• Current students
      • Student centre
        Enrol on a course/exam
        My enrolments
        Exam results
        Mock exams
      • Course information
        Students FAQs
        Student induction
        Course enrolment information
        F2f student events
        Key dates
        Book distribution
        Timetables
        FAE elective information
        CPA Ireland student
      • Exams
        CAP1 exam
        CAP2 exam
        FAE exam
        Access support/reasonable accommodation
        E-Assessment information
        Exam and appeals regulations/exam rules
        Timetables for exams & interim assessments
        Sample papers
        Practice papers
        Extenuating circumstances
        PEC/FAEC reports
        Information and appeals scheme
        Certified statements of results
        JIEB: NI Insolvency Qualification
      • CA Diary resources
        Mentors: Getting started on the CA Diary
        CA Diary for Flexible Route FAQs
      • Admission to membership
        Joining as a reciprocal member
        Admission to Membership Ceremonies
        Admissions FAQs
      • Support & services
        Recruitment to and transferring of training contracts
        CASSI
        Student supports and wellbeing
        Audit qualification
        Diversity and Inclusion Committee
    • Students

      View all the services available for students of the Institute

      Read More
  • Becoming a student
      • About Chartered Accountancy
        The Chartered difference
        Student benefits
        Study in Northern Ireland
        Events
        Hear from past students
        Become a Chartered Accountant podcast series
      • Entry routes
        College
        Working
        Accounting Technicians
        School leavers
        Member of another body
        CPA student
        International student
        Flexible Route
        Training Contract
      • Course description
        CAP1
        CAP2
        FAE
        Our education offering
      • Apply
        How to apply
        Exemptions guide
        Fees & payment options
        External students
      • Training vacancies
        Training vacancies search
        Training firms list
        Large training firms
        Milkround
        Recruitment to and transferring of training contract
      • Support & services
        Becoming a student FAQs
        School Bootcamp
        Register for a school visit
        Third Level Hub
        Who to contact for employers
    • Becoming a
      student

      Study with us

      Read More
  • Members
      • Members Hub
        My account
        Member subscriptions
        Newly admitted members
        Annual returns
        Application forms
        CPD/events
        Member services A-Z
        District societies
        Professional Standards
        ACA Professionals
        Careers development
        Recruitment service
        Diversity and Inclusion Committee
      • Members in practice
        Going into practice
        Managing your practice FAQs
        Practice compliance FAQs
        Toolkits and resources
        Audit FAQs
        Practice Consulting services
        Practice News/Practice Matters
        Practice Link
      • In business
        Networking and special interest groups
        Articles
      • Overseas members
        Home
        Key supports
        Tax for returning Irish members
        Networks and people
      • Public sector
        Public sector presentations
      • Member benefits
        Member benefits
      • Support & services
        Letters of good standing form
        Member FAQs
        AML confidential disclosure form
        Institute Technical content
        TaxSource Total
        The Educational Requirements for the Audit Qualification
        Pocket diaries
        Thrive Hub
    • Members

      View member services

      Read More
  • Employers
      • Training organisations
        Authorise to train
        Training in business
        Manage my students
        Incentive Scheme
        Recruitment to and transferring of training contracts
        Securing and retaining the best talent
        Tips on writing a job specification
      • Training
        In-house training
        Training tickets
      • Recruitment services
        Hire a qualified Chartered Accountant
        Hire a trainee student
      • Non executive directors recruitment service
      • Support & services
        Hire members: log a job vacancy
        Firm/employers FAQs
        Training ticket FAQs
        Authorisations
        Hire a room
        Who to contact for employers
    • Employers

      Services to support your business

      Read More
☰
  • Find a firm
  • Jobs
  • Login
☰
  • Home
  • Knowledge centre
  • Professional development
  • About us
  • Shop
  • News
Search
View Cart 0 Item

News

  • Home/
  • News
☰
  • News
  • News archive
    • 2024
    • 2023
  • Press releases
    • 2025
    • 2024
    • 2023
  • Newsletters
  • Press contacts
  • Media downloads

Shaping a changeable organisation

Oct 06, 2023

As the pace of change intensifies, changeability is becoming an increasingly important attribute for all organisations. David Codd explains how to get it right

Change is a constant. 

Many organisations are rethinking their purpose and adopting a more balanced outlook that recognises their environmental and societal impact. 

Technology continues to change markets fundamentally, and now, artificial intelligence is changing how work is done. 

Added to this, organisations are having to contend with changing geopolitical forces and events like Brexit and the war in Ukraine.

Therefore, the most important attribute for ensuring your organisation’s long-term health is arguably its ability to sense what needs to change and successfully manage change repeatedly. 

Here are my top tips on how to achieve an effective culture of changeability.

Critical success factors

There are four critical success factors that can guide boards and executive teams in shaping their organisation to be ‘fluent’ at change.

