woensdag, april 19, 2006

Four essential ingredients for transforming culture: what communicators can do to support culture change

Four essential ingredients for transforming culture: what communicators can do to support culture change

When it comes to culture change, the communicator's dilemma is a thorny one. Organizational communication is first and foremost a reflection of culture. But without communication, there's no hope of culture change. To get the process in motion, Roger D'Aprix and Cheryl Fields Tyler suggest communicators start by teaching their organizations to communicate more effectively.

Here, they share four crucial areas to focus on.
1. Explain why change is necessaryThe driving force of culture change is the marketplace. Its urgencies represent the only compelling rationale for organizational change. Leaders may want to discuss what actions they've decided on, but employees want to know why the change is necessary in the first place.
2. Create a clear and compelling plot lineA clear, simple and compelling "plot line" for the change story is the second essential ingredient to successful culture change. What is the business strategy and how will it make us a winner in the marketplace? How will we need to change to execute this strategy successfully? What will we need to change in the way we do business?
3. Understand those involved in the processCreating a successful communication strategy to change culture starts with understanding who needs to be communicating with one another and the current mindset, experience and expectations of these individuals and audiences. For example, front-line managers, caught between the anxiety of middle management and the fear and frustration of employees, ride the rumor mill roller coaster and wonder why no one is telling them what the future holds.
4. Aim to engageBy this we don't mean high scores on the annual survey tool, nor a permanent state of employee satisfaction and motivation. The simple truth is that most companies that have cause for major culture transformation are on the negative end of the engagement continuum. Communication strategy that supports engagement in this context must be understood as a sophisticated process that creates the situations and understandings that lead people to literally choose to engage with one another, and through that engagement, to change their behavior.


Source: Strategic Communication Management Volume 10, Issue 3 April/May 2006.