scholarly journals Socio-Psychological Determinants of Organizational Change Projects Success: a Literature Review

Author(s):  
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Oleg Volkov ◽  
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Olga Tishchenko ◽  
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This article is devoted to a problem of resistance to organizational changes in projects in general and its socio-psychological aspect in particular. During the literary review the points of view on interrelation of project management and organizational change management are revealed, types and models of organizational changes introduction are allocated. Besides, the review includes the works devoted to socio-psychological aspect of change management, and the conflicts as to a consequence of these changes, and their influence on project success.

2004 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 4-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Lynne Markus

Using IT in ways that can trigger major organizational changes creates high-risk, potentially high-reward, situations that I call technochange (for technology-driven organizational change). Technochange differs from typical IT projects and from typical organizational change programs and therefore requires a different approach. One major risk in technochange—that people will not use information technology and related work practices—is not thoroughly addressed by the discipline of IT project management, which focuses on project cost, project schedule, and solution functionality. Organizational change management approaches are also generally not effective on their own, because they take as a given the IT “solutions” developed by a technical team. Consequently, the potential for the IT “solution” to be misaligned with important organizational characteristics, such as culture or incentives, is great. Merely combining IT project management and organizational change management approaches does not produce the best results, for two reasons. First, the additive approach does not effectively address the many failure-threatening problems that can arise over the lengthy sequential process of the typical technochange lifecycle. Second, the additive approach is not structured to produce the characteristics of a good technochange solution: a complete intervention consisting of IT and complementary organizational changes, an implementable solution with minimal misfits with the existing organization, and an organization primed to appropriate the potential benefits of the technochange solution. With hard work and care, the combined IT project management plus organizational change approach can be made to work. However, an iterative, incremental approach to implementing technochange can be a better strategy in many situations. The essential characteristic of the technochange prototyping approach is that each phase involves both new IT functionality and related organizational changes, such as redesigned business processes, new performance metrics, and training.


Author(s):  
������ ◽  
Oleg Volkov ◽  
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Olga Tishchenko ◽  
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The article is devoted to a problem of resistance to organizational changes An objective of this research is to detect interdependence between personal characteristics of organizational change projects participants, psychological readiness of staff of the divisions involved in the project of organizational transformations, ways of conflict permission and efficiency of the realized projects. The results have practical value for increase of organizational change projects implementation success, and also similar projects with high degree of uncertainty, or the projects demanding an intellectual human resource for the solution of cognitive tasks.


Author(s):  
������ ◽  
Oleg Volkov ◽  
������� ◽  
Olga Tishchenko ◽  
�������� ◽  
...  

The article is devoted to a problem of resistance to organizational changes An objective of this research is to detect interdependence between ways of conflict permission and efficiency of the realized projects. The results have practical value for increase of organizational change projects implementation success, and also similar projects with high degree of uncertainty, or the projects demanding an intellectual human resource for the solution of cognitive tasks.


2005 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-50 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Ives

Change within organizations is becoming the rule rather than the exception as businesses seek to respond to an increasingly fluid, complex, and global business environment. This drive demands that organizations embrace a more strategic response to avoid being leap-frogged by more nimble competitors. As Cicmil points out (1997, 1999), strategic organizational change is most likely facilitated and managed through an organization's use of the project management disciplines. This study attempts to develop a greater understanding of the contextual aspects of project management in an organizational change setting. In reviewing the current literature, I have found an increasing use of project management within organizations and an attendant poor rate of success among these projects; interestingly, I also found only limited research on the context and fit of projects within organizations. I have addressed this void with an essentially exploratory research project that utilizes inductive strategy. The process I have used is qualitative and based on in-depth interviews with four people.


Author(s):  
Jozef Simuth

The chapter summarizes research studies as well as case studies from companies worldwide that show how organizational changes followed by downsizing create a traumatic experience for all organization members. The author's focus is on the psychological perspective on traumatic experience by all employees (victims and survivors) and managers whose task is to organize and implement changes in the organization. Based on the literature review, the chapter describes symptoms and psychological effects of organizational change trauma on individuals and the ways to minimize the traumatic effects. The author believes that outplacement and therapeutic approach are effective tools for overcoming the layoff trauma and also send positive signals to employees and to general public.


2020 ◽  
Vol 74 (2) ◽  
pp. 155-172
Author(s):  
Lukas Heidt ◽  
Felix Gauger ◽  
Benjamin Wagner ◽  
Andreas Pfnür

In times of digital transformation and dynamic change in corporate environments, the importance of agile project management is growing. This further affects the demand on change management and its contribution to project success. We conduct interviews with project participants of an agile project to identify the associated need for adaptation of change management. Change management criteria have to be adjusted, particularly in areas of communication and stakeholder management and integration into agile project management methods. Personal communication, individual stakeholder management, and participation are starting points for adapting and integrating change management into agile project management.


2016 ◽  
pp. 532-552
Author(s):  
Ute Riemann

The idea behind this chapter paper is that transformation projects can support can be better supported in terms of organizational change, process changes and IT system landscape changes with the application of a blended methodology of project management, organizational change management and Design Thinking. In other words: the proposal is that organizational change management and Design Thinking shall be an integral part of project management.


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