We would like to thank the editor and reviewers for their helpful
comments on an earlier version of this manuscript. We gratefully
appreciate the research support of MIT's Center for Coordination
Science and Center for Information Systems Research.
In this paper, we present an alternative way of thinking about
technological change in organizations. This alternative approach
is motivated by a recognition that traditional models for managing
technological change - in which the major steps of the change
are defined in advance and the organization then strives to implement
these changes as planned in a specified period of time -
are not particularly useful given the more turbulent, flexible,
and uncertain organizational situations that many companies face
today. Traditional models are also not particularly useful for
helping the implementation of technologies such as groupware whose
unprecedented, open-ended, and context-specific nature make it
difficult to predefine the exact changes to be realized and to
predict their likely organizational impact.
We suggest an alternative model of managing technological change,
one that reflects the dynamic and variable nature of contemporary
organizations and technologies, and which accommodates iterative
experimentation, use, and learning over time. We label such a
model of managing technological change "improvisational,"
and suggest that it may enable organizations to take advantage
of the evolving capabilities, emerging practices, and unanticipated
outcomes that accompany use of new technologies in contemporary
organizations.
In the preface to her discussion of technology design, Suchman
(1987: vii) refers to two different approaches to open sea navigation
-- the European and the Trukese:
The European navigator begins with a plan -- a course -- which
he has charted according to certain universal principles, and
he carries out his voyage by relating his every move to that plan.
His effort throughout his voyage is directed to remaining "on
course." If unexpected events occur, he must first alter
the plan, then respond accordingly. The Trukese navigator begins
with an objective rather than a plan. He sets off toward the objective
and responds to conditions as they arise in an ad hoc fashion.
He utilizes information provided by the wind, the waves, the tide
and current, the fauna, the stars, the clouds, the sound of the
water on the side of the boat, and he steers accordingly. His
effort is directed to doing whatever is necessary to reach the
objective. (Berreman 1966, p.347)
Like Suchman, we too find this contrast in approaches instructive,
and will use it here to motivate our discussion of managing technological
change. In particular, we suggest that how people think about
managing change in organizations most often resembles the European
approach to navigation. That is, they believe they need to start
with a plan for the change, charted according to certain general
organizational principles, and that they need to relate their
actions to that plan, ensuring throughout that the change remains
on course.
However, when we examine how change actually occurs in practice,
we find that it much more closely resembles the voyage of the
Trukese. That is, people end up responding to conditions as they
arise, often in an ad hoc fashion, doing whatever is necessary
to implement change. In a manner similar to Argyris and Schon's
(1978) contrast between espoused theories and theories-in-use,
we suggest that there is a discrepancy between how people think
about technological change and how they do it. Moreover, we suggest
that this discrepancy significantly contributes to the difficulties
and challenges that contemporary organizations face as they attempt
to introduce and effectively implement technology-based change.
Traditional ways of thinking about technological change have their
roots in Lewin's (1952) three-stage change model of "unfreezing,"
"change," and "refreezing" (Kwon and Zmud,
1987). According to this model, the organization prepares for
change, implements the change, and then strives to regain stability
as soon as possible. Such a model, which treats change as an event
to be managed during a specified period (Pettigrew, 1985), may
have been appropriate for organizations that were relatively stable,
bounded, and whose functionality was sufficiently fixed to allow
for detailed specification. Today however, given more turbulent,
flexible, and uncertain organizational and environmental conditions,
such a model is becoming less appropriate; hence, the discrepancy.
This discrepancy is particularly pronounced when the technology
being implemented is open-ended and customizable, as in the case
of the new information technologies that have come to be known
as groupware.[1] Groupware technologies provide electronic networks
that support communication, coordination, and collaboration through
facilities such as information exchange, shared repositories,
discussion forums, and messaging. Such technologies are typically
designed with an open architecture that is adaptable by end users,
allowing them to customize existing features and create new applications
(DeJean and DeJean, 1991; Malone et al., 1992). Rather than automating
a predefined sequence of operations and transactions, these technologies
tend to be general-purpose tools which are used in different ways
across various organizational activities and contexts. Organizations
need the experience of using groupware technologies in particular
ways and in particular contexts to better understand how they
may be most useful in practice. In such a technological context,
the traditional change model is thus particularly discrepant.
