Change is all around us, in every aspect of our lives. While nothing new, the amount and sheer pace of change in recent decades is tremendous. For organisations this poses often existential challenges to adapt, keep pace and "out-change" competitors or peers. Many now recognise that the agility that an organisation's change management capability brings is not a nice-to-have but a must-have. Change management capability is an essential core competency and fundamental to organisational success in a rapidly changing world.
Just as organisations have seen dramatic change, the discipline of change management has undergone significant evolution in recent years. Once an often ad hoc approach, typically focused on communications or training, it is now a codified discipline with structure, process and rigour. Increasingly organisations are bringing a sophisticated, data-driven perspective to generate new insights into how a project is performing both on the technical and the people sides of the change.
Many of the world's leading organisations, both public and private sector, have embarked on a journey to move from change management as a project-by-project practice to a systemic organisational capability. This involves institutionalising and embedding change management across the organisation while integrating change management practices, processes and tools in many of its organisational systems.
Our partners Prosci, a world-leader in change management, call this effort Enterprise Change Management (ECM). Based on over twenty years of change management research and development, Prosci has developed tools, resources and trainings to support change management deployment leaders.
One such tool is the Prosci ECM Roadmap which provides a structured process for the journey to enterprise change management capability. The remainder of this tutorial introduces you the Prosci ECM Roadmap.
Having developed a robust business case and gained commitment for building an organisational change management capability, we turn to how that capability can be built with a structured and intentional approach. If building a case for enterprise change management is something you are trying to do, review the Business Case for Enterprise Change Management tutorial for an example approach.
At the heart of the Prosci ECM Roadmap is the recognition that building an organisational change management capability is itself a significant change for an organisation that requires structure and intent. Therefore, we treat it as both a project and a change in its own right. While this may seem to be just common sense, it has a number of implications for the approach taken and we still see many organisations struggling or failing to recognise them. There are some common errors that can undermine your efforts.
Any type of organisational change can be broken into five elements:
Whether your project involves implementing an ERP application, a new hybrid working policy or a new innovation management system, these five elements combine in ECM Roadmap to form a simple but powerful change framework. It provides critical direction to your capability building efforts while also being a helpful communication aid.
The Prosci ECM Roadmap
Without this framework, change management deployment leaders can fall into a trap of slowly training more people in change management and taking an ad hoc approach to its application on projects. Even though some progress and benefits are delivered, the organisation as whole fails to make the expected leap forward.
How then can you apply the ECM Roadmap to ensure structure and intent for your efforts? The activities below illustrate how the Roadmap can support your ECM journey.
Make a clear distinction between “change management” and “enterprise change management” and ensure key stakeholders understand this distinction
Make the case for enterprise change management
Begin by treating the effort to build organisational change management capabilities and competencies as a project and as a change in its own right
Lay the groundwork for Project ECM by preparing a Project Charter including the project definition, description, scope, resources and benefits metrics
Evaluate your current state using the Prosci Change Management Maturity Model
Capture how changes happen in your organisation and lessons learned
Review and assess organisational “Help or Hinder Factors” that could impact ECM deployment
Assess the current view of change management among key stakeholders
Identify risk areas and key takeaways to inform your ECM approach and design
Conduct a visioning workshop using, for example, a “standing in the future” exercise
Align around your organisation's ambition for future state maturity and related goals
Craft an ECM Vision Statement to capture conclusions from the above activities
Define the technical side of your future state
Define the people side of your future state
Agree Project ECM Objectives that will deliver on your future state ambition
Create Future State metrics that will enable you to measure progress and success
Conduct a gap analysis between your current and future states
Identify your starting point and immediate action steps
Review your technical side design from multiple stakeholder perspectives
Develop Leadership tactics
Develop Project tactics
Develop Skill tactics
Develop Structure tactics
Develop Process tactics
Create an overall technical side implementation plan
Apply the Prosci 3-Phase Process to create people side strategies and plans
Use the Prosci ADKAR®️ Model to identify tactics to support colleagues through their individual transitions from the current to future state of ECM
Develop Awareness building tactics
Develop Desire building tactics
Develop Knowledge building tactics
Develop Ability building tactics
Develop Reinforcement building tactics
Baseline the health of Project ECM using the Prosci PCT Assessment
Establish plan for future Prosci PCT Assessments at key milestones and as part of your governance reporting
Use standard tools (statement of work, charter, project plan, business case, etc.) to projectise your efforts
Review the Prosci Change Management Best Practices Research and incorporate learnings