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The Psychology of Organizational Change: How Neuroscience Can Help Leaders

Ray Williams
Ray Williams
business.com Member
May 27, 2016

Leaders today must understand and apply the knowledge of behavioral psychology and the lessons from brain science to manage organizational change successfully.

In the past, efforts at organizational change focused on the structural aspects of organizations have systematically failed because they have neglected the reality that change doesn't happen without individual people changing their thinking, beliefs and behavior.

In an article in the McKinsey Quarterly, Emily Lawson and Colin Price argue that change success in large organizations depends on persuading hundreds or thousands of groups and individuals to change the way they work, a transformation people will accept only if they can be persuaded to think differently about their jobs.

In effect, CEOs must alter the mind-set of their employees, which is no easy task.

I would add to their conclusion that individuals in organizations, to embrace change, must also engage in a process that changes how they think about themselves, not just their job.

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Changing Behavior

Lawson and Price ask; what if the only way a business can reach its higher performance goals is to change the way its people behave across the board?

Suppose that it can become more competitive only by changing its culture fundamentally from being reactive to proactive, hierarchical to collegial, or introspective to externally focused, for instance.

Since the collective culture of an organization, strictly speaking, is an aggregate of what is common to all of its group and individual mind-set, such a transformation entails changing the minds of hundreds or thousands of people.

Although breakthroughs have been made in explaining why people think and behave as they do, these insights have, in general, been applied to business only piecemeal and haven't had a widespread effect, Lawson and Price contend.

Four Conditions for Changing Mindset

Lawson and Price identify four conditions for changing employee mind-set:

  1. Employees will alter their mindset only if they see the point of the change and agree with it, or at least enough to give it a try.
  2. The surrounding structures (reward and recognition systems, for example) must be in tune with the new behavior.
  3. Employees must have the skills to do what it requires.
  4. They must see people they respect modeling it actively.

Each of these conditions is realized independently; together they add up to a way of changing the behavior of people in organizations by changing attitudes about what can and should happen at work.

It's been well established in psychological research that a distressing mental state arises when people find that their beliefs are inconsistent with their actions, something called cognitive dissonance. The implication of this finding for organizations is that if people believe in its overall purpose and it's in alignment with their own life purposes, they will be more inclined to change their individual behaviors.

People must also understand the role of their actions in the unfolding drama of the company's fortunes and believe that it is worthwhile for them to play a part. It isn't enough to tell employees that they will have to do things differently.

Anyone leading a major change program must take the time to think through its "story"-what makes it worth undertaking and to explain that story to all of the people involved in making change happen, so that their contributions make sense to them as individuals.

Reinforcing the Change: Leadership and Rewards

Organizational designers broadly agree that reporting structures, management and operational processes, and measurement procedures-setting targets, measuring performance, and granting financial and nonfinancial rewards must be consistent with the behavior that people are asked to embrace.

When a company's goals for new behavior are not reinforced, employees are less likely to adopt it consistently; if managers are urged to spend more time coaching junior staff, for instance, but coaching doesn't figure in the performance scorecards of managers, they are not likely to bother.

Much of the research in management sciences and organizational behavior from the past has been criticized for lacking in relevance and meaning, and focusing too much on the technical aspects of organizations, akin to "rearranging deck chairs."

Researchers Thomas and Vincent Wright, writing in the Academy of Management Journal, argue that the reason for the apparent lack of relevance and negative focus on the workplace has been the failure of much organizational research to focus anything other than cost-benefit analysis or efficiency, epitomized by the committed-to-management (CMR) perspective. This perspective has emphasized the excessive focus on shareholder value as the only measure of organizational performance.

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The Broaden and Build Theory

In their article in the Journal of Organizational Behavior, Thomas Wright and James Quick, argue  that management and organizational studies should focus on cost-benefit analysis from a human asset perspective, on issues such as positive emotional states of employees, and on employee strengths rather than weaknesses.

Psychologist Barbara Frederickson's "broaden-and-build" theory of positive emotions is relevant here. She states that a number of positive emotions, such as joy, contentment, and happiness all share the ability to broaden individuals' thinking and action. In addition, these positive emotions assist in building the individual's enduring personal resources.

This expanded capacity is central to an individual's ability to grow and prosper, and add value to an organization.

