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Leadership, organizational change and sensemaking / Ronald Skea.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Routledge studies in organizational change & developmentPublisher: New York, NY ; Abingdon, Oxon : Routledge, 2021Edition: First editionDescription: xii, 164 pages ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781032014753
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Online version:: Leadership, organizational change and sensemakingDDC classification:
  • 658.4092 Sk21l 23
LOC classification:
  • HD57.7 .S5634 2021
Contents:
Part I. Leadership, organizational change and sensemaking introduced -- What are leadership and organizational change? -- What is sensemaking and how can you observe it in practice? -- Epiphanies and crossing the Rubicon: the drama of moving form old to new realities -- Part II. The nine elements of leader sensemaking -- Ontology: creating realities -- Storytelling: if you're going to tell a story, make it a good one -- Displacement of concepts: paradigm shift or paradigm expansion? -- Preunderstanding: a little (a lot of of) knowledge can be dangerous thing -- Cognitive dissonance: burning platform or has someone burnt the toast? -- Commitment compliance - a fusion of forced free will -- Defensive reasoning: rationalizing not rational -- Compresence of opposites: and makes more sense than or -- Interpretation: decide first, justify later -- Part III. Post-engagement sensemaking observed -- Post-engagement social sensemaking: what is history but a fable agreed upon -- Part IV. Conclusion - influencing sensemaking -- Sensemaking: recipes, plate spinning or web weaving?
Summary: "Organizational change literature focuses on the leaders role in giving sense to others of the need for change and there is a plethora of models and recipes on how to influence employees thinking about change, organizational design and performance. Notwithstanding this ready supply of advice, research has shown that up to 90% of change programs fail to deliver their expected outcomes. One of the reasons for this which has been neglected in the literature is that successful change in thinking starts with how leaders first make sense of the need for change and the challenges this poses to their own thinking. This book surfaces the elements behind leader sensemaking that add to or detract from their ability to critically question their current thinking. Leaders and interventionists have lacked practical and pragmatic advice on how to influence the process. This book is the culmination of 10 years of research spent working with leaders in organizations as they interpreted the need for change and made choices about engaging, or not, with transformational change methodologies. It reveals nine elements of sensemaking displayed by organizational leaders as they grapple with challenges to their current orthodoxies about how to lead and organize in times of change. The book shows the latest state of knowledge on the topic and will be of interest to researchers, academics, practitioners, and students in the fields of leadership, change, and organisational development"-- Provided by publisher.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Shelving location Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Main Library Graduate School Library GRD 658.4092 Sk21l 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1-1 Available 030079

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Part I. Leadership, organizational change and sensemaking introduced -- What are leadership and organizational change? -- What is sensemaking and how can you observe it in practice? -- Epiphanies and crossing the Rubicon: the drama of moving form old to new realities -- Part II. The nine elements of leader sensemaking -- Ontology: creating realities -- Storytelling: if you're going to tell a story, make it a good one -- Displacement of concepts: paradigm shift or paradigm expansion? -- Preunderstanding: a little (a lot of of) knowledge can be dangerous thing -- Cognitive dissonance: burning platform or has someone burnt the toast? -- Commitment compliance - a fusion of forced free will -- Defensive reasoning: rationalizing not rational -- Compresence of opposites: and makes more sense than or -- Interpretation: decide first, justify later -- Part III. Post-engagement sensemaking observed -- Post-engagement social sensemaking: what is history but a fable agreed upon -- Part IV. Conclusion - influencing sensemaking -- Sensemaking: recipes, plate spinning or web weaving?

"Organizational change literature focuses on the leaders role in giving sense to others of the need for change and there is a plethora of models and recipes on how to influence employees thinking about change, organizational design and performance. Notwithstanding this ready supply of advice, research has shown that up to 90% of change programs fail to deliver their expected outcomes. One of the reasons for this which has been neglected in the literature is that successful change in thinking starts with how leaders first make sense of the need for change and the challenges this poses to their own thinking. This book surfaces the elements behind leader sensemaking that add to or detract from their ability to critically question their current thinking. Leaders and interventionists have lacked practical and pragmatic advice on how to influence the process. This book is the culmination of 10 years of research spent working with leaders in organizations as they interpreted the need for change and made choices about engaging, or not, with transformational change methodologies. It reveals nine elements of sensemaking displayed by organizational leaders as they grapple with challenges to their current orthodoxies about how to lead and organize in times of change. The book shows the latest state of knowledge on the topic and will be of interest to researchers, academics, practitioners, and students in the fields of leadership, change, and organisational development"-- Provided by publisher.

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