Watch this space: “How my friends are helping you to make a change?”

Are you a good manager? That may be a difficult question to answer these days. Different managers manage different things and therefore need different skills.

Their skill set can be seen like a Swiss Army Knife, on which every item on the Army Knife represents a different skill. Now, let us talk about your skills to manage change. You will easily find out you need not only knives but also scissors, pinchers and most likely other items on the Army knives as change is a complex thing to manage.

Using SNA in organizational changeThe Atos Scientific Community also studied the aspect of organizational change and came up with an additional toolset for you; Social Network Analysis. The reason for looking into this was the overall feeling that social networks show the informal organizational structure of a company. This is addressed in a whitepaper on the subject that will be published shortly:

“Informal networks have always played a huge role in how works get done in organizations, as many strategically important networks don’t reside on the formal organization chart. Good managers have understood the role of these networks and people who know how to leverage them. “

I already knew that and you probably did so too. However, making sure you understand this informal network before you implement a change was always a very difficult thing to do. You must recognize that, after the change, your employees, team members and others will be able to tell you why moving a particular person to another part of the organization was a bad idea; you yourself may even notice that some parts of your organization are not running smoothly anymore. So you change something again, and again, and again.

There is another way:

“(…) what is different today is that there are now tools & methods available to get insight in these informal networks. That is what Social Network Analysis (SNA) does. It helps you to find out the underlying, informal structure in organizations. It involves the mapping and measuring of these normally invisible relationships between people and provides the company with an organizational X-ray. Key in understanding and managing networks is to find the critical connectors or the unofficial organizational roles.”

and:

“Would it not be great if you could reveal the real experts in your enterprise and who is accessing them. Target opportunities where increased knowledge flow will have the most impact and also detect information bottlenecks. Or detect opportunities for increased innovation, productivity and responsiveness. “

These insights in the way we can utilize social networks to implement successful changes in your organization is addressed by the authors. There is even a bigger benefit. By using Social Network Analysis in a structured way, you may find a method to continuously change your organization to meet the changing business goals and still be as effective as possible. Understanding your blind spots in your social connections may even be as important as understanding your portfolio and your competition:

“There are no “right” or “wrong” network structures; there are just networks that may be less effective in achieving their goals. If (…) organizations undertake social network analysis, it can help them to find the blind spots and manage the gaps which can lead to smarter organizations. “

Do you agree? Are you already using Social Network Analysis for organizational change? Do you see pitfalls, problems and obstacles? Let us know. You can download the published whitepaper at Atos.net/scientific-community-whitepapers.

Paul Albada Jelgersma

Paul has over 24 years of experience in running IT and business programs; including managing large teams of IT and other professionals. Within Atos, he and his teams have developed and managed all of the Atos standardized outsourcing services in the Netherlands, including costing, pricing and a variety of go-to market programs – many of these solutions are now part of the global Atos portfolio. Paul managed the solution pre-sales and portfolio teams and supported client sales-executives in building customer offerings. Paul is a founding member and track leader in the Atos Scientific Community for Cloud Services, he is supporting strategic sales, customer CEO’s and board room strategy decisions. In his day job, he focusses on the strategic partnership between Siemens and Atos, creating business opportunities in Cloud Computing in general and managing the overall innovation process. Paul specializes in Business Development, Portfolio Management, IT Service Innovation, Information and Infrastructure Architecture, Project Management, Cloud Computing, Outsourcing Services & Transformation projects. Paul likes to work with Virtual Teams in the new way of work. He dislikes email as a chat and document-management tool. He occasionally writes articles and publishes at his own blog. Paul is married and has 2 children. He lives near Amsterdam, The Netherlands. He likes to travel. In 2012 he did a tour in China. Many more locations are on his bucket-list.

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