The discrepancy is also evident when organizations are using information
technologies to attempt unprecedented and complex changes such
as global integration or distributed knowledge management. A primary
example of this is the current attempt by many companies to redefine
and integrate global value chain activities which were previously
managed independently. While there is typically some understanding
up front of the magnitude of such a change, the depth and complexity
of the interactions among these activities is only fully understood
as the changes are implemented. For many organizations, such initiatives
represent a new ball game, not only because they haven't
played the game before but because most of the rules are still
evolving. In a world with uncertain rules, the traditional model
for devising and executing a game plan is very difficult to enact.
And as recent strategy research has suggested (Mintzberg, 1994;
McGrath and McMillan, 1995), planning in such circumstances is
more effective as an ongoing endeavor, reflecting the changing
and unfolding environments with which organizations interact.
In many situations, therefore, predefining the technological changes
to be implemented and accurately predicting their organizational
impact is not feasible. Hence, the models of planned change that
often inform implementation of new technologies are less than
effective. We suggest that what would be more appropriate is a
way of thinking about change that reflects the unprecedented,
uncertain, open-ended, complex, and flexible nature of the technologies
and organizational initiatives involved. Such a model would enable
organizations to systematically absorb, respond to, and even leverage
unexpected events, evolving technological capabilities, emerging
practices, and unanticipated outcomes. Such a model for managing
change would accommodate -- indeed, encourage -- ongoing and iterative
experimentation, use, and learning. Such a model sees change management
more as an ongoing improvisation than a staged event. In this
paper, we propose such an alternative model. After presenting
the model, we describe a case study of groupware implementation
in a customer support organization to illustrate the value of
this alternative model in practice. We conclude by discussing
the conditions under which such an improvisational model may be
a powerful way of managing the implementation and use of advanced
technologies.
The improvisational model for managing technological change is
based on research we have done into the implementation and use of open-ended information
technologies. The model rests on two major assumptions which differentiate
it from traditional models of change: first, that the changes
associated with technology implementations constitute an ongoing
process rather than an event with an end point after which the
organization can expect to return to a reasonably steady state;
and second, that the various technological and organizational
changes made during the ongoing process cannot, by definition,
all be anticipated ahead of time.
Given these assumptions, our improvisational change model recognizes three different types of change: anticipated, emergent, and opportunity-based. These change types are elaborations on Mintzberg's (1987) distinction between deliberate and emergent strategies. Here, we distinguish between anticipated changes -- changes that are planned ahead of time and occur as intended -- and emergent changes -- changes that arise spontaneously out of local innovation and which are not originally anticipated or intended. An example of an anticipated change would be the implementation of electronic mail software which accomplishes its intended aim to facilitate increased and quicker communication among organizational members. An example of an emergent change would be the use of the electronic mail network as an informal grapevine disseminating rumors throughout an organization. This use of e-mail is typically not planned or anticipated when the network is implemented, but often emerges tacitly over time in particular organizational contexts.
We further differentiate these two types of changes from opportunity-based
changes -- changes that are not anticipated ahead of time
but are introduced purposefully and intentionally during the change
process in response to an unexpected opportunity, event, or breakdown.
For example, as companies gain experience with the World Wide
Web, they are finding opportunities to apply and leverage its
capabilities in ways that were not anticipated or planned before
the introduction of the Web. Both anticipated and opportunity-based
changes involve deliberate action, in contrast to emergent changes
which arise spontaneously and usually tacitly out of people's
practices with the technology over time (Orlikowski, 1996).
These three types of change build on each other over time in an iterative fashion (see Figure 1). While there is no predefined sequence in which the different types of change occur, the deployment of new technology often entails an initial anticipated organizational change associated with the installation of the new hardware/software. Over time, however, use of the new technology will typically involve a series of opportunity-based, emergent, and further anticipated changes, the order of which cannot be determined in advance because the changes interact with each other in response to outcomes, events, and conditions arising through experimentation and use.
