European operation • Move to consolidate/unify country operations • Problem is to grow an already profitable business
Burbank’s Perspective • Europe a “golden opportunity” • Good past performance but EEC opens new opportunities • European theme park will open doors for consumer items • Decision to create Paris HQ and hire a European head
Country Manager’s Perspective • Proud of past success • New level of control unknown before • Possible perception of a “condemnation of previous performance” • Feeling “sandbagged” having opened up to Hightower when he interviewed them • Ostensible approval of Hightower’s selection by three
Hightower’s Perspective • “I’m the boss they don’t want” • Burbank wants me but has high expectations • Somewhat embarrassed by having interviewed as a consultant & now coming as boss • “I’m stuck in the middle”
Potential Barriers to Change • Stereotypes of Americans vs Europeans • Cultural differences • National differences • Personal status issues • Tenure • Relationship with the Disney family
Hightower’s Task • Produce a strategic plan in 90 days • To do that he must: • Learn the territory • Obtain “buy-in” from the country managers • Develop and write the plan • While overcoming the barriers
Three Approaches • Just do it • Collective approach with the CMs • Individual approach with the CMs • Combination
Just Do It • Easiest and fastest • But least likely to produce “buy-in” and cooperation in implementation • And he’s got a lot to learn about the territory
Collective Approach • Convene a meeting with all the CMs • Pros • Set tone & agenda at once with no rumors • All on “same page” & “one for all/all for one • Cons • Might become an “Us vs Him” situation • He lacks knowledge and is an outsider
Individual Approach • Meet with each CM individually • Pros • Can question and learn • Can “pollinate” with his ideas • Forge personal connections • Cons • Time-consuming & keeps him away from HQ • Raises the issue of who/where to start
Combination • Question of time • Could dilute the positives of either approach
The Older CMs - Keep? • Temptation to eliminate the barriers & get young blood • A new broom sweeps clean • Situational approach called for • Never throw the baby out with the bath
What he did • Non-stop tour of the territory spending 4/5 days with each CM by seniority • Learned the territory/built personal credibility • Developed his strategy • Including at least one or two of their ideas • Then held general meeting presenting their “jointly developed” strategy • Each CM saw himself as a Change Agent
The Country Managers • Over the next year • replaced four CMs based on adaptability • 3 of the over 60 crowd remained • French Mgr delicately “elevated” to senior consultant role • In his first year, consumer products doubled bottom line
Lessons • Perspectives - we all see through different eyes • Constant need to balance perspectives • Consider the feelings of all • One way to overcome resistance is to co-opt it • Make resisters into change agents
Roles in Change • Jick - four roles to perform change • Sponsor - suggesting or demanding the change • Agent - the person actually ordering change & making it happen • Target - recipient of the change • Advocate - cheerleaders/promoters
Roles in Change • Dalziel & Schoonover • Inventor - big picture modeler • Entrepreneur - identifies new possibilities • Integrator - forges alliances to gain acceptance • Expert - provides technical knowledge & skill • Manager - delegates and runs others • Sponsor - ensures support and resources
The Sponsor’s Role • Too often adopt the “spinning top” approach • Effective sponsors remain involved • They initiate • They follow • They reinforce • Until agents become sponsors • And even the targets become sponsors
The Change Agent • Ideally becomes a sponsor • Establishes close relationship with targets • dilemma of change that really hurts people • Must be a Trainer/Teacher • Great human sensitivity called for
History of Change Agent Concept • Term first referred to external help • The “hired gun” • Has evolved to an internal function • Either integral to normal responsibilities • Or as a “project” • Change teams or change agent positions
Pros & Cons • Pros • Internal agents know the territory & culture • Communication is usually easier/better • Trust is usually there • Cons • May be difficult to take the hard decisions • Time limits when you have a “regular job” too • “Prophet without honor” syndrome
Cascading Change - the Ideal • Begins with sponsor’s convincing & attractive vision which includes appropriate sense of urgency • Results in buy-in at all levels • The good and the bad are shared • Everyone sees themselves as change agents
Northwest Airlines Case • Situation • Volatile environment of airline industry • Intense competition at multiple levels • Regulation/deregulation issues • Hugh capital investments and tight margins • Rothmeir takes over in ‘85 with Northwest is poor shape.
Rothmeir’s Vision? • Better performance through • Better customer service • Increased efficiency & economic operation • Employee participation
Dr. Ken Myers’ Role • Double team/ good cop-bad cop approach • Rothmeir to be Mr. Outside • Myers Mr. Inside • Is this approach likely to be effective?
Pros and Cons • Pros • One makes the hard decisions • The other provides the soft shoulder • Cons • Mixing “oil and water”? • Trust?
Environmental Changes • Acquisition of Republic • Impact? • The Crash at Detroit • Impact? • Bidding war over takeover by Al Checchi
Lessons • Even change agents susceptible to change • Need to “bend their knees” • Pros and cons of internal vs external change agents • It takes more than one or two agents to effect change
Microswitch Case • The situation • Microswitch attempting change to better quality and customer satisfaction • Three middle managers singled out as change agents • Transitional pace
Problems of Transitional Change • Measured pace easier to cope with • No sense of urgency can be deleterious
The Cast • Alvarez - new GM • Playing the “sponsor” role • Rick Rowe - former renegade/bad cowboy • Ellis Stewart - consummate trainer & optimist • Deb Massof - “outsider” from Honeywell, skeptical but enthusiastic
Mid-Term Report Card? • What’s been achieved so far? • Is this adequate? • Has something gone wrong? • How do the change agents feel? • Threats to the change effort at this point?
Change Agent’s Frustration • A sign of failure? • A normal part of being in the middle • Burnout and self-doubt possible • Constant questions of support & empowerment • Can appear an endless process when you’re in the middle • Article on “Converting Middle Powerlessness”
Empowerment vs Control • Alvarez ultimately responsible to the corp. • But can’t get the job done without giving up some control to others • Delicate balancing act • Finding those you can trust • Giving them the power they need • Using the vision as control
Lessons • The problem of being in the “middle” • Need for delicately balanced empowerment • Relationship between sponsors and agents • The ups and downs of all change efforts