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com 1
Contents
Why Build Awareness? 4
Building Awareness 5
Effective Communications 5
Effective Sponsorship 6
Coaching by Managers and Supervisors 7
Ready Access to Business Information 8
Obstacles to Building Awareness 8
A Person’s View of the Current State 9
How a Person Perceives Problems 9
The Sender’s Credibility 10
Circulation of Misinformation or Rumors 11
Contestability of the Reasons for Change 11
Next Steps 11
A WARENESS D ESIRE K NOWLEDGE A BILITY R EINFORCEMENT ®
Any successful change begins by answering one of the most basic questions about change: Why?
It is human nature to want to understand the reasoning behind an action or a required change.
The five parts of the Prosci ADKAR® Model show the milestones an individual must achieve for
a change to be successful: awareness, desire, knowledge, ability and reinforcement. Awareness
is the first milestone.
Awareness represents a person’s understanding of the nature of the change, why the change
is being made, and the risk of not changing. Awareness includes information about the internal
and external drivers that created the need for change, as well as “what’s in it for me?” This first
goal is defined as “awareness of the need for change,” not simply “awareness that a change is
happening.” This is an important distinction.
Prosci and ADKAR are trademarks of Prosci, Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries
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Why Build Awareness?
Lack of awareness of the reason for change was cited as the primary source of employee
resistance in the Prosci Best Practices in Change Management – 2016 Edition. This is caused by
failure to communicate details of a change to employees. Ultimately, if an employee cannot
answer “what’s in it for me?” resistance is likely to occur. And when awareness is overlooked
or ignored, projects face increased resistance, slowed progress and reduced return on investment.
As one research participant said:
‘‘
Often employees are not opposed to a solution or a new way of doing work,
but rather they resisted change because no one made a clear
and compelling case as to why the change was needed.
The elements of the Prosci ADKAR Model represent the natural order of how one person
experiences change. It is tempting to skip awareness and jump straight to desire and knowledge.
Yet, building awareness establishes the groundwork for individuals to make personal choices
about change. Desire or knowledge cannot come before awareness, because awareness of the
need for change stimulates our desire or triggers our resistance to change.
When employees clearly see that an organization is in trouble, building awareness will be
relatively easy. In contrast, when an organization is already succeeding it is often more difficult
to build awareness. In such cases, change leaders need to create a compelling case and make
the reasons for change obvious. If they are responding to an opportunity, they will need to be
clear in communicating the reasons for change.
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Building Awareness
Building awareness with the ADKAR Model means sharing both the nature of the change and
communicating why the change is necessary. It means clearly explaining the business drivers or
opportunities that led to the need for change. It also means addressing why a change is needed
now and explaining the risk of not changing.
Meeting the human need to know “why” is a critical factor in managing and enabling change.
People begin to seek this information at the first signs of change. In an organizational
setting, employees and managers feel eager to know the business or organizational reasons
for the change, so they can better understand the change and align themselves with the
organization’s direction.
Many assume that sharing information is enough to produce measurable awareness. This is
not the case. The effectiveness of your communication depends on how the messages are
received and internalized. When an employee says, “I understand the nature of the change and
why this change is needed,” you have succeeded at building awareness. To get this confirmation,
you need regular interactions and feedback.
Tactics for effectively building awareness include:
1. Effective Communications
Awareness-building is most effective when you set the message in the proper context for
each audience and design it with them in mind. This begins with identifying and
segmenting audience groups, determining the appropriate messages and preferred
senders for each, and then developing the most effective packaging, timing and channels
for these communications.
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In any awareness-building plan,
allow ample opportunity for
two-way communications. Check for
understanding and buy-in. Provide
opportunity for impacted groups to
raise concerns and engage them in
the broader change initiative.
Depending upon the audience and position in the change process, channels of communication
may include:
• Face-to-face meetings
• Group meetings
• One-on-one communications
• Email
• Newsletters
• Intranet
• Executive presentations
• Training and workshops
• Project team presentations
• Update bulletins
• Video conferencing
• Demonstrations
2. Effective Sponsorship
The executive sponsor of the change is the best spokesperson for communicating to
employees why a change is needed and the risk of not changing. To be effective the executive
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sponsor must be active and visible throughout the entire change process, engaging with
the project team and collecting feedback from employees. This direct communication with
employees increases adoption of the change. The executive sponsor must also build a
coalition that reinforces the awareness messages at all levels. This includes enabling peers,
managers and direct reports to communicate the reasons for change through multiple
communication channels and throughout the organization. A dedicated and supportive
sponsor is critical to a successful change initiative.
‘‘
In the Best Practices in Change Management – 2016 Edition, as in previous
research reports, participants identified “active and visible sponsorship”
as the most important contributor to change management
success—more than three times as often as other contributors.