One way of thinking about this model of change is to consider,
as an analogy, a jazz band. While members of a jazz band, unlike
members of a symphony orchestra, do not decide in advance exactly
what notes each is going to play, they do decide ahead of time
what musical composition will form the basis of their performance.
Once the performance begins, each player is free to explore and
innovate, departing from the original composition. Yet, the performance
works because all members are playing within the same rhythmic
structure and have a shared understanding of the rules of this
musical genre. What they are doing is improvising -- enacting
an ongoing series of local innovations which embellish the original
structure, respond to spontaneous departures and unexpected opportunities,
and iterate and build on each other over time. Using our earlier
terminology, the jazz musicians are engaging in anticipated, opportunity-based,
and emergent action during the course of their performance to
create an effective and creative response to local conditions.
Similarly, an improvisational model for managing technological
change in organizations is not a predefined program of change
charted by management ahead of time. Rather, it recognizes that
technological change is an iterative series of different changes,
many unpredictable at the start, that evolve out of practical
experience with the new technologies. Using such a model to manage
change requires a set of processes and mechanisms to recognize
the different types of change as they occur and to respond effectively
to them. The illustrative case presented below suggests that where
an organization is open to the capabilities offered by a new technological
platform and willing to embrace an improvisational change model,
innovative organizational changes can be achieved.
Zeta is one of the Top 50 software companies in the US, with $100
million in revenues and about 1000 employees. It produces and
sells a range of powerful software products providing capabilities
such as decision support, executive information, and marketing
analysis. Zeta is headquartered in the Midwest, with sales and
client service field offices throughout the world.
Specialists in the Customer Service Department (CSD) at Zeta provide
technical support via telephone to clients, consultants, value-added
resellers, Zeta client service representatives in the field, and
other Zeta employees who use the products. This technical support
can be quite complex. Specialists typically devote several hours
of research to each problem, often searching through reference
material, attempting to replicate the problem, and/or reviewing
program source code. Some incidents require interaction with members
of other departments such as quality assurance, documentation,
and product development. The CSD employs approximately fifty specialists
and is headed by a director and two managers.
In 1992, the CSD purchased the Lotus Notes groupware technology
within which they developed a new Incident Tracking Support System
(ITSS) to help them log customer calls and keep a history of progress
towards resolving the customers' problems. Following a
successful pilot of the new system, the CSD decided to commit
to the Notes platform and to deploy ITSS throughout its department.
The acquisition of new technology to facilitate customer call
tracking was motivated by a number of factors. The existing tracking
system was a home-grown system which had been developed when the
department was much smaller and Zeta's product portfolio
much narrower. The system was not real-time, entry of calls was
haphazard, information accuracy was a concern, and performance
was slow and unreliable. It provided little assistance for reusing
prior solutions and no support for the management of resources
in the department. The volume and complexity of calls to the CSD
had increased in recent years due to the introduction of new products,
the expanded sophistication of existing products, and the extended
range of operating platforms supported. Such shifts had made replacement
of the tracking system a priority, as CSD managers were particularly
concerned that the home-grown system provided no ability to track
calls, query the status of particular calls, apprehend the workload,
balance resources, identify issues and problems before they became
crises, and obtain up-to-date and accurate documentation on work
in progress and work completed. In addition, calls would occasionally
be lost, as the slips of paper on which they were recorded would
get mislaid or inadvertently thrown away.
The initial introduction of the new ITSS system was accompanied
by anticipated changes in the nature of both the specialists'
and managers' work. In contrast to the previous system,
which had been designed to only capture a brief description of
the problem and its final resolution, ITSS was designed to allow
specialists to document every step they took in their process
of resolving a particular incident. That is, it was designed to
enable the capture of a full incident history. As specialists
began to use ITSS this way, the focus of their work shifted from
primarily research--solving problems--to both research and documentation--solving
problems and documenting work in progress.
The ITSS database quickly began to grow as each specialist documented
his/her resolution process in detail. While documenting calls
took time, it also saved time by providing a rich database of
information which could be searched for potential resolutions.
