Research examines the critical role of organizational change management and effective communication
NEWTOWN SQUARE, Pa - Tuesday, March 18th 2014 [ME NewsWire]
(BUSINESS
WIRE)-- According to the Project Management Institute’s Pulse of the
Profession® In-Depth Report: Enabling Organizational Change Through
Strategic Initiatives, 48 percent of strategic initiatives are
unsuccessful, and as a result, nearly 15 percent of every dollar spent
on strategic change initiatives is lost due to poor project performance.
The good news is that success rates are significantly higher in
organizations that report being highly effective at organizational
change management. For these high-performing “change enablers,” twice as
many strategic initiatives meet original goals and are completed on
time and on budget compared to organizations that are not as good at
managing change.
Expanding on findings from the global 2014 Pulse
of the Profession® study and PMI’s Managing Change in Organizations: A
Practice Guide, this new research identifies standardization,
communication, leadership and executive support as the practices used by
companies that are most successful at driving change through successful
implementation of strategic initiatives. These “change enablers” share a
common set of practices that include:
Using standardized project and program management practices
Creating an effective communication plan; thoroughly executing that
plan; and identifying, measuring and communicating the expected benefits
of change
Engaged sponsors who actively rally senior management to actively support the change
Creating a vision and leading stakeholders through organizational change
“We
know that all strategic change happens through projects and programs.
This new study reinforces the importance of organizational change
management as an essential capability in managing an organization’s most
important projects and programs—their strategic initiatives,” said PMI
President and CEO Mark A. Langley. “It’s clear that, in order to create
competitive advantage, organizations must enhance the competencies and
practices that allow them to drive change through successful strategic
initiative management.”
To learn more about successfully leading change and the practices used by “change enablers”:
Visit PMI.org/Pulse to download Pulse of the Profession® In-Depth
Report: Enabling Organizational Change Through Strategic Initiatives
Visit
PMI.org/Knowledge-Center/Change-Management/Change-Management-Form.aspx
to download Managing Change in Organizations: A Practice Guide
(available at no charge to PMI members)
About the Pulse of the Profession/Methodology
PMI’s
Pulse of the Profession® study - the industry's annual global outlook
for project, program and portfolio management - examines the latest in
project management around the world as well as future trends. Conducted
since 2006, PMI’s Pulse of the Profession is the industry's annual
global survey of project management professionals. The newest edition of
the Pulse features feedback and insights from over 2,500 project
management leaders and practitioners.
About Project Management Institute (PMI)
Project
Management Institute is the world's leading not-for-profit professional
membership association for the project, program and portfolio
management profession. Founded in 1969, PMI delivers value for more than
2.9 million professionals working in nearly every country in the world
through global advocacy, collaboration, education and research. PMI
advances careers, improves organizational success and further matures
the profession of project management through its globally recognized
standards, certifications, resources, tools academic research,
publications, professional development courses, and networking
opportunities. As part of the PMI family, Human Systems International
(HSI) provides organizational assessment and benchmarking services to
leading businesses and government, while ProjectManagement.com and
ProjectsAtWork.com create online global communities that deliver more
resources, better tools, larger networks and broader perspectives. Visit
us at PMI.org, facebook.com/PMInstitute and on Twitter @PMInstitute.
Contacts
PMI
Megan Maguire Kelly, +1 610-356-4600 x7030
Megan.Kelly@pmi.org
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