๐ Technical Change Management
Change requires management, preparation, planning and operations.
Preparation and planningโ
- Innovations within digital technology
- Effectively communicating the rationable for the change
- Communicating hte benefits of the change
- Getting
buy in
from all areas of the business who the change effects
Operationsโ
- Interaction of new or upgraded tools and processes into current digital ecosystem
- Establishing best practice for use of new or upgraded tools and processes
- Facilitating processes and business models
- Applying fixes
Change managementโ
The components of change management include:
- Change advisory board (CAB)
- Prioritise change requests
- Review change requests
- Monitor change process
- Provide feedback
- Request for change
- Viability
- Financial
- Resource
- Analysis of benefits of implementing change request
- Stages of approval
- Viability
- Setting SMARTER objectives
- Risks
- Impact
- Configuration of digital system impacted by the change = Rollback planning
- Reproducibility
- Traceability
- Document
SMARTER
S - Specific
M - Measurable
A - Achievable
R - Realistic
T- Time-Bound
E - Evaluate
R - Re-Evaluate
Risksโ
Changes always have risks, they include:
- Resistance to change from staff / teams
- Misuse of new tools and processes
- Inadequate support infrastructure or resource
- Change stalling or impending workflows
- Knowledge management and single sources of dependencies
Impactโ
- Forecasting the impact of change implementation on the operational environment
- Measuring positive and negative impact
- Analysis of positive and negative impact
Configuration of digital system impacted by the changeโ
- Current and proposed
Roll-back planningโ
- Back-up methodology
- Local
- Cloud
- Disaster recovery planning
Reproducibilityโ
- Replicating change across other departments or businesses
- Test environments:
- Servers and software
Traceabilityโ
- Responsibility
- Accountability
- Auditing
Documentโ
- Maintaining up-to-date information
- Recording of all decisions
- Retaining change documentation
- User training manuals
- Version control
When making changes, it is important to document and log everything you do, in case you need to roll back.
Key points are:
- Maintaining up-to-date information
- Recording of all decisions
- Retaining change documentation
- User training manuals
- Version control
Factors that drive Changeโ
Internal Factorsโ
- Restructuring the process of reorganising a business in a major way such as:
- Mergers and Acquisitions
- Financial
- Turnaround eg. change of leadership
- Repositioning
- Cost restructuring
- Divestment
- Spin off
- Expansion /growth
- Downsizing
- New srategic objectives
External Factorsโ
- Political
- Shift in government priorities (for example Brexit, international trade deals)
- Economic
- Meeting newfinding/revenue streams
- Recession
- Inflation
- Consumer trends
- Social
- Change in human behaviour (for example birth rates)
- Market/social trends (for example rise in online shopping)
- Socioeconomic aspects
- Remote working
- Cultural expectations
- Technological
- Emerging technologies
- Innovation/Efficiency
- Artificial Intellegence
- New payment methods
- Legal/Regulatory
- New legislation
- Changes/updates to legislation (for example national minimum wage, working hours, General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)/Data Protection Act (DPA) 2018)
- Removal of European Union (EU) legislation
- Environmental
- Sustainability
- Reduction in carbon foorprint
- Green energy
- Digital/tech waste
- Pandemic
- Competitors
- New product/service
- Entering new markets
Methods to respond to changeโ
- New or amended:
- Policies (for example updated health and safety, due to changes in legislation)
- Business processes (for example innovation for new markets)
- Products or services (for example innovation for new markets)
- New or improved digital systems for hardware and/or software (for example DVLA systems, NHS referrals, online banking)
- Training needs analysis
- Restructuring of priotiries and resources
Responding to changeโ
The steps that organisations take to respond to change
- Planning for change
- Setting budgets and timescales
- Communicating the change activity to all stakeholders
- Clarifying resources required (for example hardware, software. staffing)
- Managing change implementation
- Monitoring process during implementation
- Maintaining quality of service during change
- Business acceptance and compliance with change
- Team upskilling and development to facilitate the change
- Communicating outcoems of change
- Post-project reviews
- Reinforcing change
- Reinforcment planning
- What steps to take if change isn't implemented quickly enough
- Reinforcment planning
- Collating and analysing outcomes of change data
- Monitoring change