Moreover, this new database of rich information served as an unexpected
and informal learning mechanism by providing the specialists with
exposure to a wide range of problems and solutions. As one specialist
noted: "If it is quiet, I will check on my fellow colleagues
to see what ... kind of calls they get, so I might learn something
from them. ... just in case something might ring a bell when someone
else calls." At the same time, however, using the ITSS
database as a sole source of information did pose some risk, since
there were no guarantees as to the accuracy of the information.
To minimize this risk, the specialists tacitly developed a set
of informal quality indicators to help them distinguish between
reliable and unreliable data. For example, resolutions that were
comprehensively documented, documented by certain individuals,
or verified by the customer were considered more reliable sources
of information.
In addition to these changes in specialists' work, use
of the new system by the CSD managers improved their ability to
control the department's resources. Specialists'
use of ITSS to document calls provided managers with detailed
workload information, which was used to justify increased headcount
and adjust work schedules and shift assignments on a dynamic and
as-needed basis. ITSS also supplied managers with more accurate
information on specialists' work process, for example,
the particular steps followed to research and resolve a problem,
the areas in which specialists sought advice or were stalled,
and the quality of their resolutions. As managers began to rely
on the ITSS data to evaluate specialists' performance,
they expanded the criteria they used to do this evaluation. For
example, quality of work-in-progress documentation was included
as an explicit evaluation criterion and documentation skills became
a factor in the hiring process.
As the CSD gained experience with and better understood the capabilities
of the groupware technology, the managers opportunistically introduced
a change in the structure of the department to further leverage
these capabilities. This change had not been planned prior to
the implementation of ITSS, but the growing reliance on ITSS and
an appreciation of the capabilities of the groupware technology
created an opportunity for the CSD to redistribute call loads.
In particular, "first line" and "second line"
support levels were established, with junior specialists being
assigned to the first line, and senior specialists to the second
line. Partnerships were created between the less experienced,
junior specialists and the more experienced, senior specialists.
Front line specialists now took all incoming calls, resolved as
many of these as they could, and then electronically transferred
calls to their second line partners when they were overloaded
or had calls which were especially difficult. In addition to handling
calls transferred to them, senior specialists were expected to
proactively monitor their front line partners' progress
on calls and to provide assistance as needed.
While this partnership idea was conceptually sound, it regularly
broke down in practice. Junior specialists were often reluctant
to hand off calls, fearing that such transfers would reflect poorly
on their competence or that they would be overloading their more
senior partners. Senior specialists, in turn, were usually too
busy resolving complex incidents to spend much time monitoring
their junior partners' call status or progress. In response
to this unanticipated breakdown in the partnership idea, CSD managers
introduced another opportunity-based structural change. They created
a new role, that of an intermediary, which was filled by a senior
specialist whose job it was to mediate between the first and second
lines, regularly monitoring junior specialists' call loads
and work in progress, and dynamically reassigning calls as appropriate.
The new intermediary role served as a buffer between the junior
and senior specialists, facilitating the transfer of calls and
relieving senior specialists of the responsibility to constantly
monitor their front line partners. With these structural changes,
ITSS in effect changed the prior undifferentiated and fixed division
of labor within the department to a dynamic distribution of work
reflecting different levels of experience, various areas of expertise,
and shifting workloads. In response to the new distribution of
work, managers adjusted their evaluation criteria to reflect the
changed responsibilities and roles within the CSD.
Another change which emerged over time was a shift in the nature
of collaboration within the CSD from a primarily reactive mode
of collaboration to one that was more proactive. Because all specialists
now had access to the database of calls being worked on in the
department, they began to browse through each others' calls
to see which ones they could provide help on. Rather than waiting
to be asked if they had a solution to a particular problem (which
is how they had solicited and received help in the past), specialists
actively browsed through the database of calls seeking problems
for which they could offer help. This shift from solicited to
unsolicited assistance was facilitated by the capabilities of
the groupware technology, the complex nature of the work, existing
evaluation criteria that stressed teamwork, and the long-standing
cooperative and collegial culture in the CSD. Consider the following
specialists' comments: "Everyone realizes that we
all have a certain piece of the puzzle ... I may have one critical
piece, and Jenny may have another piece. ... And if we all work
separately, we're never going to get the puzzle together. But
by everybody working together, we have the entire puzzle";
"Here I don't care who grabs credit for my work ...
this support department does well because we're a team,
not because we're all individuals" (Orlikowski,
1995). Managers responded to this shift in work practices by adjusting
specialists' evaluation criteria to specifically take unsolicited
help giving into account. As one manager explained: "When
I'm looking at incidents, I'll see what help other people have
offered, and that does give me another indication of how well
they're working as a team."
