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“Change-Masters: Corporate Entrepreneurs at Work”

This presentation will probably involve audience discussion, which will create action items. Use PowerPoint to keep track of these action items during your presentation In Slide Show, click on the right mouse button Select “Meeting Minder” Select the “Action Items” tab

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“Change-Masters: Corporate Entrepreneurs at Work”

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  1. This presentation will probably involve audience discussion, which will create action items. Use PowerPoint to keep track of these action items during your presentation • In Slide Show, click on the right mouse button • Select “Meeting Minder” • Select the “Action Items” tab • Type in action items as they come up • Click OK to dismiss this box • This will automatically create an Action Item slide at the end of your presentation with your points entered. “Change-Masters: Corporate Entrepreneurs at Work” Source: Rosabeth Moss Kanter Professor, Harvard Business School

  2. Definition of a “Change Master” • “… those people and organizations adept at the art of anticipating the need for, and of leading, productive change.” • Kanter, The Change Masters, Unwin Paperbacks, London, 1990.

  3. Main Trait of a Change Master • “ … corporate entrepreneurs … who measure themselves not by the standards of the past (how far they have come) but by visions of the future (how far they have yet to go).” • Kanter, p.27f

  4. History and the Future • “The change master is partly a historian who knows what pieces of the past to honor and preserve, while moving toward a different future, but that is not the same as letting the past define the future.” • Kanter, p.33

  5. The Three Waves of Activity in a Prototypical Innovation • 1. Problem definition. • Acquisition and application of information to shape a feasible, focussed project • 2. Coalition Building. • Developing network of backers who agree to provide resources and/or support

  6. The Three Waves of Activity in a Prototypical Innovation • 3. Mobilization. • Investment of acquired resources, information, and support in the project • activation of the project’s working team

  7. Eight Classic Tactics of Change • 1. Waiting it out. • Useful when entrepreneurs have no tools with which to counter the opposition directly • 2. Wearing them down. • Continuing to repeat the same argument and not giving ground

  8. Eight Classic Tactics of Change • 3. Appealing to larger principles. • Tying the innovation to an unassailable value or person • 4. Inviting them in. • finding a way that an opponent might share the “spoils” of innovation

  9. Eight Classic Tactics of Change • 5. Sending emissaries to smooth the way and plead the case. • Picking diplomats on the project team to visit critics periodically and present them with information • 6. Displaying support. • Asking sponsors for a visible demonstration of backing

  10. Eight Classic Tactics of Change • 7. Reducing the stakes. • De-escalating the number of losses or changes implied by the innovation • 8. Warning the critics. • Letting them know they would be challenged in important public forums

  11. Core Value of These Tactics • Each of the 8 tactics stresses the need for change-masters to be “masters of the use of participation” • Not authoritarian but collaborative and participatory

  12. How Corporate Entrepreneurs Produce Innovative Achievements • 1. Persuading • 2. Teaming • formal and informal coalition building • 3. Frequent sharing of information • staff meetings, brain-storms, scheduled and informal conversations

  13. How Corporate Entrepreneurs Produce Innovative Achievements • 4. Seeking input from others • needs of users, suggestions of subordinates, review by peers • 5. Showing “political sensitivity” • understanding others’ stake in project • 6. Demonstrating willingness to share the rewards and recognition

  14. The Right Change • The right people. • Uses the people with ideas beyond the organization’s established practice to form vision

  15. The Right Change • The right places. • Integrative environments that support innovation and encourage the building of coalitions and teams to support and implement vision

  16. The Right Change • The right times. • “Those moments in the flow of an organization’s history when it is possible to reconstruct reality on the basis of accumulated innovations to shape a more productive and successful future.” (p. 306)

  17. Conclusion • Change-masters are able to bring about tactical Kingdom change in congregations when they are the • right people • in the right place • at the right time.

  18. This presentation will probably involve audience discussion, which will create action items. Use PowerPoint to keep track of these action items during your presentation • In Slide Show, click on the right mouse button • Select “Meeting Minder” • Select the “Action Items” tab • Type in action items as they come up • Click OK to dismiss this box • This will automatically create an Action Item slide at the end of your presentation with your points entered. “Change-Masters: Corporate Entrepreneurs at Work” www.rasnet.org John.chandler@vbmb.org Copy right John Chandler, 2000

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