Genuine buy-in, as distinguished from compliance, is the product of involvement, not exhortation. To embrace change, employees need a hand in creating it.
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How is it that in their personal lives, employees can be trusted to buy houses and cars, but at work canât requisition a $300 office chair without a managerâs approval? If we thought about it for a minute, weâd realize this is stupid. Autonomy correlates with initiative and innovation. Shrink an individualâs freedom and you shrink their enthusiasm and creativity.
A lot of companies acquire others without much sensitivity regarding what theyâre really buying. They think theyâre getting physical assets or manufacturing assets or intellectual property (in some industries, thatâs more true than in others). In most cases, what theyâre really acquiring is people. In a creative business, thatâs where the value truly lies.
The sine qua non of any successful corporate transformation is public acknowledgment of the existence of a crisis. If employees do not believe a crisis exists, they will not make the sacrifices that are necessary to change. Nobody likes change. Whether you are a senior executive or an entry-level employee, change represents uncertainty and, potentially, pain.
You canât mandate it, canât engineer it.
What you can do is create the conditions for transformation. You can provide incentives. You can define the marketplace realities and goals. But then you have to trust. In fact, in the end, management doesnât change culture. Management invites the workforce itself to change the culture.
As Lou Gerstner says, âChanging the attitude and behavior of hundreds of thousands of people is very, very hard to accomplish. You canât simply give a couple of speeches or write a new credo for the company and declare that the new culture has taken hold. You canât mandate it, canât engineer it.
âWhat you can do is create the conditions for transformation. You can provide incentives. You can define the marketplace realities and goals. But at some point you have to trust. In fact, in the end, management doesnât change culture. Management invites the workforce itself to change the culture.