After approximately one year of using ITSS, the CSD implemented
two further organizational changes around the groupware technology.
Both of these had been anticipated in the initial planning for
ITSS, although the exact timing for their implementation had been
left unspecified. First, the ITSS application was installed in
three overseas support offices, with copies of all the ITSS databases
replicated regularly across the four support sites (US, UK, Australia,
and Europe). This provided all support specialists with a more
extensive knowledge base on which to search for possibly helpful
resolutions. The use of ITSS in all the support offices further
allowed specialists to transfer calls across offices, essentially
enacting a global support department within Zeta.
Second, the CSD initiated and funded the development of a number
of bug tracking systems which were implemented within groupware
and deployed in Zeta's departments of product development,
product management, and quality assurance. These bug tracking
applications, which were modeled on the ITSS application, were
linked into ITSS and enabled specialists to enter any bugs they
had discovered in their problem resolution activities directly
into the relevant product's bug tracking system. Previously,
the reporting of bugs by the CSD to other departments was done
manually, took many weeks, and involved minimal communication.
With the new bug tracking applications and linkages to ITSS, specialists
could also directly query the status of particular bugs, and even
change their priority if customer calls indicated that such an
escalation was needed. Specialists in particular found this change
very valuable. For the other departments, the link with ITSS allowed
users such as product managers and developers to access the ITSS
records and trace the particular incidents that had uncovered
certain bugs or uncovered certain use problems. Only the developers
had some reservations about the introduction of the bug tracking
application, reservations that were associated with the severe
time constraints under which they worked to produce new releases
of Zeta products.
In addition to the improved coordination and integration achieved
with other departments and offices, the CSD also realized further
opportunity-based innovations and emergent changes within their
own practices. For example, as the number of incidents in ITSS
grew, some of the senior specialists began to realize that the
information in the system could be used to help train newcomers.
By extracting certain records from the ITSS database, these specialists
opportunistically created a training database of sample problems
with which newly hired specialists could work. Using the communication
capabilities of the groupware technology, these senior specialists
could monitor their trainees' progress through the sample
database and intervene to educate when necessary. As one senior
specialist noted: "So we can kind of keep up to the minute
on their progress. ... If they're on the wrong track, we
can intercept them and say, 'Go check this, go look at that.'
But it's not like we have to actually sit with them and
review things. It's sort of an on-line, interactive thing."
As a result of this new training mechanism, the time that it took
for new specialists to begin taking customer calls was reduced
from eight weeks to about five weeks.
An emergent change realized during this time related to access
control. An ongoing issue for the CSD was who (if anybody) outside
of the CSD should be given access to the ITSS database with its
customer call information and specialists' work-in-progress
documentation. This issue was not one that had been anticipated
prior to the acquisition of the technology. While the managers
were worried about how to respond to the increasing demand for
access to ITSS as the database became more valuable and word about
its content spread throughout the company, they continued to handle
each access request as it came up. Over time, they had used a
variety of control mechanisms ranging from giving limited access
to some "trusted" individuals, generating summary
reports of selected ITSS information for others, and refusing
any access to still others. As one of the managers explained,
it was only after some time that they realized that their various
ad hoc responses to different access requests amounted to, in
essence, a set of rules and procedures about access control. By
responding locally to a variety of requests and situations over
time, an implicit access control policy for the use of ITSS had
evolved and emerged.
Figure 2 represents the change model around the groupware technology
followed by Zeta in its CSD. Along with the introduction of the
new technology and the development of the ITSS application, the
CSD first implemented some planned organizational changes, expanding
the specialists' work to include work-in-progress documentation
and adjusting the managers' work to take advantage of the
real-time access to workload information. These changes were anticipated
prior to introducing the new technology. As specialists and managers
began to work in new ways with the technology, a number of changes
emerged in practice, such as the specialists developing norms
to determine the quality and value of prior resolutions, and managers
paying attention to documentation skills in hiring and evaluation
decisions.
