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John P Kotter (2008)
A Sense of Urgency

http://slashdemocracy.org/book/1422179710

In his international bestseller "Leading Change," Kotter provided an action plan for implementing successful transformations. Now, he shines the spotlight on the crucial first step in his framework: creating a sense of urgency by getting people to actually see and feel the need for change.
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Added 21 days ago

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Howard Gardner (2004)
Changing Minds: The Art and Science of Changing Our Own and Other People's Minds

http://slashdemocracy.org/book/1578517095

Think about the last time you tried to change someone’s mind about something important: a voter’s political beliefs; a customer’s favorite brand; a spouse’s decorating taste. Chances are you weren’t successful in shifting that person’s beliefs in any way. In his book, Changing Minds, Harvard psychologist Howard Gardner explains what happens during the course of changing a mind – and offers ways to influence that process. Remember that we don’t change our minds overnight, it happens in gradual stages that can be powerfully influenced along the way.This book provides insights that can broaden our horizons and shape our lives.
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9 out of 10 stars



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Added 140 days ago

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Change Management - Kurt Lewin

http://rafcammarano.wordpress.com/2008/03/31/change-management-kurt-lewin/

Raf Cammarano: In Enterprise Architecture we often talk about models, patterns, best practices, technology and the like. Given that EA is fundamentally about change, it's interesting that change management doesn't get a lot of coverage in EA circles. In this post I'll introduce a very simple model of change management that has been around for over 50years.
- Change Management - Enterprise Architecture -

Added 235 days ago

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Scenario-based enterprise architecture - CIO's strategy to respond to a change

http://cloudcomputing.blogspot.com/2008/02/scenario-based-enterprise-architecture.html

Chirag Mehta, SAP: Scenario-based planning is inevitable for an enterprise architect. The changing business models, organizational dynamics, and disruptive technology are some of the change agents that require enterprise architecture strategy to be agile enough to respond to these changes.
- Enterprise Architecture - Change Management -

Added 271 days ago

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Geoffrey Moore (2006)
Dealing with Darwin: How Great Companies Innovate at Every Phase of Their Evolution

http://slashdemocracy.org/book/1841127175

Geoffrey Moore is one of the most respected and bestselling names in business books. In his widely quoted Crossing the Chasm, he identified and addressed the greatest challenge facing new ventures. Now he's back with a book for established businesses that need to learn how to adapt - or suffer the slow declines into marginalized performance that have characterized so many Fortune 500 icons in recent years. Deregulation, globalization, and e-commerce are exerting unprecedented pressures on company profits. In this new economic ecosystem, companies must dramatically differentiate from their direct competitors - or risk declining performance and eventual extinction. But how do companies choose the right innovation strategy? Or overcome internal inertia that resists the kind of radical commitments needed to truly set the company's offers apart? Illustrating his arguments with more than one hundred examples and a full-length case study based on his unprecedented access to Cisco Systems, Moore shows businesses how to meet today's Darwinian challenges, whether they're producing commodity products or customized services. For companies whose competitive differentiation to the marketplace is still effective, he demonstrates how innovations in execution can help boost productivity, whether a company is competing in a growth market, a mature market, or even a declining market. For companies in danger of succumbing to competitive pressures, he shows how to overcome inertia by engaging the entire corporate community in an unceasing commitment to innovate and evolve. For any business competing in today's eat-or-be-eaten economic jungle, this groundbreaking guide shows not only how to survive, but also thrive.
- Change Management - Markets -

