In the first 16 years of my career in the corporate world I experienced 8 reorganisations that directly involved my role. For some I was an individual contributor waiting to hear my fate and for most I was in a leadership role designing the future and deciding the fate of others. Eventually things came full circle, and I was an individual suddenly searching for a new career outside of the one I had known for so long.
Reorganisations are difficult, necessary, and deeply personal for everyone involved.
Often, when the term reorganisation is used, job loss or cost-cutting comes to mind. Certainly, these are possible outcomes but never the true purpose of the effort. The true purpose is to move the company from the path it is on to a path which leadership believes will be more viable and more likely to lead to future success. I have never met a leader contemplating a reorg who did not subscribe to this purpose, yet 80% of reorgs fail to deliver the hoped-for value in the time planned.
Simply put, it is not the what, but the how. Humans can be incredibly resilient and highly unforgiving at the same time. There is little point in developing a go-forward strategy if you are unable to get your team to come with you. Everyone is going to receive the news of the change differently and will need help and guidance to create a bridge to the future state. It’s your role as a leader to embrace the human side of change if you want your next reorganisation to result in a successful transformation vs. a dysfunctional shell of what once was.
If you’re contemplating your team’s future, consider these best practices and leadership lessons I’ve gathered from my experience through 8 reorganisations, before, during and after the reorg announcement.
Leadership Lesson: I recall a conversation with a fellow leader who was looking to stand up a new function within their department and be headcount neutral. Unfortunately, this leader was not very familiar with the intricacies of how their team operated and didn’t follow the Strategy, Structure and Selection approach. Uninformed assumption led to cutting several roles that appeared to be redundant which were critical to established process. Stress and frustration ensued, productivity was impacted and unfortunately, the new capabilities took a backseat to keeping the lights on following the disruption from those employee departures. The lesson here is to take your time, do your homework and carefully involve people who can supplement your own blind spots. Don’t let urgency or impatience impact quality.
Leadership Lesson: During one reorg I had an individual on my team whose job was not changing much, but because of the amount of change adjacent to their role, I chose to have a 5 minute 1:1 touch base so they would not be surprised by the broader subsequent communications. They were grateful to have time to process beforehand and immediately became a supporter of the change as a result. A week prior another I shared my communication plan with another leader who questioned why I had so many conversations planned. “You don’t need to waste all that time, just bring them all into a room and put the org chart up on the screen,” they said. I was willing to put in the time to make sure the entire team understood where we were going and what it meant to them. No change is easy, but I believe the rate at which my team embraced the situation and moved forward had a lot to do with how they felt when the news broke. The lesson here is simple, treat people how they want to be treated.
Leadership Lesson: You can’t expect to control everything once your changes are rolled out. One of the most well-planned organizational changes I rolled out included full cross-functional leadership alignment for work that our team was going to stop doing. We banked that found capacity into the org design, rolled out the changes and quickly found in the months to come that the team was stretched thin because the alignment at a leadership level did not flow downstream. Individual contributors still had the same expectations of my team that they always had, and the team struggled with even less capacity to support them given the new operating model. Fortunately, my managers and peers were still in the trenches with the team at this time. We knew that to make this change stick, we had to support the role clarity, collaboration and process enhancements well past announcement day. Lesson Learned, there is no “set it and forget it” in a reorganisation or leadership for that matter.
“We’re getting too good at this,” remarked one of my peers on our leadership team. It was the third year in a row we had restructured the group. We were getting good at the mechanics of reorganisation, but what he meant was he’d rather we be spending time leading major customer and product development initiatives or helping our people grow, than creating org charts and delivering difficult news. There is always growth in every change, but even though it sometimes it can feel like 2 steps forward and one step back, it is still forward progress when done right.
I’m often asked how I went from the world of building motorcycles to leading Right Management’s Career Development, Mobility and Change and Outplacement product portfolio. When I found myself reflecting on what I wanted to do next after my role was eliminated (and supported by a great Right Management outplacement programme), I came to realise that what I enjoyed most about my work was seeing the impact it had on peoples’ lives. Right Management’s mission of helping individuals grow and organizations thrive, has a significant impact on helping people navigate change and grow to be their best selves… a rewarding fit for me.
As you find yourself contemplating the next major organisational change at your company, be sure to keep the human element at the centre of your decision-making process. Pay special attention to what remaining employees will need to not just keep the lights on, but to chart the course to a brighter tomorrow. Connect with a trusted partner, like Right Management. Our Mobility and Change Solutions and Outplacement Programmes can help you achieve the goals of your change effort with rapidly deployable and scalable programmes optimised to support your go-forward talent. Our Outplacement Programmes support exiting employees with expertise and care to accelerate their transition to the next step in their careers. Commit to helping those leaving the organisation find their next chapter with confidence. And never forget that how you communicate difficult news is as important as the news itself.
Jeff Strunk, Vice President, Product Portfolio, Right Management