The Human Component

Aubrey C. Daniels, one of the world's foremost authorities on management and human performance, outlines management practices that are destructive to organizations during boom or bust times, in his outstanding book, "Oops! 13 Management Practices That Waste Time and Money".

Daniels points out that few managers look for behavioral data to affect employee performance because most managers know very little about the science of behavior and recent brain science or neuroscience, and very few business programs in universities teach it. He says another reason why organizations are fundamentally flawed from a behavioral perspective is that they were designed by people, those with financial expertise, who have only one purpose in mind, to make money.

He says that "how employees are paid, appraised, rewarded, and recognized have financial implications," but when designed without an understanding of human behavior, the results can be destructive. For example, there is a mountain of research to show that employees are not primarily motivated by financial rewards over the long term, yet we continue to use that as a management motivational strategy.

Some valuable insights come from John Medina, a molecular biologist, published in the Harvard Business Review. Medina is an author of "Brain Rules: 12 Principles For Surviving and Thriving at Work, Home and School." Medina says "the brain is so sensitive to external experiences that you can literally rewire it through exposure to environmental influences."

For example, we know that stress hurts the brain and that has a huge impact on productivity. Medina says that enduring continuing stress is like trying to fly an airplane under water.

The Power of Mindfulness

"Neuroleadership," is a term coined by David Rock, a leadership consultant and author of "Quiet Leadership: Six Steps to Transforming Leadership At Work". Rock and Jeffrey Schwartz, a research scientist at UCLA, are applying neuroscience concepts to leadership.

For example, by emphasizing mindful, focused attention on new management practices, rather than fixing old habits that don't work, leaders can actually rewire their brains. McKinsey and Company is now incorporating their ideas into client workshops. An article by Rock and Schwartz published in Strategy and Business Journal was the publication's most downloaded article in 2006.

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Improvements in brain analysis technology have allowed researchers to track the energy of a thought coursing through the brain in the same way they can track blood flowing through the circulatory system. Change lights up the prefrontal cortex, which is fast and agile. Overloading the prefrontal cortex can generate fatigue, fear, and anger, because of the cortex's connection to the emotion center of the brain, the amygdala.

Rock and Schwartz state: "The traditional command-and-control style of management doesn't lead to permanent changes in behavior. Ordering people to change and them telling them how to do it fires the prefrontal cortex's hair trigger connection to the amygdala. The more you try to convince people that you're right and they're wrong, the more they push back.

The brain will try to defend itself from threats. Our brains are so complex that it is rare for us to be able to see any situation in exactly the same way as someone else. The way to get past the prefrontal cortex's defenses is to help people come to their own resolution regarding the concepts causing through their prefrontal cortex to bristle."

What Does All This Add Up To?

Traditional change in management tactics in organizations is based more on animal training than on human psychology and neuroscience. Leaders promise bonuses and promotions (the carrot) for those who go along with the changes and punish those (the stick) who don't with less important jobs or even job loss.

This kind of managerial behavior flies in the face of evidence that shows that people's primary motivation in the workplace is neither money or advancement but rather a personal interest in their jobs, a good environment to work in and fulfilling relationships with their boss and colleagues.

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Ray Williams
Ray Williams
business.com Member
Ray Williams, Master Certified Coach, is widely regarded as one of Canada’s top executive coaches. He brings over 35 years experience to his clients as a CEO, and senior HR executive and professional speaker. Ray is the recipient of the Master Educator Award from the American Society of Education Executives, and is also past President of the International Coach Federation and Governor of the National Staff Development Council in the U.S. He has clients in Fortune 500 companies, Best Managed Companies in Canada and small to medium sized businesses and non-profit organizations throughout the world in the areas of leadership, workplace culture, team development and peak performance. He has been very active in such organizations as the Vancouver Board of Trade, having served as a Director and Vice-Chair. Ray has written for or been interviewed by The Washington Post, Forbes, USA Today, NBC News, The Huffington Post, Entrepreneur, MacLean’s, The Financial Post, Fast Company and Psychology Today, Salon, and dozens of other and other national and international publications having published more than 300 articles. He is author of a new best selling book, Eye of the Storm: How Mindful Leaders Navigate Chaotic Workplaces. He has also written a book on educational leadership, The Leadership Edge, a personal growth book, Breaking Bad Habits, and was contributing author to Systemic Change, and the Best Seller, Ready, Aim, Influence. He has also written a novel and screenplay entitled Dragon Tamer.