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Feature
Why HR personnel fail as change managers?
In any organization, there are lots of expectations
from HR personnel to be key agents for enabling change. Sudipta
Dev tries to understand the reasons why they fail in their efforts
to be good change managers Change
management issues have become critical for most organizations as
they continue to grow fast in a dynamic business scenario. They
have to grapple with key issues like cross-cultural complexities,
mergers and acquisitions, necessitating restructuring the organization,
work allocation, team synergies, remuneration policies, and many
such issues. HR personnel are expected to be the key change agents,
as they are closest to the globally dispersed workforce across all
hierarchical levels. The only problem is the fact that HR managers
are not known to be the best change managers. They more often than
not fail in their efforts to enable change positively and effectively.
The causes require a deeper understanding of their mindset and evident
handicaps.
Reasons for failure
There are many reasons why HR people are rarely seen as good
change managers despite expected to be so. They are so caught up in their HR
function that they are unable to get the big business picture, which is so essential
for effective change management. Sharad Heda, COO, Microland stated, HR
should be able to recognize change, be able to consider the change important
enough (appreciate it adequately), have the willingness to respond to that change
and have the personal ability to carry forward that change. In reality, HR departmentsor
the HR community as a wholeare implementers of policy at an operational
level. They are rarely initiators of change or approvers of change. This is
a major hurdle. Evidently, being operational in nature, HR managers rarely
tend to look in places where change is being initiated.
Ullhas Pagey, a well-known HR and organizational development expert, and a visiting
faculty at the Jamnalal Bajaj Institute Management Studies, Mumbai, is quick
to point out that the competencies required to handle the change management
issues though they may fall into HR domain, are entirely different which run
of the mill HR managers with generalist profile are not equipped with. To
be specific, it requires more of organizational development competencies than
HR competencies. Though many HR guys would like to believe that they are good
at it, the fact is something different, added Pagey. Most organizations
also fail to realize that neither the top management nor the HR personnel are
equipped to handle these changes, particularly in mid-sized companies.
- The company is not ready for the change
and it gets forced instead of being facilitated.
- Sometimes managers try to bring too
big a change too fast. Like everything else, it has to be done
in phases.
- Change is a process, not an event. It
does not happen overnight by releasing a memo. It has to be lived each
day and enforced.
Source: Cincom Systems
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Matter of acceptability
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"When
HR is aligned in the very beginning, they can contribute as
well as become better aware of the need and impact. In the
absence of this, HR managers as change agents are destined
to fail"
- Arun D Rao
Vice-President, Human Resources, AppLabs
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It is partly a competence and partly an acceptance issue.
Arun D Rao, Vice-President, Human Resources, AppLabs, felt that the HR function
faces the threat of marginalization because too much emphasis is being placed
on tactical accomplishments, In spite of all the talk of working towards
boardroom acceptance, HR managers of today are busier than ever in managing
output at a very transactional level. As a result, the HR gets aligned to change
management processes as implementers.
Often the conventional mindset of initiators do not expect
any value add by involving the HR, given the internal interfaces. By not involving
the HR from the initial stages itself, their capability to be a positive catalyst
in the change management process is severely handicapped. When HR is aligned
in the very beginning, they can contribute and become better aware of the need
and impact. In the absence of this, HR managers as change agents are destined
to fail, asserted Rao.
The top management should realize that decisions like mergers, demergers or
alliances, apart from having financial angle, also has an HR angle. Having
realized this, ignoring such issues or not taking external help if the internal
HR is not competent enough to handle this at an early stage can spell disaster,
stated Pagey.
Impact on the organization
Failure in ensuring effective change management leads to widespread dissatisfaction
in the organization. Employees get demotivated and disillusioned, and finally
lose faith in the company. HR managers begin to find it frustrating that
despite adopting best practices (which is what their training tells them to
do), they are not harvesting results, stated Heda, pointing out that obviously,
the lack of results is hinged to the fact that the best practice is being implemented
out of context, without seeing the actual needs of an organization. This outcome
of implementing best practices can often lead to devastating the confidence
of an HR manager.
Mona Gupta, Senior Manager-HR, Cincom Systems, India felt that a well-facilitated
change does wondersorganizations can benefit by synergizing and collaborating.
At the same time, a badly handled change leads to bad-alignment, loss of trust
and could lead to collapse of the entire operation.
Change management skills
The important question is: can HR managers sharpen their change management skills?
While it is true that the impact of training is useful in this context, but
it is also limited. It is important for them to have a macro level involvement
of the organizational business and strategy to be truly effective as change
agents. This is much more than what any training can provide.
Change management is a highly specialized skill, it
needs altogether a different mindset and orientation. HR managers must be very
conversant with the change management models and be adept with diagnostic and
intervention technology, warns Pagey. The only practical and effective
way for HR managers is to be involved with things beyond the HR function. They
themselves need to be more open-minded. Fundamentally, HR managers need
to stay less insulated in order to sharpen their change management skills,
insisted Heda. Rao lists a few factors that can help HR people to be better
change managers:
- Continuous communications with stakeholders.
- Proactive indulgence with internal customers
- Seen as being an accessible unit by the impacted
population.
- Extensive reading on change management.
- Practicing the theory even in every small instances
of change management.
As the roadblocks are mostly internal (people being resistant to change, lack
of communication between the management and employees, etc.) Gupta outlined
the best solutions:
- Make sure everyone understands how the change will
benefit them and why its important.
- Be firm yet sensitive to peoples concerns.
What HR personnel have to do is to first bring about a change in their mindset,
attitude, vision and learning focus, before they can be change agents who can
transform an organization.
sudipta.dev@expressindia.com
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