Change Management: Leading Through Technology Changes

By Charlie Feld
Sun, February 15, 2004

CIO — In a recent article in Harvard Business Review, business strategy guru Gary Hamel wrote, "The world is becoming turbulent faster than organizations are becoming resilient." Since organizations are collections of people, then individuals are feeling this same disorientation from the high-change world?which, I might add, is here to stay. The technological change that occurred slowly over centuries (such as the invention of the wheel) accelerated to change measured in decades (the impact of the automobile, for instance), which has now been transformed into continuous and pervasive change brought on by the computer chip.

The implications for individuals in general, and leaders in particular, can be either debilitating or energizing, depending on your aperture. Use a narrow day-to-day lens, and the winding path of change will disorient you. Widen the aperture to a few years, and you’ll see patterns forming out of the changing landscape. These patterns out of chaos will give you both great insight and confidence to either stay or change the course.

Consider, for example, the dotcom craze. In the late ’90s, anyone who didn’t buy in just didn’t understand. By 2001, it seemed obvious that everyone who had bought in just didn’t "get it." In retrospect, although the business models were wrong and overheated very quickly, the long-term principles of e-commerce (consumer choice, self-service and extended, real-time supply chains) were right. The technology innovation spawned during the first dotcom boom set the stage for true e-business transformation, which will take place during the next decade.

It’s important for all leaders to step back and recognize the patterns in change and factor out the noise?but it’s even more critical for CIOs to do so. CIOs have a bifurcated agenda, because at the same time that we’re dealing with the rapid pace of technological change, we are also shaping technology.

There are three major competencies that great IT leaders need in order to get the lay of the changing landscape: pattern recognition, technical savvy and street smarts. Put another way, if you want to be a great IT leader, these are three talents you need to hone.

Pattern Recognition The ability to sit back and watch the horizon instead of concentrating on the "hood ornament" will keep you going in the right direction. The faster the speed and the more winding the road, the more this principle is true. Unfortunately, the demands of business make most executives pay attention not just to the hood ornament but also to the fly on the windshield.

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