About
Many organisations, including government agencies, are set up to
promote stability, routine, and predictability in our lives and in our
interactions with others. Yet our operating contexts are subject to
continual pressures for change. Those pressures come from multiple
sources. When should organisations embrace and pursue change? How
much change should be introduced? What parts of a system should be
maintained? When change is handled badly, many problems can arise.
When it is done well, change can open up many opportunities previously
unrealised. Politicians, advisors, policy analysts, and public sector
managers increasingly need to be effective change managers.
This
seminar draws on state-of-the-art theory and practice of change
management to produce insights for achieving successful change. The
seminar gives participants the knowledge and tools needed to
effectively plan and implement change efforts across a wide range of
organisational settings, with a special focus on the public sector.
Approaches
to change management can run from the simple and straight-forward to
the more sophisticated. Strategies used in any given instance will
depend on time constraints and resource considerations. As well as
introducing participants to the fundamentals of carefully-planned
change management, the seminar recognises that frequently change must
be managed in urgent, difficult, and near-crisis conditions. The
seminar is built around an understanding of the constraints that many
public sector managers and analysts work under, and how those
constraints affect change processes. Equipped with the framework
emerging from this seminar, participants will be prepared to
effectively manage change in many settings.
Training Methodology
The
seminar is organised into a series of modules, each of which involves a
formal presentation of material followed by structured discussions and
case work. Participants are encouraged to relate elements of each
module to current problems and proposals for change in their
organisations. The accompanying workbook contains notes on each
module, discussion questions, and suggestions for further reading.
Who should attend?
All
those involved in policy planning and implementation within local and
central government agencies, including public sector managers involved
in:
• Designing and managing government programmes
• Monitoring and assessing programmes
• Implementing policies, projects, and programmes
• Policy development and analysis
Learning Outcomes
After attending this seminar, participants should understand appropriate ways to:
• Interpret current programmes and structures and effectively assess the need for change
• Use evidence to build the case for change
• Create a change agenda
• Communicate change and build a coalition to support change
• Monitor and control change processes
• Manage conflicts arising from change
Outline
Course times 9am-5pm – Refreshment breaks and lunch are included
Day 1: Preparing for Change
Change Management: An Overview
• What is change? Defining change management
• Change and the public sector
• Central Govt vs Local Govt change – are there differences?
• SOEs, NGOs and other non-core organisations
• Case Study: Public Sector Reforms – the good and the bad
Institutions, Stability and Change
• The virtues of institutional stability
• Hierarchies and resistance to change
• Identifying opportunities for change
• Incremental versus dynamic change
Models for Leading Change
• Robert E. Quinn on deep change
• John P. Kotter on the heart of change
• The political economy of change
• An inventory of tools for effective change management
Building the Case for Change
• Diagnosing the current situation
• Identifying key performance variables
• Highlighting weaknesses
• Gathering needed information
• Drawing comparisons across organisations
• Creating sound alternatives to the status quo
• Communicating the case for change
Mapping Processes and Contexts
• Developing a sense of institutional history
• Understanding the lines of responsibility
• Appreciating the organisational politics
• Identifying entry-points for change efforts
• Identifying likely barriers and how to get around them
Creating a Change Agenda
• Treating the process as a product
• Identifying what is central to the argument for change
• Creating and exploiting windows of opportunity
• The art of compromise
• Securing buy-in from powerful allies
• Working with unlikely messengers
Keys to Promoting Change
• Securing energy and commitment
• Constructing a shared vision or end goal
• Leading through conversation
• Starting outside the core and moving inward
• Using flexibility to your advantage
• Locking in successes as they occur
Conclusion: Taking Stock and Looking Ahead
• Review of the day
• Next steps
Day 2: Implementing Change
Successful Change Leadership
• The politics of change leadership
• Selecting the right people to implement and lead change within the public sector
• Building teams to embark on the change process
• Motivating others to embrace change
• Developing a change culture; assessing goodness-of-fit within New Zealand’s current management culture
Communicating Change
• Successfully communicating to reduce and eliminate fear of change
• Creating opportunities for sharing of good news and turn-around stories
• Identifying and empowering champions for change
• Defining stakeholders and effectively communicating and engaging with them
Coalition Building for Change
• Developing an effective change management team
• Anticipating opposition
• Bringing people on board
• Working with politicians, interest groups, and the media
Monitoring and Controlling Change
• Developing clear metrics and measuring the change
• Establishing a management dashboard
• Anticipating and monitoring risks
• Working to secure critical success factors
Conflict Management
• Adopting a future orientation
• Identifying shared interests
• Creating a path to effective resolution
Crisis Management
• Identifying lead indicators
• Developing containment strategies
• Working through crises
Continuing to Build Change Management Skills
• Capturing lessons learned from experience
• Learning from the experiences of others
• Closing knowing/doing gaps
Seminar Review and Evaluation
• Discussion of key points
• Final question and answer session
Facilitator
Michael Mintrom, Associate Professor Political Studies Department, University of Auckland

Michael Mintrom is an associate professor in the Political Studies Department at the University of Auckland, where, since 2002, he has offered courses on Policy Analysis, Evaluation, and Research Methods. He coordinates the University of Auckland Master of Public Policy (MPP) degree and works with others to run the annual Auckland Public Policy Seminar Series. He has extensive experience as a trainer of public sector professionals in New Zealand, Australia, Asia, and the United States.
Throughout his academic career, Michael has studied and written about aspects of policy analysis, policy change, and approaches to securing change in the public sector. His books include Public Entrepreneurs: Agents for Change in American Government (Princeton University Press, 1995), Policy Entrepreneurs and School Choice (Georgetown University Press, 2000), People Skills for Policy Analysts (Georgetown University Press, 2003), and Political Leadership in New Zealand (Auckland University Press, 2006). Most recently, Michael has been studying approaches used by universities to create stronger research cultures and promote greater engagement between academics and knowledge-based enterprises.
Michael received his Ph.D. in Political Science from the State University of New York at Stony Brook in 1994. Prior to that, he received an MA in Economics from the University of Canterbury and worked from 1987-1990 as a policy analyst in The Treasury. From 1994-2002, he was a faculty member at Michigan State University, where he attained the rank of associate professor with tenure in the Department of Political Science and the Institute for Public Policy and Social Research. He has also been a visiting professor in the School of Policy, Planning, and Development at the University of Southern California.
Michael Mintrom is also facilitating:
In-house Training
Sorry, this event currently has no dates scheduled.

