Unit 4 AOS 1 Flashcards
Define business change
Business change is the alteration of behaviours, policies and practices of a business.
Define Key Performance indicators
Key performance indicators (KPIs) are criteria that measure how efficient and effective a business is at achieving different objectives.
Define percentage of market share
Percentage of market share measures a business’s proportion of total sales in a specific industry, over a specific period of time, expressed as a percentage.
Define net profit figures
Net profit figures are calculated by deducting total expenses incurred from total revenues earned over a period of time.
Define number of sales
Number of sales is the amount of goods and services sold by a business within a specific time period.
Define number of customer complaints
Number of customer complaints is the amount of customers who have notified the business of their dissatisfaction and had that dissatisfaction recorded, within a specific time period
Define rates of staff absenteeism
Rates of staff absenteeism is the average number of days employees are not present when scheduled to be at work, for a specific period of time.
Define level of staff turnover
Level of staff turnover is the percentage of employees that leave a business in a year and have to be replaced.
Number of workplace accidents
Number of workplace accidents measures the amount of injuries and unsafe incidents that occur at a work location over a period of time.
Level of wastage
Level of wastage is the amount of inputs and outputs that are discarded during the production process.
Rate of productivity growth
Rate of productivity growth is the change in outputs produced from a given level of inputs from one time period to another.
Difference between proactive and reactive change
•Proactive = planned → made in anticipation of a situation or event occurring (e.g. launching a new product or decision to upgrade technology platform)
Reactive = unplanned -→ response when it has become necessary = the result of a given situation
Define Force Field Analysis
Force field analysis theory is a model that determines if businesses should proceed with a proposed change. This model identifies and examines factors which promote or hinder the change from being successful.
Lewin’s force field analysis theory helps businesses identify factors which influence change. The model has two key principles: driving forces and restraining forces.
Define driving forces
Driving forces are factors within or outside the business’s environment which promote change by initiating, encouraging or supporting.
Define restraining forces
Restraining forces are factors within or outside the business’s environment which resist change and try and lead the business to remain in the status quo
What are the steps in applying Lewin’s Force Field Analysis?
Step 1: Identify need for change -
Step 2: Identify driving forces - Which internal and external factors promote the proposed change?
Step 3: Identify restraining forces - Which factors resist the proposed change?
Step 4: Assign scores - Determine the strength of each driving and restraining force by assigning numerical scores that are based on their level of influence on the proposed change.
Step 5: Analyse and apply
According to Lewin, what must be true for change to be successful?
Driving forces must outweigh restraining forces
If restraining forces match or exceed driving forces, strategies need to be implemented to overcome the restraining forces.
Advantages of force field analysis
Provides objective view of change before it is attempted
Analysis = process vs. meetings where ‘loudest’ voices can sway decision making = better informed decision making
Informs the implementation enables a plan around restraining forces
Saves time and money by only implementing changes that are predicted to be successful
Limitations of Force Field analysis
Weighting is subjective – so even if an organisation things that driving forces > restraining forces still need an action plan to reduce restraining (e.g. in the bean bag example could plan to redeploy employees or bring in outplacement services to assist redundant employees to overcome resistance)
Unknowns – some restraining forces may be unknown or unpredictable (how people will respond)
Time consuming to complete properly
What is the vested interest of managers as stakeholders?
Managers have a vested interest in the performance of a business. This is because business performance impacts their financial and job security, particularly, if the manager owns the business.
How can managers drive change?
- Initiate
- shape
- new management bring in new perspectives
- support change through effective management
Managers can act as a driving force if they are incentivised to push for change
What is the vested interest of employees as stakeholders?
Employees help achieve business objectives by completing work tasks to meet the needs of the business. In return for their contribution to the business, employees have their own expectations. These include competitive wages, supportive working conditions, and training.
When are employees likely to be a driving force?
any proposed change that can improve the working conditions of employees will see them become a driving force
could be:
- pay
- alignment of change to personal values
- increased status
- career advancement
- more flexible
How can employees drive change?
Can initiate = e.g. see need for improvement Total Quality Management
Can develop = feed in with new ideas or technologies that impact the change strategy
Can support = see benefit – e.g. improved working conditions OR keen for new challenge OR see/believe in need for change can influence other employees to also support