Building on these anticipated and emergent changes, the CSD introduced
a set of opportunity-based changes, creating junior-senior specialist
partnerships to take advantage of the shared database and communication
capabilities of the technology, and then adding the new role of
intermediary in response to the unexpected problems that arose
around partnership and work reassignment. These changes were not
anticipated at the start, nor did they simply emerge spontaneously
in working with the new technology. Rather, they were conceived
of and implemented in situ and in response to the opportunities
and issues which arose as the CSD gained experience and developed
a deeper understanding of the new technology and their particular
use of it. This change process around the groupware technology
continued through the second year at Zeta when some anticipated
organizational changes were followed by both emergent and opportunity-based
changes associated with unfolding events and the learning and
experience gained by using the new technology in practice.
Overall, what we see here is an iterative and ongoing series of
anticipated, emergent, and opportunity-based changes which allowed
Zeta to learn from practical experience, respond to unexpected
outcomes and capabilities, and adapt both the technology and the
organization as appropriate. In effect, Zeta's change model
cycles through anticipated, emergent, and opportunity-based organizational
changes over time. It is a change model which explicitly recognizes
the inevitability, legitimacy, and value of ongoing learning and
change in practice.
Clearly, there were certain aspects of the CSD and the Zeta organization
which enabled it to effectively adopt an improvisational change
model to implement and use the groupware technology. Our research
at Zeta and other companies suggests that at least two sets of
enabling conditions are critical: aligning key dimensions of the
change process, and dedicating resources to provide ongoing support
for the ongoing change process. We will consider each in turn.
Aligning Key Change Dimensions
An important influence on the effectiveness of any change process
is the interdependent relationship among three dimensions: the
technology, the organizational context (including culture, structure,
roles and responsibilities), and the change model used to manage
change (see Figure 3). Ideally, the interaction among these three
dimensions is compatible, or at a minimum, not in opposition.
First, consider the relation of the change model and the technology
being implemented. When the technology has been designed to operate
like a "black box," allowing little adaptation by
users, an improvisational approach may not be more effective than
the traditional approach to technology implementation. Similarly,
where the technology is well-established and its impacts are reasonably
well understood, a traditional planned change approach may be
effective. However, when the technology being implemented is new
and unprecedented, and additionally has an open-ended and customizable
nature, an improvisational model providing the flexibility for
organizations to adapt and learn through use becomes more appropriate.
Such is the case, we believe, with the groupware technologies
available today.
Second, the relation of the change model to organizational context
is also relevant. A flexible change model, while likely to be
problematic in a rigid, control-oriented or bureaucratic culture,
is well-suited to a more informal and cooperative culture such
as the one characterizing the CSD. In another study (Gallivan
et al., 1994), we examined the MidCo organization's successful
adoption and implementation of CASE (Computer-Aided Software Engineering)
tools within its IS organization. While MidCo, a multi-national
chemical products company with revenues of over $1.5 billion,
was a relatively traditional organization in many ways, key aspects
of its culture--a commitment to total quality management, a focus
on organizational learning and employee empowerment, as well as
a long-term time orientation--were particularly compatible with
the improvisational model it used to manage ongoing organizational
changes around the new software development technology.
Finally, there is the important relationship between the technology
and the organizational context. At Zeta, the CSD's cooperative,
team-oriented culture was compatible with the collaborative nature
of the new groupware technology. Indeed, CSD's existing
culture allowed it to take advantage of the opportunity for improved
collaboration afforded by the groupware technology. Moreover,
when existing roles, responsibilities, and evaluation criteria
became less salient, the CSD managers expanded or adjusted these
to reflect new uses of the technology. Compare these change efforts
to those of Alpha, a professional services firm which introduced
the Notes groupware technology to leverage knowledge sharing and
to coordinate distributed activities (Orlikowski, 1992). While
the physical deployment of groupware grew very rapidly, anticipated
benefits were realized much more slowly. Key to the reluctance
to use groupware for knowledge sharing was a perceived incompatibility
between the collaborative nature of the technology and the individualistic
and competitive nature of the organization. As in many professional
services firms, Alpha rewarded individual rather than team performance,
and promoted employees via an "up or out" set of evaluation
criteria. In such an environment, knowledge sharing via a global
Notes network was seen to threaten status, distinctive competence,
and power. In contrast to Zeta, managers at Alpha did not adjust
policies, roles, incentives, and evaluation criteria to better
align their organization with the intended use and capabilities
of the technology they had invested in.
