In any change initiative, the sponsor is one of the most important change leadership roles. This is especially true if your change initiative is transformational where real breakthrough is the goal. By now, you probably know the data that 60-70% of all change initiatives fail. As a change leader or change consultant, you rely on your change sponsor to ensure that your change initiative succeeds. As you may have experienced, the level of skill, knowledge, and thinking of change sponsors can vary drastically. Understanding the capability of your sponsors can help you to assist in their development as change leaders to up-level the quality of their sponsorship.
First let’s take a look at what less-than-optimal change sponsorship looks like. This type of change sponsor is what we call the “Bless and Delegate” or “Hit and Run” sponsor. These symptoms may be all too familiar to you: They announce the change initiative, delegate it to a person or project team and disappear. Often their expectations are unrealistic and they leave the solution design, plan, and deployment to the project team. Their focus is typically on meeting their schedule and budget, leaving out any consideration of the impact on people, capacity, and cultural dynamics. The schedule and budget is often not based on the reality of the actual work required to deliver the sponsor their intended outcomes. In addition, they often leave stakeholders with no voice or way to impact their new reality. Getting the solution installed is their priority, not how the people feel or think who must live with the solution. This type of sponsor usually causes politics and resistance, making it difficult for those impacted to embrace the change. All of this makes it really tough on change leaders and change consultants to influence a satisfying outcome.
Now let’s contrast that with the role of an executive sponsor who is a transformational change leader. A transformational change leader is committed to ensuring sustained business results from their projects and they understand how to set up change efforts for success. They ensure the design of a change strategy and process plan that will produce an optimal change solution so that the people who must make it happen are engaged, have a say, and are committed to being successful. These sponsors know they must address and demonstrate shifts in their own mindsets, behaviors, and culture to provide credibility to the effort. And they understand that transformational change is a process to be led and course corrected, not an announcement followed by metrics.
As we said, the level of skill and knowledge of change sponsors can vary drastically. So how can you help? What can you do to support your sponsor and drive the change you (and they) are committed to?
First, take a look at your current relationship with your sponsor and ask yourself the following questions:
Are you already well-connected and influential?
How do they perceive the expertise YOU bring to their change initiatives? What do they think you do for them?
When in their change initiatives do they reach out to you for help? At launch? After design?
What do they know of good sponsorship and the consequences of poor sponsorship? How would you describe their level of leading change?
Next, get the attention of project sponsor(s) and generate a trusted relationship required for their change initiatives to succeed.
Generate and present data on costly patterns from past change initiatives
Engage executives in this data and explore questions that raise their awareness and secure commitment in their change leadership roles
Brand your services to start on Day One so they know what to call on you for
Train, coach, advise in Conscious Change Leadership capabilities and strategies
In summary, there is a huge advantage to up-leveling the quality of sponsorship on change initiatives. This is work well worth investing in. The first step is to assess the reality—and the consequences—of the current sponsorship you have in your organization. Start there and get the conversation going!
Instructor: Dr. Linda Ackerman Anderson
This webinar explores a four-step process for creating an effective sponsor-project lead partnership and the proven principles that drive it. You’ll get our best practices and tips for building a sponsor-project lead partnership derived from our 40+ years as experts in leading transformation.
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.
Please complete the form to download your eBook: