• Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Advertisement
  • Privacy & Policy
Thursday, July 3, 2025
SUBSCRIBE
The Brief | Namibia's Leading Business & Financial News
13 °c
Columbus
19 ° Tue
21 ° Wed
  • Home
  • Companies
    • Finance
    • Agriculture
    • Technology
    • Property
    • Trade
    • Tourism
  • Business & Economy
  • Mining & Energy
  • Opinions
    • Analysis
    • Columnists
  • Africa
  • e-edition
No Result
View All Result
The Brief | Namibia's Leading Business & Financial News
  • Home
  • Companies
    • Finance
    • Agriculture
    • Technology
    • Property
    • Trade
    • Tourism
  • Business & Economy
  • Mining & Energy
  • Opinions
    • Analysis
    • Columnists
  • Africa
  • e-edition
No Result
View All Result
The Brief | Namibia's Leading Business & Financial News
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
TB image banner 750x140
Home Companies

What changes when you change scale in Change Management?

by editor
May 22, 2023
in Companies
47
A A
57
SHARES
954
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedIn

You might also like

BoN orders banks to cut gap between repo and lending rates

Foreign investment into Namibia surges to US$11 billion

Namibia’s medical aid funds record N$229.7m surplus in Q1

Building change capability is a change, like any other change, involving people adopting new working methods.

So, one could imagine that this change would need what all changes need; strong sponsorship, good project management, and a focus on the people side, all backed up by a clear definition of what success would look like. Yes, that is true, but is that all? Let’s look at Prosci’s research on this.

The research shows that several factors determine the success of building change capability. We shall visit each in turn over the next few weeks. Underpinning these factors, however, is one element that respondents strongly identified; the need for a method.

A vital strength of a method is its inherent structure. Research has consistently shown that structure is a significant contributor to change success. Since 2005 a structured approach has consistently appeared as the second or third most potent factor for change success after sponsorship.

At a recent change management conference, I heard a presenter say, “It’s not important that you follow a specific method as long as you use a comprehensive tool to help you manage change”. 

 There could be more than one comprehensive toolset; with the focus on digitization these days, we see tools being launched daily. But let’s imagine what our enterprise would look like if several toolsets were used simultaneously. Of necessity, each would reference a language of change different from another toolset.

Without a method, we cannot express value; we cannot build knowledge, and managing change is a process of building knowledge in an organization. So, while a change manager could use some toolset without a method, they will likely find significant misunderstanding and lack of support without the fundamental understanding and consistency of applying a method. 

Changing scale, moving from a single initiative of change to deploying an enterprise-wide change, like change capability, also requires a strategy to achieve success. Over half the organizations that responded to our research indicated that they were actively deploying change management as a capability. They do this because this activity leads organizations to achieve their targeted ROI on change initiatives more often, which is the ultimate test of value.

Organizations implementing strategies specific to a particular method and aligning the entire organization with a consistent methodology significantly impact the rate at which they build change capability. The deployment must provide repeatable processes and tools that employees can use throughout the organization; deployment requires a solid methodology as its foundation.

So, armed with a solid method as a foundational element, we can move on to considering five strategic areas where change capability is built. These include Leadership, Projects, Skills, Structure and Process. When we meet again next time, we shall visit the strategic area of Leadership.

Actions like how leaders govern and sponsor the deployment of change capability set the base and provide the energy and political will to start and keep momentum in managing change. However, we would do well to consider which method we will use to support our drive to manage change better.

*Tom Marsicano is the CEO of ‘and Change’, a change management consulting and training company. He is a Master Certified Prosci® Instructor with an extensive background, especially in financial services and IT systems. His love for research make him a widely respected facilitator and speaker. Write to him at tom@andchange.com or learn more at andchange.com.

author avatar
editor
See Full Bio
Tags: companies
Share23Tweet14Share4
Previous Post

Tech for good: Harnessing technology for positive social change

Next Post

Fibre or 5G connectivity?

Recommended For You

BoN orders banks to cut gap between repo and lending rates

by reporter
July 2, 2025
0
BoN orders banks to cut gap between repo and lending rates

The Bank of Namibia (BoN) has directed all commercial banks to narrow the gap between the repo rate and lending rates by 25 basis points in two stages...

Read moreDetails

Foreign investment into Namibia surges to US$11 billion

by reporter
July 2, 2025
0
Namibia attracts  N$115 billion FDI over 4 years

Namibia’s inward foreign direct investment (FDI) stock rose to US$10.995 billion in 2024, up from US$9.2 billion in 2023, according to the United Nations Conference on Trade and...

Read moreDetails

Namibia’s medical aid funds record N$229.7m surplus in Q1

by reporter
July 2, 2025
0
Namibia’s medical aid funds record N$229.7m surplus in Q1

Namibia’s medical aid funds industry recorded a net surplus of N$229.7 million in the first quarter of 2025, driven by ongoing cost containment efforts and a steady claims...

Read moreDetails

DBN secures Green Climate Fund accreditation

by reporter
July 2, 2025
0
DBN secures Green Climate Fund accreditation

The Development Bank of Namibia (DBN) has been officially accredited by the Green Climate Fund (GCF), a move expected to improve Namibia’s ability to access international climate finance....

Read moreDetails

Edelweiss to launch direct Zurich–Windhoek flights in June 2026

by reporter
July 2, 2025
0
Edelweiss to launch direct Zurich–Windhoek flights in June 2026

Edelweiss Air will launch a direct, twice-weekly service between Zurich and Windhoek starting 1 June 2026. The non-stop route, operated by Switzerland’s leading leisure airline, will connect Zurich...

Read moreDetails
Next Post
Fibre or 5G connectivity?

Fibre or 5G connectivity?

Related News

TransNamib to invest N$1.7 billion in 23 new locomotives

TransNamib to invest N$1.7 billion in 23 new locomotives

January 10, 2025
Namibia2Go car rental launches hybrid vehicles

Namibia2Go car rental launches hybrid vehicles

April 1, 2022
Ministry of Trade to develop 36ha of land in Congo and DRC

Ministry of Trade to develop 36ha of land in Congo and DRC

February 13, 2023

Browse by Category

  • Africa
  • Agriculture
  • Analysis
  • Business & Economy
  • Columnists
  • Companies
  • Finance
  • Finance
  • Fisheries
  • Green Hydrogen
  • Health
  • Investing
  • Latest
  • Market
  • Mining & Energy
  • namibia
  • Namibia
  • News
  • Opinions
  • Property
  • Retail
  • Technology
  • Tourism
  • Trade
The Brief | Namibia's Leading Business & Financial News

The Brief is Namibia's leading daily business, finance and economic news publication.

CATEGORIES

  • Business & Economy
  • Companies
    • Agriculture
    • Finance
    • Fisheries
    • Health
    • Property
    • Retail
    • Technology
    • Tourism
    • Trade
  • Finance
  • Green Hydrogen
  • Investing
  • Latest
  • Market
  • Mining & Energy
  • namibia
  • News
    • Africa
    • Namibia
  • Opinions
    • Analysis
    • Columnists

CONTACT US

Cell: +264814612969

Email: newsdesk@thebrief.com.na

© 2025 The Brief | All Rights Reserved. Namibian Business News, Current Affairs, Analysis and Commentary

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Companies
  • Mining & Energy
  • Business & Economy
  • Opinions
    • Analysis
    • Columnists
  • Africa

© 2025 The Brief | All Rights Reserved. Namibian Business News, Current Affairs, Analysis and Commentary

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.