Dedicating Resources for Ongoing Support
An ongoing change process requires dedicated support over time
to adapt both the organization and the technology to changing
organizational conditions, use practices, and technological capabilities.
Opportunity-based change, in particular, depends on the ability
of the organization to notice and recognize opportunities, issues,
breakdowns, and unexpected outcomes as they arise. This requires
attention on the part of appropriate individuals in the organization
to track use of the technology over time and to implement or initiate
organizational and/or technological adjustments which will mitigate
or take advantage of the identified problems or opportunities.
At Zeta, it was the managers and technologists who primarily played
this role, incorporating it into their other responsibilities.
So, for example, the managers adjusted the structure of their
department by introducing first line/second line partnerships
to facilitate a dynamic division of labor, and then made further
adaptations by introducing an intermediary role to overcome some
unanticipated difficulties associated with the initial change.
Similarly, the technologists working with the CSD incorporated
enhancements to the ITSS system as they realized ways of improving
ease of use and access time. The CSD's commitment to noticing
and responding to changes when appropriate did not end after the
implementation of the technology. The managers clearly realized
that the change process they had embarked on with the use of groupware
was an ongoing one, as one manager noted: "We've had
ITSS for two years. I'm surprised that the enthusiasm hasn't
gone away. ... I think it's because it's been changed
on a regular basis....Knowing that [the changes are going to get
implemented keeps you wanting to think about it, and keep going."
Ongoing change around the use of groupware technology also requires
ongoing adjustments to the technology itself as users learn and
gain experience with the new technology's capabilities
and their uses of it over time. Without dedicated technology support
to implement these adaptations and innovations, the continued
experimentation and learning in use central to an improvisational
change model may be stalled or thwarted. At Zeta, the CSD's
use of groupware and ITSS was supported by a dedicated technology
group. Initially consisting of one developer, this group grew
over time as use of the technology expanded. After two years of
technology use, the group included four full-time technologists
who provided technology support for the various systems that had
been deployed within Zeta via the Notes platform. The group also
maintained strong ties with all their users through regular meetings
and communications with them. This dedicated and ongoing technical
support ensured that the technology would continue to be updated,
adjusted, and expanded as appropriate.
The value of ongoing support to enable ongoing organizational
and technological change was similarly important in another organization
we studied, the R&D division of a large Japanese manufacturing
firm (Orlikowski et al., 1995). A newly-formed product development
team within the R&D division installed its own groupware technology,
the Usenet news-system (a computer conferencing system). Similar
to Zeta, the team's use of this new technology also iterated
among anticipated, emergent, and opportunity-based changes over
time. Here, a small group of users who had previously used the
groupware technology took on the responsibility to manage and
support its ongoing use for themselves and their colleagues. They
tracked technology usage and project events as they unfolded,
responded as appropriate with adjustments to communication policies
and technology functionality, and proactively made changes to
the team's use of the conferencing system to leverage opportunities
as they arose.
Global, responsive, team-based, networked--these are the watchwords
for organizations of the nineties. As managers redesign and reinvent
organizations in a new image, many are turning to information
technologies to enable more flexible processes, greater knowledge
sharing, and global integration. At the same time, effectively
implementing the organizational changes associated with these
technologies remains difficult in a turbulent, complex, and uncertain
environment. We believe that a significant factor contributing
to these challenges is the growing discrepancy between the way
people think about technological change and the way they actually
do it.
