HRM 587 Final Exam ANSWERS
1. (TCO A) The organization is planning to make a substantial
change to the compensation and benefits program for the next fiscal year. This
change will impact all branches of the organization throughout the U.S. Eight
thousand employees will be required to move from the very popular existing
total rewards program to the new system. A compensation study determined that
most employees will need updated position titles and salary bands.
A. Compile the change management imperatives that will go into
making this a successful change project.
B. Construct a set of strategies that managers can use to help
employees cope with complex change.
C. Persuade the managers involved in this change that the
imperatives that you identified and the strategies to help employees cope with
change will help them manage the complex realities of this change project.
(Points: 30)
2. (TCO B) You are the Director of Change Management, and it is
expected that you can read the corporate change âtea leafsâ and have a model
for change and an approach to plan change when the need arises.
A. Construct a model of change that reflects the reality of change
in modern organizations and reflects your beliefs about change.
B. Think of an organizational change that you believe should be
implemented in an organization where you work now, or one you worked for in the
past. Create a plan to implement change by integrating your change model.
C. Plan a system to measure how your model will impact the
organization. (Points: 30)
3. (TCO C) Put this scenario into the context of an organization
where you work now or did in the past.
Your organization has recently (past two months) hired a new VP of
Marketing and she is trying to understand the various types of changes that
might impact the organization in the future. This is important to know, as it
is hard to develop a strategic vision for the Marketing Department without
first considering how things might look in the future.
A. Evaluate the various types of change pressure that might impact
the organization in terms of: (a) staffing levels, and (b) corporate branding.
B. You are further asked to compile a list that compares each
potential force for change to the stability of the organization.
C. Speculate as to why some of these potential pressures on
organizations to change do not impact all organizations in the same way.
(Points: 30)
4. (TCO D) As the change expert for the State Department of
Natural Resources in a large state with thousands of acres of forests, lakes,
and wildlife, you learn that the legislature voted to privatize the entire
department in order to save money and help reduce state and local taxes. It is
entirely possible that some current government agency employees could be hired
to work as âcivilianâ employees of the private company.
A. Appraise the cultural impact of this change on the employees
who will move from government to private sector employment.
B. Speculate on the changes that will come to the strategic
behaviours of the new privatized organization compared to the government
organization.
C. Propose a plan that will help bring alignment between former
government employees and the new strategy that they will have to work within.
(Points: 30)
5. (TCO E) The organization is going through sweeping changes that
will lead to layoffs and a situation where several âmanagersâ will now be
reporting to their former âdirect reports.â
A. Compose a likely set of reasons why people will resist this
change.
B. Appraise the most effective and least effective strategies for
overcoming the resistance to the change identified in the scenario.
C. Devise a plan to implement the most effective approaches to
reducing change resistance.(Points: 30)
6. (TCO F) There are many approaches to diagnosing change in an
organization. In the end, the change agent must use the best practices of
various models of diagnosis and apply them to the organization.
A. Appraise two approaches to diagnosing organizational change,
pointing out what works and what does not work in effective organizational
diagnosis.
B. Construct your own version of an effective diagnostic model
using the best elements of other models. Be specific about the components of
the model you create.
C. Create a strategy that will measure the effectiveness of your
diagnostic model. (Points: 30)
7. (TCO G) Itâs no secret that having a vision for change and
being able to communicate the change project are critical to success. However,
that all requires a communication plan. Assume that you are working on a change
project and need to design a solid communication plan.
A. Help yourself by generating a checklist of key attributes of a
good change communication plan.
B. Then, compose an example change communication using an appropriate
scenario.
C. Finally, formulate a methodology to measure the success of your
communication plan. (Points: 30)
Multiple Answer Choice
1. (TCO G) Choose from the list of statements below the items that
are considered to be part of a strong change communication strategy. (Points:
30)
Focus on letting people know the âwhyâ of the change.
Rely on verbal communication, as that is the way that most people can pick up
and understand messages.
Avoid using humor, as it indicates that the message is not focused and not
serious.
Physical presence in delivering the communication is media rich and helps the
audience understand the message better.
It is good to have âtoxic handlers,â as they take the heat related to the
change in the organization.
âToxic Handlersâ tend to incite more frustration and confusion during the
change. These people need to be neutralized if the change is to be successful.
While talking to a group about the change, show polite interest, but inside, be
preparing your rebuttal.
Try to keep involvement and communication low in the organization, as to not
scare people or cause employees to become overly concerned about the change.
Engage in intentional, interpersonal interactions with employees to minimize
their perceptions that changes are likely to lead them to harm for them.
Spray and Pay gets a lot of specific and focused information out of the
employees about the change.
Withhold and uphold works well because communication is more efficient and
people only get what they need to know and arenât distracted from work by too
much communication.
Be sure to communicate relevant organizational changes to external stakeholders
who need to know.
In the commanding style, leaders, when communicating change, deploy strategic
actions as a result of discovering the range of alternatives.
In the supportive style, the leader, when communicating change, is concerned
with creating consensus.
Flyers, bulletins, and generalized computer reports are effective ways to
communicate change, as they are in the hands of the people who are the targets
of change.
2. (TCO F) Choose from the list of statements below those items
that are considered to be part of an effective strategy to diagnose
organizational change. (Points: 20)
Be careful and not too open about the potential problems in the organization,
as there is no way to know with certainty that these are the real issues that
might drive change.
While it sounds good, brainstorming is too vague an approach to determine the
environmental factors impacting the organization.
Identify the potential symptoms of change by listing the phenomena that suggest
that there might be a problem.
Gap Analysis answers the following questions: Where are we now? When do we want
to get there? How do we get there?
Donât worry too much about customers when it comes to trying to determine the
need for change, as change really only impacts inside the organization.
Making use of the various organizational models is helpful in diagnosing change
because most of them are designed to demonstrate the interconnection between
the elements that signal the potential for change.
Making use of Force Field Analysis in diagnosing change is good because the
driving forces push against the need for change â drive them back â and the
restraining forces open the door to new ideas.
Diagnosing the readiness for change can provide an indication of the likely
outcome of a change project.
Gap Analysis answers the following questions: Where are we now? When do we get
there? How do we prevent returning?
The SWOT analysis is very effective and should be used as it gets at believed
strengths and believed weaknesses that relate to perception.
The SWOT analysis is not very effective because it tends to get at believed
strengths and believed weaknesses and these need to be challenged.
Scenario analysis is good to use in diagnosing change, as you are not tied down
to a specific methodology and are more free to examine all of the possible
reasons for potential change.