Relation between Organizational Capacity for Change and Readiness for Change
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
3. Theoretical Lens
4. Dimensions and Antecedents
5. Applicability to Different Types of Change
5.1. Change as Planned vs. Emergent
5.2. Change as Adaptation vs. Transformation
5.3. Change as Discontinuous vs. Continuous
5.4. Change as Incremental vs. Revolutionary
6. Discussion and Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
(Oxtoby et al. 2002) | (Bennebroek Gravenhorst et al. 2003) | (Judge and Elenkov 2005) | (Meyer and Stensaker 2006) | (Klarner et al. 2008) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Empirical Personal interviews, results aggregated into 167 key points | Empirical Survey questionnaire, 79 statements under 16 aspects, grouped in 2 dimensions | Empirical Survey questionnaire, 32 items grouped in 8 dimensions | Conceptual Literature review on change process prescriptions | Empirical Case study: World Health Organization Interviews, internal documents, business press articles |
‘Sustainable Competitiveness Process’ model-12 steps:
| 16 aspects of organizational capacity for change: 1st group relates to the organization
| 8 dimensions of OCC:
| Prescriptions to building organizational change capacity:
| 14 determinants grouped into 3 dimensions: 1st dimension-5 process determinants
|
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Readiness for Change | Organizational Capacity for Change | |
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Theoretical Lens |
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Readiness for Change | Organizational Capacity for Change | |
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Dimensions |
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Antecedents |
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Dimension | Readiness for Change | Organizational Capacity for Change |
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Control: planned vs. emergent | Facilitates planning and implementation with a focus on a particular change initiative Not relevant in the case of emergent change | Facilitates both planned and emergent change through ensuring the appropriate leadership, culture, and an organizational infrastructure |
Scope: adaptation vs. transformation | Required when transformations are being initiated Could help in the case of adaptation | Facilitates both adaptation and transformation through the necessary capabilities to implement the change |
Frequency: discontinuous vs. continuous | Facilitates planning and implementation with a focus on a particular change initiative Requires new assessment and development of readiness for each initiative (in the case of multiple changes) Could be more cumbersome to assess in the case of continuous change | Facilitates managing and leading continuous change without losing operational performance Requires constant focus of the organization in developing and maintaining the capacity Supports the implementation of discontinuous change, seen as a distinct event |
Stride: incremental vs. revolutionary | Helps keep focus when the change is incremental Helps mobilize members of the organization through shared attitude | Facilitates both incremental and revolutionary change through the necessary capabilities to implement it |
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Mladenova, I. Relation between Organizational Capacity for Change and Readiness for Change. Adm. Sci. 2022, 12, 135. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci12040135
Mladenova I. Relation between Organizational Capacity for Change and Readiness for Change. Administrative Sciences. 2022; 12(4):135. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci12040135
Chicago/Turabian StyleMladenova, Irena. 2022. "Relation between Organizational Capacity for Change and Readiness for Change" Administrative Sciences 12, no. 4: 135. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci12040135
APA StyleMladenova, I. (2022). Relation between Organizational Capacity for Change and Readiness for Change. Administrative Sciences, 12(4), 135. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci12040135