We have proposed here that people's assumptions about technology-based
change and the way it is supposed to happen are based on models
which are no longer appropriate. Traditional models for managing
technology-based change treat change as a sequential series of
predefined steps which are bounded within a specified period of
time. With these models as a guide, it makes sense -- as the European
navigator does -- to define a plan of action in advance of the
change and track events against the plan, striving throughout
the change to remain on track. Deviations from the intended course
-- the anticipated versus the actual -- then require explanation,
the subtle (and sometimes not-so-subtle) implication being that
there has been some failure, some inadequacy in planning, that
has led to this deviation. Indeed, many organizational mechanisms
such as budgeting and resource planning are based on these notions.
The problem is that change as it actually occurs today more closely
resembles the voyage of the Trukese navigator, and the models
and mechanisms most commonly used to think about and manage change
do not effectively support the experience of change in practice.
In this paper, we have offered an improvisational change model as a different way of thinking about managing the introduction and ongoing use of information technologies to support the more flexible, complex, and integrated structures and processes demanded by organizations today. In contrast to traditional models of technological change, this improvisational model recognizes that change is typically an ongoing process made up of opportunities and challenges which are not necessarily predictable at the start. It defines a process which iterates among three types of change -- anticipated, emergent and opportunity-based -- and which allows the organization to experiment and learn as it uses the technology over time. Most importantly, it offers a systematic approach with which to understand and better manage the realities of technology-based change in organizations today.
Because such a model requires a flexible and responsive environment,
adopting it implies that managers relinquish what is often an
implicit paradigm of "command and control" (Zuboff,
1995). An improvisational model, however, is not anarchy and neither
is it a matter of "muddling through." We are not implying
that planning is an activity which is unnecessary or should be
abandoned. We are suggesting, instead, that a plan is a guide
rather than a blueprint (Suchman, 1987), and that deviations from
the plan, rather than being seen as a symptom of failure, are
to be expected and actively managed.
Rather than pre-defining each step to be taken and then controlling
events to fit the plan, the idea is to create an environment which
facilitates improvisation. In such an environment, management
provides, supports, and nurtures a set of expectations, norms,
and resources which guide the ongoing change process. Malone (1996)
refers to such a style of managing as "cultivation."
Consider again the jazz band. While each member of the band is
free to improvise during the performance, the result is typically
not discordant. Rather, it is harmonious because each player operates
within an overall framework, conforms to a shared set of values
and norms, and has access to a known repertoire of rules and resources.
Similarly, while many of the changes at Zeta's CSD were
not pre-planned, they were compatible with the overall objectives
and intentions of the department's members, their shared
norms and team orientation, and the designs and capabilities of
the technology at hand.
Effectively executing an improvisational change model also requires
aligning the technology and the organizational context with the
change model. Such alignment does not happen automatically. It
requires explicit and ongoing examination and adjustment, where
and when necessary, of the technology and the organization. As
such, mechanisms and resources allocated to ongoing support of
the change process are critical. Tracking and noticing events
and issues as they unfold is a responsibility that needs to be
owned by appropriate members of the organization. Along with the
responsibility, these organizational members require the authority,
credibility, influence, and resources to implement the ongoing
changes. Creating the environment, aligning the technology, context,
and change model, and distributing the appropriate responsibility
and resources are critically important in the effective use of
an improvisational model, particularly as they represent a significant
(and therefore challenging) departure from the standard practice
in effect in many organizations today.
It is important to bear in mind, however, that an improvisational
model of change will not apply to all situations. As we have noted,
it is most appropriate for open-ended, customizable technologies
or for complex and unprecedented change. In addition, as one of
our reviewers noted, "jazz is not everyone's 'cup
of tea'... some people are incapable of playing jazz much
less able to listen to what they consider to be 'noise.'"
We noted above that some cultures do not support experimentation
and learning. As a result, they are probably not receptive to
an improvisational model, and are less likely to succeed with
it. However, as these organizations attempt to implement new organizational
forms, they too may find an improvisational model to be a particularly
valuable approach to managing technological change in the 21st
century.
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[1] Not all goupware technologies are
flexible and customizable (e.g., fixed-function electronic mail systems). We
are interested here only in those that are (e.g., Lotus Notes).
Footnotes
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