Your organisation must be:

  1. aware;
  2. inclusive;
  3. aligned; and
  4. adept at change management.

So why are these factors critical to success? What are the barriers that prevent organisations from being effective, and how can they be overcome?

1. Aware

Awareness in this context relates to strategic sensitivity – being highly attentive to strategic developments both inside and outside the organisation. 

An organisation requires a comprehensive view of the current and future landscape and a considered position on what that means. Otherwise, groupthink and complacency can creep in, and the organisation can stagnate. 

Barriers can arise when teams are too busy (under too much day-to-day pressure) or too proud (already delivering success). 

So, how do you get over these barriers? Through process and challenge. 

A well-run and well-structured strategic planning process, with senior management and board input, supports quality thinking. By not prejudging the outcome, you normalise constructive questioning of the status quo and open minds.

A strategic review needs to have a challenge built in. Some challenges can come from deep customer insight.

2. Inclusive

Changeability is enabled by being as inclusive as possible. Inclusiveness can unlock your talent’s potential. 

At the very least, colleagues have a right to expect that the rationale behind any intended change is clearly explained to them. 

When done well, this can help you to achieve acceptance, but it still falls short of full ownership. The best results are built on strong buy-in secured through real participation. 

In any organisation of scale, one barrier to inclusivity can be the inability to have everyone participate in every change decision – it’s not always feasible.

In organisations of all sizes, varying degrees of confidentiality are usually necessary when change is planned or implemented, e.g. entering competitive markets, using acquisitive strategies, and making difficult cost-reduction decisions.

To overcome these potential barriers, leaders should provide frequent, engaging progress updates to the whole workforce – both successes and challenges – not just titbits of good news.

If using third parties to gather insights, partner relevant internal teams with them. Once the overall direction is set, involve colleagues in ideation for implementation in their own function. 

Building trust is a two-way process. Staff engagement can be objectively measured, and the results and trends can be shared internally. Then colleagues know that their organisation is really listening.

3. Aligned

The different components of an organisation need to be aligned for change to be successful. If vital components are misaligned, then change will be blocked or at least compromised. This is clear but not easy to achieve, especially in a big organisation. 

Barriers here can arise when the vision underpinning change is not clearly articulated – it can be perceived as meaningless background noise.

For reasons rooted in a lack of trust, you may find that teams pursue different agendas or adopt a wait-and-see stance.

Similarly, individuals and teams often have understandably limited exposure beyond their own area and, therefore, cannot be expected to immediately align behind a general direction they can’t relate to. 

Purpose, vision and strategy must be clear and expressed and fleshed out in ways that everyone can relate to.  

4. Adept at managing change

Change is disruptive and potentially destabilising, so effective implementation needs focus and skill. The barriers here can include the complexity of the project and a shortage of appropriate expertise.

Portfolio management, run as a process with executive participation, can bridge strategy and the plan-of-action. 

It facilitates good collective choices by prioritising proposed change initiatives versus strategic objectives, recognising that human and financial capital are scarce resources. 

Similarly, while project managers can usually be contracted in, it can be difficult to free up internal people who have deep functional knowledge and enjoy projects. 

Experienced programme and project managers (ideally with functional knowledge) are essential.

A highly beneficial medium-term measure is to develop ‘hybrids’ – people who can work across functions and switch between operational and project management disciplines. This contributes to a higher project success rate and a faster pace.

The changeability lens

Regardless of whether your organisation is currently undergoing significant change, it can be helpful for leadership to apply a ‘changeability’ lens to the organisation as a whole. 

Use the four critical success factors to take a view on the change capabilities, processes and culture that you will need and create an action plan to address the gaps.

A thorough review can form the basis of an enduring strong change capability – the key to your organisation growing from strength to strength.

David Codd is a Chartered Accountant and transformation specialist

The latest news to your inbox

Please enter a valid email address You have entered an invalid email address.

Useful links

  • Current students
  • Becoming a student
  • Knowledge centre
  • Shop
  • District societies

Get in touch

Dublin HQ

Chartered Accountants
House, 47-49 Pearse St,
Dublin 2, D02 YN40, Ireland

TEL: +353 1 637 7200
Belfast HQ

The Linenhall
32-38 Linenhall Street, Belfast,
Antrim, BT2 8BG, United Kingdom

TEL: +44 28 9043 5840

Connect with us

Something wrong?

Is the website not looking right/working right for you?
Browser support
CAW Footer Logo-min
GAA Footer Logo-min
CCAB-I Footer Logo-min
ABN_Logo-min

© Copyright Chartered Accountants Ireland 2020. All Rights Reserved.

☰
  • Terms & conditions
  • Privacy statement
  • Event privacy notice
  • Sitemap
LOADING...

Please wait while the page loads.