9 out of 10 stars



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Added 320 days ago

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Behnam Tabrizi (2007)
Rapid Transformation: A 90-day Plan for Fast and Effective Change

http://slashdemocracy.org/book/1422118894

Profound organizational transformation takes years and, in most cases is unsuccessful, right? Not according to change expert Behnam Tabrizi. In Rapid Transformation: A 90-Day Plan for Fast and Effective Change , Tabrizi shows you how to accomplish successful transformational change in your firm in just 90 days. Based on ten years of research into more than 500 leading companies including 3M, IBM, GE, Nissan, Apple, Bay Networks, Verisign, HP and Best Buy this book demystifies fast, effective change and lays out a clear roadmap for achieving it. Tabrizi's 90-day transformational model comprises three main phases, each lasting 30 days. The model enables you to analyze your company's specific challenge, develop a new course of action, and carry out the plan. Moreover, you apply the model in parallel with the normal workings of your organization so you don't have to put your company on hold for the sake of the change effort. With its detailed recipe and insightful stories from actual corporate reinventions, this book defies long-held assumptions about change and provides a practical and immediately actionable guide.
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Added 320 days ago

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Five Things I've Learned About Change

http://www.cio.com/article/129253/

By Katherine Walsh, CIO.com, 9 August 2007. Harvard Business School Professor John Kotter is one of the top authorities on leadership and change, and author of the best seller Leading Change. He says that he has not always found it easy to cope with personal change.
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Added 460 days ago

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John P. Kotter et al (2006)
Harvard Business Review on Leading Through Change

http://slashdemocracy.org/book/1422102807

Seventy percent of all change initiatives fail. Yours won’t have to—when you apply the practices provided in HBR on Leading Through Change. In this vital new resource, today’s leading thinkers offer suggestions for articulating a compelling vision of an organization’s future, overcoming employee resistance to change, and surmounting other challenges that come with leading change.
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Added 475 days ago

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John P. Kotter (1996)
Leading Change

http://slashdemocracy.org/book/0875847471

In Leading Change, John Kotter examines the efforts of more than 100 companies to remake themselves into better competitors. He identifies the most common mistakes leaders and managers make in attempting to create change and offers an eight-step process to overcome the obstacles and carry out the firm's agenda: establishing a greater sense of urgency, creating the guiding coalition, developing a vision and strategy, communicating the change vision, empowering others to act, creating short-term wins, consolidating gains and producing even more change, and institutionalizing new approaches in the future. This highly personal book reveals what John Kotter has seen, heard, experienced, and concluded in 25 years of working with companies to create lasting transformation.
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9 out of 10 stars



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Added 475 days ago

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John P. Kotter, Dan S. Cohen (2002)
The Heart of Change: Real-Life Stories of How People Change Their Organizations

http://slashdemocracy.org/book/1578512549

John Kotter's international bestseller Leading Change struck a powerful chord with legions of managers everywhere. It acknowledged the cynicism, pain, and fear they faced in implementing large-scale change-but also armed them with an eight-step plan of action for leaping boldly forward in a turbulent world. Now, Kotter and coauthor Dan S. Cohen delve deeper into the subject of change to get to the heart of how change actually happens. Through compelling, real-life stories from people in the trenches, in all kinds of organizations, the authors attack the fundamental problem that underlies every major transformation: How do you go beyond simply getting your message across to truly changing people's behavior? Based on interviews within over 100 organizations in the midst of large-scale change, The Heart of Change delivers the simple yet provocative answer to this question, forever altering the way organizations and individuals approach change. While most companies believe change happens by making people think differently, Kotter and Cohen say the key lies in making them feel differently. They introduce a new dynamic-"see-feel-change"-that fuels action by showing people potent reasons for change that spark their emotions. Organized around the revolutionary eight-step change process introduced in Leading Change, this story-driven book shows how the best change leaders use not just reports or analysis, but gloves, video cameras, airplanes, office design, and other concrete elements to impel people toward positive action. The authors reveal how this appeal to the heart-over the mind-motivates people to overcome even daunting obstacles to change and produce breathtaking results. For individuals in every walk of life and companies in every stage of change, this compact, no-nonsense book captures the heart-and the how-of successful change. John P. Kotter, world-renowned expert on leadership at the Harvard Business School, is the author of many books, including the award-winning, best-selling Leading Change. Dan S. Cohen is a Principal with Deloitte Consulting LLC.
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Added 475 days ago

