Business Transformation is a programme or portfolio of work that fundamentally improves the people, process and technology capability across a whole organisation or organisational unit, to achieve measurable improvements in customer and stakeholder satisfaction".
This definition of Business Transformation benefits from two supporting concepts.
The first is clear: transformation is dependent on multiple teams in multiple disciplines. Everyone IT, HR, Finance must be on the bus (or stagecoach) and the management of dependencies across these silos requires evolved Programme Management Office (PMO) skills.
The second is new: taking the concept of scale a step further, it is necessary to divide delivery programmes into a) simple initiatives that deliver across multiple projects or workstreams but do not generate a transformational change and b) wider transformational programmes or a collection of initiatives (portfolio) that delivers a step change in performance, measurable improvements at an organisational level.
The Scope
Transformation isn’t just a matter of programme delivery or portfolio management, it’s much bigger than that. A Transformation Director or Chief Transformation Officer will expect to have mastered or be at least highly credible in many capabilities from Business Analysis to Programme Management. Hence in the context of current professions, Transformation has the potential to become the big fish umbrella term that engulfs all other change disciplines.
Figure 1: Transformation – big fish umbrella term for the whole profession, (or red herring?)
Is Transformation a pseudonym for Change Management? Absolutely not. Put simply, no Change Management model provides the necessary guidance or framework for operational change (transformation).
Kotter, Kubler Ross, Deming, Prosci ADKAR and now ‘nudge’ all provide great models and tools, but none provide the guts of what is required to deliver transformation, none provide the full toolbox. Smartsheet neatly summarized this argument with a compelling table view of major change management models, each with their benefits and limitations listed. A canter through that list illustrates how change management will help you navigate the emotional and behavioural battlefield of transformation, but not give you the bridge or gunpowder to make things actually happen
: The Transformation Landscape v1.0 – Defined as Professional Capabilities
Any attempt to create a professional skills map of Transformation will create argument and agreement in equal measure. Does Project Management include Risk Management and more? Should Programme Management include Benefits / Value Management? Where does Agile fit in?
These arguments have been conveniently parked here to develop version 1.0 of this map and highlight some key viewpoints:
The Capability
Understanding what Transformation is by piecing together the fabric of professional disciplines in change management is useful, but there is a better way. Transformation is best described through capability. There are three elements:
Transformational Leadership Capability
The need for Transformational Leadership is defined in the first article in this series alongside Transformation Delivery Capability. Although not scientific, Leadership capability can be measured and the results illustrate different shapes of Leadership. Recognising and acting on that shape of leadership is key to Transformation success.
Transformation Leadership Capability – measured
Visionary Leadership (in Blue) – where the C-Suite provide the vision, the mission, the motivational communications and the permission to succeed. However, the detail is potentially at risk including the alignment of initiatives. He time commitment may also be missing – just when the decision is required.
Managerial Leadership (in red) – where Leadership is visible, involved and accountable. However, they may not be so charismatic or inspiring and the vision could be lost in the various Boards, forums and spreadsheets
Transformation Delivery Capability
Transformation Delivery is where the theories, frameworks, training and certifications can be argued, re-badged and re-argued at length. The bottom line is that successful Transformation is dependent on ten core capabilities. Each can be measured and evaluated to indicate what “shape” an organisation’s Transformation is in.
Transformation Delivery Capability – measured
Process Led Transformation (in Blue) – where the best practice manuals are adopted. The governance is in place and the operating model is designed. Full speed might be achieved but not necessarily in the right direction. Will the programme meet changing customer needs and make a commercial difference?
Strategy Led Transformation (in red) – where the commercial and strategic needs are driving the programme. However, the PMO might not be resourced, the plans not providing the rigour needed and delivery success not as certain
Organisational Readiness
The starting point for Transformation is often overlooked. Leadership and Delivery Capability may be highly evolved, but if the challenge is just too big then any Transformation mission can fail. Illustrating two flavours of Organisational Readiness demonstrates the challenges:
Organisational Readiness – measured
A financially and commercially capable organisation (in blue) will be ready for benefits management in P&L terms, commercially focused change and third party management. In contrast the organisation may not have defined processes, service management discipline or understand the people challenge of any change.
A process and service management capable organisation (in red) will have a clearer understanding of the operational foundations upon which to deliver Transformation. However, the financial and commercial foundations may be less well defined and understood.
Summary and Conclusions
Organisations who have “two kinds of people” are able to run the business and transform the business simultaneously. For those who do not, the prognosis is not so good. In fact, it is often bad and sometimes ugly.
Transformation is homing in on a succinct written definition of what it is and what it does. However, the way of defining and understanding Transformation is in capability terms. Transformational Leadership, Transformation Delivery Capability and Organisational Readiness are all defined in and are all measurable.
The talent needed to deliver Transformation comes from a growing pool of increasingly professional individuals. The scope of skills within that Transformation talent pool are well understood, they include recognised professions and established qualifications. However, there is an opportunity to pull these multiple strands of capability together to create a Transformation profession with modular qualifications and a Transformation certification.
Far from being a gun slinging analogy, Transformation is a recognised business capability and recognised profession it just needs a little finesse, co-ordination and the qualification to pull it together
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