MIT Sloan Management Review Article on How Organizational Change Disrupts Our Sense of Self
- 7m
- Hal Gregersen, Roger Lehman
- MIT Sloan Management Review
- 2021
In a recent workshop, we assembled a group of managers involved in large-scale digital transformation initiatives in their various organizations. As part of the discussion, we first asked them how they would describe their roles in those change initiatives. By roles, we didn’t mean job titles — we did not need to know that someone was a chief technology officer or head of HR. As we had already clarified for our participants, we were looking for more archetypal roles, such as “problem solver,” “dealmaker,” “functional expert,” or “idea person.” Next, we asked them to imagine the digital transformation really taking hold and to name roles that would be most valuable in driving that success. And here was the interesting disconnect: For the most part, their answers to the two questions were different. Evidently, if these managers wanted to have a meaningful impact on their organizations’ futures, they would have to do some role adjustment.
This is the right challenge for managers to focus on right now, because we are heading into a period that will make unprecedented demands on organizations to navigate big transitions successfully. This is true because of the digital transformations so many of them have embarked on and because those changes have been accelerated by a year of pandemic lockdowns and remote work.
About the Author
Hal Gregersen (@halgregersen) is a senior lecturer in leadership and innovation at the MIT Sloan School of Management and author of Questions Are the Answer (Harper Business, 2018). Roger Lehman is a senior lecturer at the MIT Sloan School of Management and an emeritus senior affiliate professor at INSEAD.
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MIT Sloan Management Review Article on How Organizational Change Disrupts Our Sense of Self