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Spencer Johnson (1998)
Who Moved My Cheese? An Amazing Way to Deal with Change in Your Work and in Your Life

http://slashdemocracy.org/book/0399144463

Change can be a blessing or a curse, depending on your perspective. The message of Who Moved My Cheese? is that all can come to see it as a blessing, if they understand the nature of cheese and the role it plays in their lives. Who Moved My Cheese? is a parable that takes place in a maze. Four beings live in that maze: Sniff and Scurry are mice--nonanalytical and nonjudgmental, they just want cheese and are willing to do whatever it takes to get it. Hem and Haw are "littlepeople," mouse-size humans who have an entirely different relationship with cheese. It's not just sustenance to them; it's their self-image. Their lives and belief systems are built around the cheese they've found. Most of us reading the story will see the cheese as something related to our livelihoods--our jobs, our career paths, the industries we work in--although it can stand for anything, from health to relationships. The point of the story is that we have to be alert to changes in the cheese, and be prepared to go running off in search of new sources of cheese when the cheese we have runs out. Dr. Johnson, coauthor of The One Minute Manager and many other books, presents this parable to business, church groups, schools, military organizations--anyplace where you find people who may fear or resist change. And although more analytical and skeptical readers may find the tale a little too simplistic, its beauty is that it sums up all natural history in just 94 pages: Things change. They always have changed and always will change. And while there's no single way to deal with change, the consequence of pretending change won't happen is always the same: The cheese runs out. --Lou Schuler Book Description: The Change Survival Kit is an A-Mazing Way to Deal with Changes in Your Work and in Your Life. It reminds you to use what you discovered in the "Cheese" story - and enjoy it!
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Added 475 days ago

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Transforming Government through Change Management: The Role of the State CIO

http://www.nascio.org/committees/EA/download2.cfm

NASCIO Enterprise Architecture Committee, April 2007. This white paper reviews contemporary ideas surrounding the subject of organizational transformation, presents a state perspective on the issue, and provides the state CIO with relevant recommendations and calls to action. The accompanying research summary provides a short overview of the research findings presented in the white paper. The paper illustrates that change is an ongoing process that requires organizations to become change competent. It emphasizes that as with enterprise architecture, the best approach to organizational change involves incremental, step-by-step transformation that is effectively delivered through valued relationships involving all stakeholders.
- Change Management - Enterprise Architecture -

Added 574 days ago

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Potential Pitfalls in Technology-Enabled Business Transformations

http://sol1.blogspot.com/2006/08/potential-pitfalls-in-technology.html

In my experience, when Enterprises perform Business Transformation design exercises where the solution is to be enabled or underpinned by technology, a core list of the same potential pitfalls are regularly encountered. It would be interesting to see whether others come across the same types as well, so here are a few examples of what I always tend to come across.
- Enterprise Architecture - Change Management -

10 out of 10 stars

Added 826 days ago

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The Primordial Factors in Change Management

http://blogs.cio.com/the-primordial-factors-in-change-management

Sympathy is a loaded word in our macho business and IT culture, because it is often associated with weakness, both in those who express sympathy and those who are supposedly in need of it (pity, is, after all, a synonym). Especially in systems projects or major business changes, there is little patience for the word, because those involved in the change simply have to get through it and the quicker the better. Spend too much time on sympathy and you'll never get anything done.
- Change Management -

6 out of 10 stars

Added 864 days ago

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Team Building and Leadership Development

http://www.leadingconcepts.com

Rapid Behavior Change through an intense personal and group learning experience. Our immersion development is not only team building, but also person building and talent building. This level of development is not for everyone.
- Management - Change Management - Business Process Management -

8 out of 10 stars

Added 1159 days ago

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Leadership Responsibilities of Professionals

http://www.kon.org/hswp/archive/mitstifer_4.htm

This chapter introduces a leadership development model that raises the question: Leadership for what? Leadership is about going somewhere - personally and in concert with others in an organization.
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10 out of 10 stars

Added 1245 days ago

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