Transcript Document

MANAGING LIBRARY
TRANSFORMATION TO MEET THE
CHALLENGES OF A NEW ERA
24th Annual IATUL Conference, Ankara, Turkey,
2-5 June 2004
Egbert D. Gerryts
Academic Information Service,
University of Pretoria, South Africa
OUTLINE
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Why this paper on transformation management
Cycles of development and transformation
Phases of complexity in transformation
Balance between transformation and degree of
maturity
Organizational life cycle
Role of Balanced Scorecard in phases of
transformation
Team building and functioning
Strategic framework for the transformed
organization
Change collection-aimed
functional structure into a
market-orientated matrix
organizational structure
(Strategic Thrust, 1990)
Change matrix
orientated structure into
service orientated
network organization
(Strategic Thrust, 1994)
Year 1
Year 5
PREVIOUS
PRIMARY
CYCLE
1990
Broad based
Planning
Committee
Data
Collection
Year 2
Year 3
Secondary
Cycle
Secondary
Cycle
Secondary
Cycle
(NEW FIVE YEAR
PERIOD)
1991
1992
1993
1994
Continuing
Planning
Committee
Data
Collection
Year 4
NEW PRIMARY
CYCLE
Broad based
Planning
Committee
Data
Data
Data
Collection Collection Collection
Data
Collection
PHASES OF ORGANIZATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
Phase 2
Phase 3
Phase 4
4. Crisis of positioning
Evolution stages?
Revolution stages?
Degree of maturity
Mature
Phase 1
3. Crisis of
RED TAPE
2. Crisis of
CONTROL
4. Growth through
COLLABORATION
3. Growth through
COORDINATION
Conventional
1. Crisis of
LEADERSHIP
2. Growth through
DELEGATION
1. Growth through
CREATIVITY
Structured
Organization
Degree of transformation
Network
Organization
FOUR PHASES IN TRANSFORMATION 1990 - 2003
Crisis of value (R0I)
Complexity
Crisis of
identity
4. Integration with
academic processes
2002 -
Crisis of
control
3. Knowledge
Management
1998 - 2002
Crisis of
Structuring
2. Virtual
library/Networking
1994 - 1998
1. Information
as a resource
1990 - 1994
Time
Academic Information Service: Organizational Life Cycle
1990 - 2003
?
1. Library Service
1980 - 1990
2.
Information 3. Virtuality
Service
1994 - 1998
1990 - 1994
4.
Knowledge 5. Integration
Management academic processes
1998 - 2002
2002 -
Linking measurement and strategy (Balanced Scorecard)
1.
2.
3.
Driving force
Vision
Values
Our vision of the future
If we are successful,
how shall we be
different?
To our
shareholders
(financial)
Business
Orientated
To our
customers
Indispensable
With our
processes
Integrated
processes
To our staff
Ability to
innovate
What are our critical
success factors?
Value
for money
Relevant
services and
products
Cost
effectiveness
Attitude
motivation
values
Benchmarking
Customer
satisfaction
Management
information
system
Culture and
climate audit
How can we
measure?
BALANCED SCORECARD: PHASE 3
1998-2002
Financial: Shareholder
Intellectual capacity
and property
Customer
Communities of
Practice (COP’s)
Information Portal
Vision Strategy
Knowledge
Management
Learning & Growth
Communication
skills
Relationship
management
Processes
Scholarly
Communication
BALANCED SCORECARD: PHASE 4
2002-
Financial: Shareholder
Measurement &
Productivity
Value
Return on investment
(R0I)
Processes
Customer
Vision Strategy
Learning center
Research information
Service
Integrated with
academic processes
Learning & Growth
Richness of Diversity
Training programmes
Information
Management &
Procurement Service
(IMPS)
FOUR LEVELS OF CHANGE (Blanchard)
Behaviour (Group)
DIFFICUTLY
Behaviour (Individual)
Attitudes
Knowledge
TIME
TEAM FUNCTIONING
Team performance
Relationship between team performance and cohesion
More the same;
less critical
Cohesion
Develop capacity
Activating abilities and potential
Result:
TEAM BUILDING
Future Focus
Interpretation
Above dotted line:
Team looks good
Below:
Not to be neglected
Necessary for team to
look good in the long
run
Issues
• Role clarification
• Problem solving
• Intra-team process
analysis
Basic
Focus
(reflection)
Characteristics of
winning team
• Diversity
• Spreading intellect
• At least one innovator
• Adapt to weak points
in team
• Mature personalities
(sensitive towards
others, in charge of
emotions)
STRATEGIC FRAMEWORK OF THE TRANSFORMED ORGANIZATION
Goals
Hard
Systems
Tangible
FUTURE
PICTURE
OF
ORGANIZATION
Vision &
Mission
statement
Intangible
Soft
Systems
Values
Time present
Profitability
(output vs input)
Growth in use
Service
Quality
Market:
professional &
expertise leadership
On-time delivery
High morale
etc
Adaptability
Autonomy
Cooperation
Creativity
Development
Diligence
Humor
Initiative
Moral integrity
Openness
Orderliness
etc
Control
Plans
Policies
Procedures
Rewards
Required
Behaviours
Shared meaning
Sense of
belonging
Common frames
of reference
Alignment
Emergent
reality
Fulfillment
of
stakeholder
needs
Commitment
Time - future
Customer needs
Employee needs
Shareholder
needs Society
needs, etc
LEARNING AND GROWTH
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Internalize vision
Accept ownership
Positive attitude
Communication skills
Multi-skilling
Team ownership
Client focus
Commitment and empowerment
New competencies and skills
Networking and relationship management
ROLE OF THE LEADER: CHARACTERISTICS
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Capacity to act
Focus on customer satisfaction
Result orientated
Responsibility for resources
Accountability for process
Accountability for well-being of team
Mentor
Team integration
THE FINANCIAL PERSPECTIVE
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Alternatives for continuous expansion of
buildings
Taking services and products to the client
Alliances and partnerships
Alignment: higher education and university
strategies
Learning culture
Role of professional academic
Business orientation
Innovative culture
Return on investment
THE CUSTOMER PRESPECTIVE
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Living the value: “client is king” value
Client and market differentiation
Defunctionalization
Service level agreements
Internal and external clients
COP’s
Info portal
Scholarly communication
INTERNAL BUSSINESS PROCESSES
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Defunctionalization
Service units
Change management
Team management
Competency and skill development
Facilities and services
INTERNAL WORK PROCESSES
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Process re-engineering
 Effectiveness and efficiency
 Frontline and back office
 Networking and partnerships
TRUST: SIX RULES
1.
TRUST IS NOT BLIND:
Small groupings of people to know each other well
2.
TRUST NEEDS BOUNDARIES:
Vision-Mission-Goal. Leave worker to go on
3.
TRUST DEMANDS LEARNING:
Tolerate mistakes
4.
TRUST DEMANDS OPENNESS TO CHANGE:
Be future orientated
5.
TRUST NEEDS BONDING:
Small and larger groups must merge
6.
TRUST NEEDS TOUCH:
Staff must meet in person
(Charles Handy. Harvard Business
Review 73(3) 1995: p. 178)