Holden, et. al. (2008) provides one of the more comprehensive lists of goals for successful change management. They include (p. 461):
- Develop a change that fits the organization and its needs, and implement it in a fitting way
- Be able to anticipate future problems/barriers and deal with them effectively
- Build a shared, agreed-upon understanding of the change
- Create an awareness of the change such that all key stakeholders are accurately informed
- Reduce fear and uncertainty
- Plan and implement a high-quality change that will be useful, ‘‘user-friendly,’’ and compatible with the current state of affairs—and promote it as such
- Ensure justice in all that is done
- Manage employees and management reactions including receptivity, resistance, commitment, cynicism, stress, buy-in, and trust
- Ensure that workers are satisfied and make (effective/efficient) use of the change
- Ensure that the change has a positive net benefit for individuals and the organization
- Institutionalize change and secure lasting commitment
- Learn from successes and failures, and adapt as needed
- Demonstrate to stakeholders that change was worthwhile
References
Holden, R.J., Or, C.K.L., Alper, S.J., Rivera, A.J., & Karsh, B.T. (2008). A change management framework for macroergonomic field research. Applied Ergonomics, 38, 459-474.