Change Management - Instructor Guide
Teaching Overview
This 6-hour seminar balances conceptual frameworks with practical application. The goal is to help participants develop confidence in leading change initiatives within their organizations. Expect diverse experience levels—from those implementing their first major change to seasoned transformation leaders.
Key Teaching Principles
- Make it Relevant: Consistently connect frameworks to participants' real organizational challenges
- Encourage Participation: Create safe spaces for sharing resistance, concerns, and experiences
- Balance Theory and Practice: Alternate between concepts and real-world application activities
- Build Confidence: Help participants see change leadership as a learnable skill, not innate talent
Module 1 Teaching Notes (45 minutes)
Opening Activity (10 min)
Start with a personal change story: Share a significant organizational change you've experienced. Include what worked, what didn't, and what you learned. This builds credibility and establishes a collaborative tone.
Discussion Prompt: "Think of a change your organization went through. What made it succeed or fail?" Allow pairs to share, then harvest common themes.
Change Curve Exploration (20 min)
Work through the Kubler-Ross model systematically. Have participants identify a change their organization is currently navigating and map where different groups are on the change curve.
Facilitation Tip: Help participants understand that resistance isn't failure—it's a predictable stage. This reframe reduces defensiveness and opens dialogue.
Interactive Element: Ask "What does each stage look like in your organization?" Generate specific behaviors and concerns for each phase.
Resistance Conversation (15 min)
This is often the most valuable part. Many leaders view resistance as opposition to address rather than information to understand.
Discussion Points:
- Resistance reveals what people care about and fear losing
- The best information about change adoption barriers comes from resisters
- Leaders who can understand resistance before it becomes entrenched can address root concerns
- Default to curiosity: "Help me understand your concern"
Role Play (optional): Demonstrate how to have a conversation with someone resisting change. Show:
- Listening more than telling
- Acknowledging legitimate concerns
- Finding common ground on objectives even if methods differ
Module 2 Teaching Notes (75 minutes)
Kotter Model Overview (25 min)
Present each of the 8 steps with real-world examples. The Kotter model is comprehensive—don't try to cover everything in depth.
Key Teaching Points:
- Each step builds on previous ones
- Skipping steps or going too fast creates problems later
- The model provides a checklist for diagnosing change problems
Discussion: "Where do most changes fail in your organization?" Often the answer relates to skipped steps (e.g., poor communication = step 4, insufficient empowerment = step 5).
ADKAR Model Practice (30 min)
The ADKAR model is excellent for individual-level change adoption. Have participants work through a current organizational change using the ADKAR framework.
Exercise:
- Identify a change initiative
- For each ADKAR element, assess: "How are we doing?"
- Identify gaps or missing elements
- Discuss implications
Debrief: Help participants see ADKAR as a diagnostic tool for understanding adoption barriers.
Model Comparison (20 min)
Kotter = organizational/strategic level
ADKAR = individual adoption level
Both are useful and complementary.
Facilitation Point: Different situations call for different emphasis. A rapid implementation might need Kotter's urgency and coalition building. A complex cultural change might need deep ADKAR focus on each person's awareness, desire, and knowledge.
Module 3 Teaching Notes (60 minutes)
Change Strategy Development (60 min)
This is hands-on application. Have participants work individually or in pairs on a real change initiative from their organization.
Workshop Outline:
- Readiness Assessment (15 min): Assess current capacity and readiness for change
- Stakeholder Analysis (15 min): Map stakeholders and design engagement approaches
- Change Plan Outline (20 min): Draft key elements of their change management plan
- Gallery Walk (10 min): Post plans and allow others to review and add feedback
Instructor Role: Circulate and ask probing questions:
- "Who are your biggest resisters and what are their concerns?"
- "How will you build desire, not just awareness?"
- "What will success look like and how will you measure it?"
Key Insight to Emphasize: Successful change requires careful attention to the human side, not just the technical implementation.
Module 4 Teaching Notes (60 minutes)
Communication Strategy Development (60 min)
Communication is central to change success. Have participants develop a communication plan for their change initiative.
Exercise Framework:
- Audience Mapping (10 min): Identify key audiences and their concerns
- Message Development (15 min): Develop clear, compelling messages for each audience
- Channel Strategy (15 min): Select communication channels and frequency
- Two-Way Dialogue (15 min): Plan how to create opportunities for questions and feedback
- Risk Planning (5 min): Anticipate potential rumors or concerns and plan responses
Facilitation Tips:
- Help participants move beyond one-way announcements toward dialogue
- Emphasize consistency—all leaders telling the same story
- Highlight the importance of early, frequent, honest communication
- Role-play difficult conversations (e.g., how to respond when someone says "This is just the flavor of the month")
Module 5 Teaching Notes (45 minutes)
Change Team Workshop (45 min)
Effective change requires a strong team. Have participants assess their change team composition and dynamics.
Exercise:
- Team Composition Review (15 min): Do you have the right people? Missing expertise?
- Role Clarity (15 min): Are roles and responsibilities clear?
- Team Dynamics (15 min): How is the team functioning? Where are conflicts or gaps?
Discussion Points:
- Change teams need both formal authority and informal influence
- Diverse perspectives prevent groupthink and improve decisions
- Clear decision authority prevents paralysis
- Regular team check-ins maintain focus and morale
Action Planning: Have each participant identify one concrete action to strengthen their change team.
Module 6 Teaching Notes (60 minutes)
Sustainability and Measurement Workshop (60 min)
How will you know if your change is sticking? What will you do if momentum wanes?
Exercise:
- Success Metrics Development (20 min): Define what successful change looks like
- Measurement Planning (20 min): How will you track adoption and business impact?
- Sustainability Strategy (20 min): How will you sustain change momentum and prevent backsliding?
Teaching Points:
- Leading indicators (early adoption, training completion) help predict success
- Lagging indicators (business outcomes) show ultimate impact
- Measurement should inform course corrections, not just report results
- Celebrating progress maintains team morale and signals seriousness of change
Closing Reflection (15-20 min)
End with reflection on participants' biggest insights and commitments:
- "What's one thing you'll do differently in your next change initiative?"
- "Who will you ask for support?"
- "What's your biggest concern about implementing what you've learned?"
Handling Common Challenges
"We've tried change before and failed"
Response: Help them diagnose what went wrong using frameworks from the course. Often previous failures provide valuable lessons that improve current efforts. Frame as learning opportunity.
"Our culture doesn't support change"
Response: Culture change is one of the hardest types of change. Acknowledge the challenge while helping them identify small areas where they can build momentum. Often one successful change initiative improves culture for future changes.
"Our leadership isn't aligned"
Response: This is a serious obstacle. Encourage building a guiding coalition to create alignment. Sometimes showing one leader how change benefits their area helps build broader support.
Resources for Ongoing Learning
- Recommend "Leading Change" by John Kotter for deeper dive on 8-step model
- Share case studies of successful and failed changes relevant to their industry
- Provide template toolkit for change plans, communication, and measurement
- Offer follow-up coaching or cohort calls to support implementation
Evaluation and Feedback
End with brief feedback survey:
- "How relevant was this to your current situation?"
- "What will you implement in the next 30 days?"
- "What topics need deeper coverage?"
Follow up: Consider a 30-day check-in with participants to hear about implementation and offer support.