How to Minimize Damaging Organizational Politics During Change

Large, complex change – especially transformational change – impacts people and processes across boundaries (boundaries of role, function, process, and organization). Organizational transformation demands cross-boundary support among your top executives; this support is a non-negotiable requirement of success.

As CEO, it is your job to create alignment, commitment, and support in your top executive team to ensure they are individually and collectively doing all that is necessary to make your company transformation successful. This is key to your role as the sponsor of this level of change.

Damaging Political Dynamics among Top Executives

Unfortunately, political dynamics often impair change efforts. Not only do some executives refuse to work together, they may actively work against their peers’ agendas. When you are transforming the whole enterprise, or any major segment of it, you need all your executives leading as a unified team, not fighting each other overtly or covertly.

DOWNLOAD THE TOOL:  22 Strategies for Dealing with Political Dynamics During  Change

The Major Cause of Damaging Political Dynamics is a "Silo Mentality"

Most senior leaders see themselves as responsible for leading their own functions. They naturally think first about the success of their business unit, process, or function and orient to the success of the enterprise second. At a distant third, they may support their peers’ needs and success. The silo orientation can create and stir the political dynamics that inhibit an organizational transformation. How true is this for your team?

The Impact of Damaging Political Dynamics

The silo orientation among those at the top often creates internal competition for power, resources, staff, project priority, compensation, promotions, and general attention. If this internal competition goes unchecked, it manifests into power struggles, alliance building, internal resistance, and withholding of support or information from other executives’ agendas.

For a transformational change to be successful, all leaders, and everyone else impacted, need to be on board and do what is best for the change to succeed. As much as leaders assume their political behavior is invisible, it is glaringly obvious! Trust us, your subordinates can see the dissension among your leaders; we hear this from them all the time. And you can hardly expect them to work together and support a change initiative if the top executives are not.

Addressing Damaging Workplace Politics

How do you address damaging company politics and ensure your top executives are on board with your change initiatives? How do you get them to focus on what is best for the overall enterprise, and do what that requires of them, instead of doing only what favors their own function?

The political terrain among the top echelons may be so fraught with conflict you may be hesitant to address it, no matter how costly the finger-pointing and backbiting is to the overall performance of the organization. Discussing the quality of your relationships with each other may seem impossible and threatening. You might even think it is better to leave things alone. However, in your gut, you know that such dysfunction will destroy any chance for success in your large change efforts. Leaving it alone is also a reflection of your leadership. As the overall sponsor of the effort, your job starts here!

Click here for tool: 22 Strategies for Dealing with Negative Political Dynamics During Change

How to Create Alignment, Commitment and Support Among Executive Leaders

To get the needed support for your enterprise-level initiatives from your executive team:

  • Set the context that the success of the overall transformation requires they lead as a unified team.
  • Objectively describe the known dysfunctions in your team, including historic power struggles and lack of alignment, communication, and support. Start with owning up to the political patterns you are a part of. This may take courage, but the ROI will be substantial. You may need experienced external facilitation support for this, as many executives are not comfortable doing this level of interpersonal work with internal resources.
  • Secure the agreement of team members that your change effort is a direct vehicle and requirement for implementing your organization’s business strategy. (By the way, if it is not, you should stop the effort!) Since your top team is responsible for business strategy success, demonstrate how the change effort both supports the enterprise and them in their role as a senior leader.
  • Collectively explore and determine how the scope of your transformation will impact their areas of responsibility. Make sure they understand the tangible ways the change will influence their operations. They need to be clear and aligned with the coming impacts and feel secure that the future state will add value and reduce cost to them.
  • Let them know how you will inform and involve them throughout the change and what you will need from them over time. Get their agreement to partner with you for success.

Reducing Organizational Politics

By interrupting the natural propensity of executives to think first about the success of their business unit, process, or function and creating alignment, commitment, and support in your top executive team you will reduce power and politics in your organization and increase the opportunity for success in your change initiatives.

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Related Video:

Why Leadership Commitment and Alignment Are Critical to Transformation

 
 
 

 

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The Ten Key Strategies for Leading Transformation

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Through 40 years of observing and supporting large-scale change and transformation in Fortune 500, government, global NGOs and public service organizations, we’ve identified these ten Best Practice strategies for leading transformation successfully.

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About the author

Dr. Linda Ackerman Anderson

Dr. Linda Ackerman Anderson is an international speaker, bestselling author, and strategic advisor to the C-Suite and change consultants world-wide. For forty years, Dr. Ackerman Anderson has been guiding visionary leaders of America’s Fortune 500 companies, government agencies and global non-profit organizations to transform themselves and their organizations to Achieve Breakthrough in business results, culture, leadership, and executive team performance. Linda is the co-founder of Being First, one of America’s most innovative transformational consulting firms, and, with her partner, Dr. Dean Anderson, a co-creator of Conscious Change Leadership, an advanced Body of Work that integrates personal and organizational transformation. Linda received an honorary doctoral degree from Brandman University, part of the Chapman University system, for this pioneering work. Linda co-authored two cutting edge books that have become classics in the field of organizational transformation: Beyond Change Management: How to Achieve Breakthrough Results through Conscious Change Leadership, and The Change Leader’s Roadmap: How to Navigate Your Organization’s Transformation. She and her co-author, Dr. Dean Anderson, have published over 50 articles on human performance and organizational change, and are the co-developers of The Change Leader’s Roadmap Methodology.