ABSTRACT

The topic of change management presents students with many challenges. One of the most difficult is making sense of the plethora of guru and hero-manager literature.
Managing Change/Changing Managers is an innovative textbook that encourages readers to rigorously question popular management theory, presenting a challenging review of existing literature in the change management field. The author brings together an overarching perspective on the most influential writings in the area, but unlike other textbooks, provides a much-needed criritque of the material and its implications for management practice.
Arguing that the majority of management guru literature makes the art of managing change appear simple and foolproof when it is not, this text is refreshingly critical, guiding and enhancing the reader's own criticality. The book also draws the best practice out of the traditional theory, using cases to illuminate the practical side to change management.

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter |24 pages

Finding your way in

Managing change or changing managers

chapter |26 pages

Thinking about change

Stages, process or continuum

chapter |26 pages

Managing systems

Open or closed?

chapter |26 pages

Individuals and change

Manageable or not?

chapter |27 pages

Cultural transformation

Behaviours or perception?

chapter |24 pages

N-step models

Practice, performance or preference?

chapter |28 pages

Programmed approaches to organizational change

Rhetoric and reality

chapter |33 pages

Project management

Facilitation or constraint?

chapter |27 pages

Change agency

Managing change or changing managers?

chapter |6 pages

Conclusions