Change. It's unsettling
and exciting. It's evolutionary and inevitable. It's widely
initiated and frequently resisted.
Alvin Toffler, in his 1970
book Future
Shock, says we can only take
so much change before we hit overload and shut down mentally to
additional change – like a sponge reaching its saturation point.
The
pace of change has increased dramatically since Toffler defined
Future Shock, and our capacity to adopt change has evolved also –
but limits still affect us.
At
a recent meeting, the facilitator did an observation exercise in
which one person altered their appearance and the other tried to
identify the changes. A few minutes after the exercise, the
facilitator noted that most individuals reversed the changes –
returning to the comfort of the pre-change conditions. The
illustrated principle – after change, people strive to return to
status quo (the old normal state) – they try to re-establish what
was
before.
Simple
examples of this tendency – New Year's resolutions, diets, personal
development training... a strong pull to return to the old way.
So
what happens in an organization when the changes have eliminated the
status quo for the individual? They will make up a new story – new
rules – a new norm – to replace the no longer available status
quo. They create nuvo quo - a
new normal state – to guide them in their roles. Nuvo quo helps
the person regain the feeling of control of their environment. There
is no coordination with mission or vision of the organization as the
individual develops a New
Normal state – to mitigate the uncomfortable feeling of change
overload. Communication of nuvo quo to the leaders of the
organization is virtually unknown.
Conflicts
develop between what the individual is doing and what the
organization expects the individual to do - “Just doing my job (as
I define it)” versus “not doing your job (as documented in the
position specs)”. An employee of a transportation agency boasted
in an external meeting that he had the ability to completely shut
down an entire sector of the transportation industry country-wide
with just the flick of a computer key – wonder if that's part of
the ops plan for the agency and under what controlled circumstances?
Have
any examples of Nuvo Quo after a change in the organization? Please
share.
This
may be of interest -
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Association
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