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Jill Geisler
Practical advice for managers & tools for leaders from Poynter's Jill Geisler
Jill Geisler heads Poynter's Leadership and Management Group.
She works with managers at every level of print, broadcast and online news organizations, helping them become more effective leaders.

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Managing Change: the Rules and the Roles
Remember when being a newsroom manager meant simply overseeing the quality of your daily report and those who produced it? Changes happened from time to time in your organization, and you rolled with them. 

Today, change is rampant: new technology, new tasks, new organizational structures, new ownership, new partners, new products, new competition, new measurements of success. Today, change is a constant.

RELATED RESOURCES
More from Jill on leading change:

"Leader to Leader: Tips for Managing Change in Your Newsroom"


"Leading Through Uncertainty"

"Keeping the Faith"

"Leading in Tight Times"

"Getting to Know
'Them' "


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Change brings us opportunity -- but also challenge. Managers must innovate and then implement. But even the best new ideas and initiatives can be strangled by flawed execution.

Managers need strategy, support and smarts. They need to know some rules of change and their own roles in the process. Here are some essential rules of change -- and the roles leaders must play to make that change successful:

1. Two top change challenges: learning and letting go.

Change requires us to learn new skills and to let go of past practices and assumptions. But changing our customs doesn't necessarily mean abandoning core values.

The leader's role: Honor the past while moving people toward a new vision of success. Provide clarity about values. If you don't explicitly marry your vision to values, you are missing an opportunity to reduce fear -- and to inspire. Assume people are worried. Assume they want to hear from you. Don't assume they know what you want them to let go and what you'll never abandon. Give them specifics.

2. Learning something new makes us temporarily incompetent.

Intelligent, competent people experience "learning anxiety" during change. Organizational psychologist Edgar Schein says we fear loss of status and self-esteem. We fear we'll be less successful in a new work team. We even fear punishment.

The leader's role: Reduce learning anxiety through training, coaching, promotion of reasonable risk-taking and tolerance for mistakes. Leaders should be role models for learning. You don't have to learn every new skill that's been adopted in the newsroom, nor master every piece of new technology. It would leave you little time for anything else! But do lead the way. Take part in some of the same training that others are experiencing. It will help you see the world through their eyes and let them see YOU as a continuous learner.

3. Emotion can help or hinder change, depending on how managers handle it.

Harvard business professor John Kotter believes successful change is built on understanding and managing emotions. He says the formula that moves people to action isn't "Analyze-Think-Change," where people ingest data, consider it and then change. Instead, it is "See-Feel-Change," a process in which they witness a telling event or example that touches their emotions and inspires them to choose to change.

The leader's role: Demonstrate -- even dramatically -- the need for change so people can see and feel it. Articulate a clear vision of what success looks like and how it will be measured. Show examples. Expose the work of early adopters. Provide opportunities for "quick wins" that build momentum and buy-in. Don't discount the depth of emotion that accompanies change; expect it.

4. Understanding motivation helps leaders manage change.

This requires a knowledge of the unique mix of intrinsic and extrinsic motivators that work for each staffer. Intrinsic motivators are the most powerful of all.

The leader's role: Focus on the intrinsic motivators, the internal engines that drive us. Management scholar Kenneth Thomas says they are: competence, choice, meaningfulness of the work and progress. Help people know they are making progress as they try new things. Set goals. Then use the extrinsic motivator of honest praise as people make progress. But remember: Praise without progress is merely flattery -- and people know it.

5. Collaboration is critical for innovation and change.

Today's change initiatives often require people to step out of their comfortable silos and into new work teams. The best of these collaborations generate innovation and change.

The leader's role: Identify, cultivate and reward your "boundary spanners" -- staffers who network, build bonds, exchange information and solve problems. Deploy them as catalysts for change. Teams that work together for a long time are more likely to produce incremental improvements than major change. But when a smart, collegial and dedicated person enters the mix, bringing fresh skills and a different viewpoint, the team is more likely to grow beyond improvement to real innovation. Who are your boundary spanners?

6. Communication fuels successful change management.

Managers at every level must take responsibility for communicating vision, values, goals and strategy. We underestimate the need for ongoing and custom-tailored communication.

The leader's role: Communicate a unifying vision for the team, but also deliver it personally to individuals, framed so they can clearly see and feel it. If you are holding a group meeting, remember that the meetings before and after it -- the ones you have with individuals -- are usually the most productive. In these meetings you can focus on each person's unique hopes, fears and history. Additionally, use every opportunity to reinforce your message to individuals and groups so it becomes part of the daily language and life of the organization. Just when you are getting tired of saying it, it is starting to take root.

Finally, don't underestimate the importance of optimism. Behavioral researcher Daniel Goleman says that the leader's mood runs through the room like an electrical current. The enthusiasm and energy of a respected manager, especially in the face of challenges, build confidence and courage in the newsroom.

Posted by Jill Geisler 11:06 AM May 9, 2007
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Recent Comments:
good column i'm reading this as an excellent advice column for people... More.
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