Dr Mark DeVolder is an award-winning change-management expert and public speaker. He has empowered hundreds of organisations to adapt to change. He works with business leaders across the world to understand the process of adapting to continuous change through reinvention, innovation and anticipation.
In an exclusive event with QBE Canada, Mark shared anecdotes from his book 'Perpetual Pivot: How the Best Leaders Adapt to Exponential Change' and strategies to re-energise, re-engage and transform working and personal lives.
In the first of this three-part Change Management Series, Mark will look at the three main stages of any change, predictable trends in transition, and how business leaders can get prepared.
Covid-19 has for many people been a crisis and something to be endured. But what is happening right now is not out of the norm. In fact, this is very normal. Despite it being quite extreme, this is how change occurs. I want to normalise what is going on right now for you.
If we don’t see this as something to be anticipated, then we approach with resistance rather than acceptance. When we think something is just temporary, we don't prepare in the same way. It's the difference between a hurricane and a cloud burst. During a cloud burst, you would park up and wait for it to be over. With a hurricane, you must prepare. We are going through a hurricane right now.
In life, we should expect problems, obstacles and adversity. If we do that, then we look for opportunities differently. In the earlier stages of Covid-19, many businesses missed out on opportunities because they thought, as the advice was given, that this would just disappear. They all missed an opportunity.
Once we develop an understanding of transitions, we think about what is going on as normal and start to recognise the trends. Everything that is going on right now is, in one sense, very predictable. We can’t predict the specifics, but we can monitor the trends and adapt accordingly, rather than waiting back, or worse yet, entering a state of paralysis and shock.
What makes change most difficult is the transition from how things used to be to imagining how they might be. We are in going through the 'in between' phase. We don't know what the new future will look like, but we romanticise what the past was like.
The kind of actions that we do in this time is very key for our future success, and even our success amid the transition.
We must develop a good understanding of what the stages look like:
Using the pandemic as our guide, the early days of it were 'stage one'. Some people didn't believe it was happening and others were shocked. People were anxious, worried and frantically buying toilet paper. However, we don't see that now. That was a very predictable kind of response for ‘stage one’.
The limbo that we’re currently in indicates ‘stage two’, which is by far the hardest of any change. What we're seeing right now, in this stage, is that we still have the same level of anxiety and worry, but the positive feelings have gone.
The 'new beginning' when this is all over. Right now, we should be speculating what that will look like. We must ask ourselves: What can we ground ourselves on? The 'new beginning' will, no doubt, be complicated; a hybrid of virtual and live. There will be people who won't make it through; those who are stuck back in 'stage one', waiting for something that is no longer there.
"What's fascinating is that in ‘stage one’, you may have anxiety and worry, but you also have positive feelings. People were hopeful and supportive. "Come on everybody, we're going to get through this together!" We don't hear that any more in the same way as we did back then. These were 'stage one' kinds of responses and actions."
We will not go back. We will go to something different. This is very predictable, so prepare yourself for something new. A lot of people incorrectly associate ‘resilience’ with the idea that we’re going to bounce back. We will not bounce back, but we’ll learn how to learn to bounce again.
By far, the most difficult and the most important of the three stages is the limbo of ‘stage two’. Those who utilise and embrace this stage, instead of resisting it, are the people who will seize the opportunities hidden in the pandemic.
We can best use this time by learning new skills, new technology and about our people. Those who say they’re no good with technology better learn fast, because if they don’t, they will be left behind.
Best-selling author Dr Mark DeVolder has written and spoken extensively on change management. His latest book ‘Perpetual Pivot: How the Best Leaders Adapt to Exponential Change