So you want to be a Change Agent?
So you want to be a Change Agent? - by Eric D. Brown
I was recently reading Dagmar Recklies’ article titled What Makes a Good Change Agent? and started thinking about some of the people that I know who are good at change…and some who completly destroy any opportunities for change.
In the article, 15 Competencies are listed that a good change agent should have. These competencies are:
15 Key Competencies of Change Agents
- Sensitivity to changes in key personnel, top management perceptions and market conditions, and to the way in which these impact the goals of the project.
- Setting of clearly defined, realistic goals.
- Flexibility in responding to changes without the control of the project manager, perhaps requiring major shifts in project goals and management style.
- Team-building abilities, to bring together key stakeholders and establish effective working groups, and to define and delegate respective responsibilities clearly.
- Networking skills in establishing and maintaining appropriate contacts within and outside the organization.
- Tolerance of ambiguity, to be able to function comfortably, patiently and effectively in an uncertain environment.
- Communication skills to transmit effectively to colleagues and subordinates the need for changes in the project goals and in individual tasks and responsibilities.
- Interpersonal skills, across the range, including selection, listening, collecting appropriate information, identifying the concerns of others, and managing meetings.
- Personal enthusiasm in expressing plans and ideas.
- Stimulating motivation and commitment in others involved.
- Selling plans and ideas to others by creating a desirable and challenging vision of the future.
- Negotiating with key players for resources, for changes in procedures, and to resolve conflict.
- Political awareness in identifying potential coalitions, and in balancing conflicting goals and perceptions.
- Influencing skills, to gain commitment to project plans and ideas form potential skeptics and resisters.
- Helicopter perspectives, to stand back from the immediate project and take a broader view of priorities.
Looks like a fairly good list. Take a look at some of the main terms found in these competencies. You’ll see words like...........
© Eric D. Brown for Eric D. Brown - Technology, Strategy, People & Projects, 2009. [Aligning Technology, Strategy, People & Projects]
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