Joining Jambo today for this Q&A blog is Jan Pezarro from Q4 Consults. Q4 Consults focus on strategic planning, communications and engagement, and corporate development. As Jan says, “this might seem like a little bit of an unusual mix until you consider that communications and engagement and corporate development are crucial to the implementation of any strategic plan.” For Jan’s bio and the rest of the Q4 Consults team bios, please visit the Q4 Consults website.
We asked Jan to join our expert blog series to provide our readers with some insight into how change management best practices can be used by engagement teams to improve stakeholder management system implementations. Jan’s change management expertise lies largely in the transportation industry including railways, transit, ports, airports - just about anything that involves the movement of people and goods. She has most recently guided a change management process within the health sector. “When it comes to change management, very different industries experience the same issues,” says Jan.
In its simplest form, change management is a systematic approach that helps the implementation of new initiatives by supporting all the stakeholders impacted by the change. It proposes a range of strategies and tactics that will drive the adoption of the desired change. It considers policy, equipment, software, resources, and people.
People working in the engagement space often consider stakeholders to be the individuals impacted by a project and with whom they are doing the engagement or consultation. For this blog, we are considering internal stakeholders - the team members that will be directly impacted by the new process and technology. Like external stakeholders, internal stakeholders can advance or delay the completion of a project.
We know that moving from one way of managing stakeholder engagement to another will be a change, so you need to include all members of the team in the implementation journey so they can feel confident using the new software. If a team member doesn’t understand why they are using new software or isn’t taught how to use all the excellent features, it is unlikely they will buy into the change.
If implemented effectively, the outcome of a stakeholder management system implementation is that engagement teams can transform how they run their stakeholder engagement programs and improve their stakeholder relationships.
I suggest beginning by asking these questions:
You need to understand the answers to these questions so, when you roll out your software implementation, everyone is singing from the same hymn sheet. To do this, meet with executives, the engagement teams, external stakeholders (if appropriate and applicable), the software provider and whoever else makes sense. Take all their input and use it to answer the questions and produce your change management plan.
In large-scale implementations, there’s often so much attention paid to aspects like documentation or the timeline for implementation, that organizations forget about the people at the front line who are actually going to use the software and drive the change. Believe me, it’s way easier to do your research and work with team members in advance than to launch your new software and fail due to lack of adoption.
For engagement teams communicating with many stakeholders or running consultation activities that need to be reported on, not using software to organize and manage this information is a significant risk. A stakeholder management system is a place for teams to store stakeholder profiles, log engagement information and communications with stakeholders, manage project tasks, run reports, etc.
I suggest helping people understand both the benefits of the software and the risks involved if the software isn’t implemented. Develop key messages that explain these risks and use them often. It can be helpful to designate a champion of the software implementation to help get these messages across.
“Change management is a systematic approach where we must assess the readiness of each team member on a couple of metrics to embrace and succeed with the new process or technology.”
A change management tool you can use during the implementation phase is a readiness assessment. A readiness assessment identifies the potential challenges that might arise when implementing the new software within a current organizational context. It helps by getting under the hood to understand how people feel and the attitudes they have towards the change. You can find out things like:
Only when you tease out those individual aspects and concerns can you understand the challenges you may face during the implementation. Once you have completed a readiness assessment, you can start to think about what needs to be done to address these challenges.
For example, if someone is concerned about learning how to use the new software or is worried that they won’t understand it, consider if there is someone on your team who is a software wiz and buddy them up for peer support or coaching. Peer support is judgement-free and can help teams move towards the successful adoption of new software.
Every situation is a bit different but there are some key principles. We personalize and design all our change management plans to be actionable. We don’t compile a pretty plan that sits on your shelf, but a plan that tells you how to move into action.
We can draft the change management plan, help develop the key messages, complete readiness assessments, and develop and facilitate various workshops (whether those are with senior management, a larger supervisor group, or even the entire engagement team).
We can prepare a wide range of communication materials. We also have various templates we can provide, and we can deliver coaching or support peer coaching.
In our change management plans, there will be a range of tactics around communications, training, reinforcement, etc., to meet the organization’s needs and challenges. Overall, we really prefer to teach our clients how to deliver these tactics themselves. Rather than us coming in and doing it all for you, we set up, support, and prepare teams to go out and implement the change management plan themselves.
“Developing capacity within organizations and teams is a strong emphasis in our work. We want organizations to work with us, learn from us, and then be able to use these new skills now and into the future.”
Implementing a new stakeholder management system is exciting. The supervisor or team member that picked the software will often want everyone to start using it right away. Although it is important to have a champion of your software, if the wider team are still struggling to understand the reason for the software implementation you will encounter some issues. Do the work upfront to develop key messages related to the implementation and always remember you’re dealing with different human beings who need to adapt in different ways. Whether you complete a full change management plan or not, make sure change management best practices are included in your process in some way.
If you’d like to know more about Q4 Consults and how they can help you, please visit their website.