3. Coaching by Managers and Supervisors
Part of awareness-building for employees is learning what the change will mean for them
personally. When a change is proposed, a supervisor or manager is in the best position to
help employees understand this in meaningful terms. To be effective at coaching employees,
managers and supervisors must first have the opportunity to build their own awareness of
the need for change. This means they must have accurate messages relating to the change,
and basic knowledge about and skills for leading change with their own employees.
It is also important to remember that managers are employees first and managers second.
If they don’t understand the need for the change or don’t have the support to participate in
the change, they will experience resistance themselves. It is critical to plan activities to build
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awareness of the need for change with managers before expecting them to effectively build
awareness with their employees.
Managers and supervisors face the greatest challenge because they are in charge of
translating the change message from the top to their employees. Before they can do that,
they must receive appropriate training and coaching. Only then can they conduct effective
sessions with their employees. Face-to-face communications with employees about the
change has been cited in all of our longitudinal benchmarking studies as the most effective
form of communication. Honest, straightforward and confidential discussions also help to
correct misunderstandings and provide an opportunity to collect feedback from employees,
which helps leadership better understand the background conversation. Although group
meetings are more convenient and useful for initiating communications, one-on-one
conversations that offer details of the change on a personal level are best at answering
“what’s in it for me?”
4. Ready Access to Business Information
Many companies underestimate the power of readily accessible information about company
performance, market conditions, environmental factors, competitive threats and changing
business priorities. Transparency builds awareness on an ongoing basis and supports not
only the current change but also future changes. Increasing visibility and creating a culture
that values open sharing of information translates directly to increased awareness of the
need for change among employees.
Obstacles to Building Awareness
Many factors influence how readily people recognize the need for change. As a change leader,
you need to understand not only the activities that drive awareness, but also the resistance
factors or restraining forces that may prevent the awareness message from taking hold with your
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audiences. In some cases the resistance factors are so strong that even the best communications
plan will not be sufficient. Effective change management plans are designed to surface and deal
with these resistance factors.
We list potential resistance factors and suggestions for overcoming these barriers below:
1. A Person’s View of the Current State
Individuals who are comfortable with or strongly invested in the current state may discredit
or reject the reasons for change in favor of maintaining the status quo. To understand their
unique points of view, schedule one-on-one conversations and actively listen to
their concerns.
2. How a Person Perceives Problems
People have different cognitive styles. This will impact how an individual approaches a
problem, internalizes an awareness message, and perceives the need for change. While some
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already see the need for change, others may be completely caught off guard. For this reason,
broad and general communications to create awareness of the need for change may not be
effective. Individualized messages and one-on-one communications are more effective,
along with providing the time and opportunity for people to process new information and
ask questions.
3. The Sender’s Credibility
When it comes to building awareness, those receiving the awareness message will consider
the sender either credible or not credible, depending on how much they trust and respect the
sender. The sender directly impacts how the receiver internalizes the message.
Senders from different levels of the organization are more credible than others, depending
on the message content. People expect messages about why the change is being made
and how it aligns with the business strategy to come from the person near or at the top of
the organization. People expect messages about how the change will impact employees
personally to come from their immediate supervisors.
Employees also weigh the message
against the organization’s track record
for change. If there is a history of false
alarms or failed changes, individuals
tend to disregard the new information.
Designing credible awareness messages
involves designing them specifically
for each group, and factoring in their
unique context, access to ongoing
information, and their specific change-related pain points. Tailoring key messages for each
group and delivering them from their preferred senders increases credibility.
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4. Circulation of Misinformation or Rumors
If business managers have withheld information from employees about the change, rumors
may spread and cloud the facts—and employees may prefer to listen to the rumors.
To overcome the barrier of distorted or incorrect background information, leaders and
supervisors must now spend extra time correcting misinformation, while employees decipher
the real from the fabricated.
Because misinformation stalls efforts to create awareness, it is better to communicate the
right information from the start. Even if all information is not yet solidified, it is better to start
clearly communicating what is known and what is not yet known rather than letting people fill
in the gaps for themselves.
5. Contestability of the Reasons for Change
If the reasons for change are unclear, subjective or open to debate, awareness takes longer
to build. Although some changes have external and observable reasons that are difficult
to dispute (such as new industry regulations that require compliance), other changes are
internal and less obvious to employees. When employees question the credibility of the
reasons for change, they are more likely to resist.
Next Steps
Once the first objective of the ADKAR Model has been achieved, we can shift our focus to
the next milestone. In Desire: How to Positively Influence a Person’s Desire to Embrace Change,
we explore the importance of creating desire, typical challenges and many tactics you can use
to influence and create the desire to support and participate in a change.
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Change Management Certification Program
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This three-day experiential learning program teaches you to
apply a holistic change management methodology and toolset,
including the Prosci ADKAR Model, to a real project.
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