Organizational Behavior resistance to change and changing collective cognition Tomáš Ondráček ondracek.t@mail.muni.cz Faculty of Economics and Administration, Masaryk University 2020 Intermezzo Intermezzo ·ORBE ·2020 2 / 28 Intermezzo riddle Which word in the dictionary is always spelled incorrectly? ·ORBE ·2020 3 / 28 Introduction Introduction ·ORBE ·2020 4 / 28 Introduction resistance Studies of change appear to take the perspective, or bias, of those seeking to bring about change, in which it is presumed change agents are doing the right and proper things while change recipients throw up unreasonable obstacles or barriers intent on "doing in" or "screwing up" the change (Dent & Goldberg, 1999a; Klein, 1976). (Dent & Goldberg, 1999; Klein, 1976) according (Ford, Ford, & D‘Amelio, 2008: 362) ·ORBE ·2020 5 / 28 Introduction change agent-centric view objectivity biases communication interpretation behavior ignorance, incompetence, or mismanagement (Ford et al., 2008: 362) ·ORBE ·2020 6 / 28 Introduction authentic dissent intention of solving a problem (Ford et al., 2008: 36š) ·ORBE ·2020 7 / 28 Resistance as a Change Agent Sensemaking Resistance as a Change Agent Sensemaking ·ORBE ·2020 8 / 28 Resistance as a Change Agent Sensemaking change [...] change presents both agents and recipients with potential problems that are an occasion and trigger for sensemaking [...] Problems are not givens; they are constructed from novel, discrepant, or problematic situations that are puzzling, troubling, or uncertain to participants (Weick, 1995). Change is a situation that interrupts normal patterns of organization and calls for participants to enact new patterns, involving an interplay of deliberate and emergent processes that can be highly ambiguous (Mintzberg & Waters, 1985). (Ford et al., 2008: 363) ·ORBE ·2020 9 / 28 Resistance as a Change Agent Sensemaking questions How will this get accomplished? What will happen to me? (Gioia, Thomas, Clark, & Chittipeddi, 1994) according (Ford et al., 2008: 363) ·ORBE ·2020 10 / 28 Resistance as a Change Agent Sensemaking sensemaking active process the interaction of information seeking meaning ascription associated responses involving extracting particular behaviors and communications out of streams of ongoing events (i.e., bracketing) interpreting them to give them meaning acting on the resulting interpretation resulting in net presentation (Ford et al., 2008: 363–364) ·ORBE ·2020 11 / 28 Biases Biases ·ORBE ·2020 12 / 28 Biases biases Expectation Effects self-fulfilling prophecies the Pygmalion effect Self-Serving Accounts scape-goating self-serving attributions an (Ford et al., 2008) ·ORBE ·2020 13 / 28 Contributions to Resistance Contributions to Resistance ·ORBE ·2020 14 / 28 Contributions to Resistance trust general trust psychological contracts justice (Ford et al., 2008) ·ORBE ·2020 15 / 28 Contributions to Resistance communication legitimizations Misrepresentations No call for action Resisting Resistance (Ford et al., 2008) ·ORBE ·2020 16 / 28 Resistance as a Resource Resistance as a Resource ·ORBE ·2020 17 / 28 Resistance as a Resource activity search engage use (strenghten) ·ORBE ·2020 18 / 28 Reconstructing Resistance Reconstructing Resistance ·ORBE ·2020 19 / 28 Reconstructing Resistance reconstructing resistance recipient action agent sense making agent-recipient relationship (Ford et al., 2008) ·ORBE ·2020 20 / 28 Changing Collective Cognition Changing Collective Cognition ·ORBE ·2020 21 / 28 Changing Collective Cognition The links between resources, capabilities, and competitive advantage (Grant, 2018: 113) ·ORBE ·2020 22 / 28 Changing Collective Cognition changes C stands for commitment by top management to explore change. Organizations must have the commitment to invest both the time and resources needed to engage in workshop activities. H refers to using a holistic approach, which helps ensure discussion of varied alternatives and perspectives from different departments, divisions, and constituencies. A represents an external agent, who is a skilled facilitator. N stands for using a neutral site away from daily operations for conducting the workshop. G represents the group, i.e., the top management team, which together develops, owns, and is responsible for the new strategy. E refers to execution of the proposed changes. Maintaining an eye on execution during the workshop ensures tight coupling between formulation and implementation (Grant, 2018: 12,108) ·ORBE ·2020 23 / 28 Changing Collective Cognition the resource-based view of the firm Establishing Competitive Advantage relevance scarcity Sustaining Competitive Advantage durability transferability replicability appropriation (Grant, 2018: 112) ·ORBE ·2020 24 / 28 Intermezzo Intermezzo ·ORBE ·2020 25 / 28 Intermezzo riddle What can you hold in your right hand, but never in your left hand? ·ORBE ·2020 26 / 28 Intermezzo The End (Randall, 2021) ·ORBE ·2020 27 / 28 Sources Dent, E. B., & Goldberg, S. G. (1999). Challenging “resistance to change”. The Journal of applied behavioral science, 35(1), 25–41. Ford, J. D., Ford, L. W., & D‘Amelio, A. (2008). Resistance to change: The rest of the story. Academy of management Review, 33(2). doi: 10.5465/amr.2008.31193235 Gioia, D. A., Thomas, J. B., Clark, S. M., & Chittipeddi, K. (1994). Symbolism and strategic change in academia: The dynamics of sensemaking and influence. Organization science, 5(3). doi: 10.1287/orsc.5.3.363 Grant, R. M. (2018). Contemporary strategy analysis: Text and cases edition. John Wiley & Sons. Klein, D. (1976). Some notes on the dynamics of resistance to change: The defender role. in. In W. G. Bennis, K. D. Benne, R. Chin, & K. E. Corey (Eds.), The planning of change (p. 117-124). Holt, Rinehart & Winston. Randall, E. (2021). And that’s all i have to say about that. Retrieved from https://cz.pinterest.com/pin/563442603353836727/