Change Agent or King of Status Quo? Which Are You?

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Aren’t you tired of hearing customers complain? Tired of low productivity and high payroll costs? Tired of watching your service scores fall month after month? What are you doing about it? Are you a change agent or the king of status quo?

A successful business is dependent upon the unwavering ability to identify challenges, evaluate a new course of action and put into effect the processes and procedures to make it happen. You must be willing to change as needed until it works!

Sadly, too few are willing to put in the effort to do this.

We sit through many unproductive meetings discussing the issues at hand but never come out with tangible solutions and an action plan to improve. Why is this?

What role do you play in your organization?

The King of Status Quo

“Oh, things will never change.” “I doubt he (the boss) will want to do it.” “We’ve always done it this way.” “But we tried that already.” “It’s not in the budget.”

Do these statements sound familiar?

Characteristics of the Status Quo

Your job is to perform the individual responsibilities as listed on your job description. Nothing more, nothing less.

You keep your head down and refuse to rock the boat. I’ve heard you say “It’s my job to do what the boss wants!”

You dress in subdued tones and your desk is sloppy. Ideas come slowly and have little impact. Someone other than you is responsible for the direction of the team/department. You rationalize-away mistakes.

You’re dismissive of those willing to try something new and those who accept change. You fear retaliation from superiors if you stray from the norm. You’re afraid of failure.

But what if the status quo follower is your boss? What do you do?

Your supervisor demands your loyalty and distributes responsibility freely. He expects your compliance regardless of the challenges faced. Timetables are developed and discipline given when tasks are not completed. He doesn’t seem to “get it”. “There are better ways to do this”, you say.

He listens to your ideas but rarely acts upon them. He explains the difficulties in implementing your new procedure and recommends your patience. He sits mute during your presentation and collects your data, which is never seen again.

Your status quo supervisor will probably have a job for life. There is no need to assume otherwise. He’s “steady”, a “solid player”. He always flies under the radar.

Will things change? I doubt it.

But those higher up need this. They fear the young upstarts with their wild dreams and “careless ideas”. The BIG boss has an ego to feed and it feeds off the spark of those with initiative.

All ideas must come from him. He knows all, his ideas are best. He uses his position of power to his advantage. Need something done, call the big boss for approval.

The Change Agent

There are a few, willing to look at situations far differently from most.

They have a swagger, a confidence and an ability to make things happen. These are the “change agents”.

Characteristics of a Change Agent

A change agent doesn’t live in today’s world; he/she looks toward tomorrow when improvements are already put in place. Change agents quickly see when something doesn’t work and knows by experience and practice how to fix it. He’s dissatisfied with the status quo and unwilling to accept apathy and inaction.

If something’s broken it must be fixed right away. No need to wait for approval or a vetting process. You carry your passion on your sleeve and are willing to plow through road blocks to implement your ideas.

A team-builder, motivator, a take-charge personality are terms associated with you. Subordinates trust your judgments and will follow your lead. You have proven your worth time and time again.

You’re called a contrarian; willing to go against popular opinion – and you’re not afraid to do so. Others may think you’re crazy, but you don’t care.

Mounds of paperwork sit with ideas hatched out of frustration of the status quo. You “know” what’s wrong and “need” to fix it!

You can:

  • Clearly identify the issue(s)
  • How does this affect the customer?
  • How does this affect employee morale?
  • How does this affect payroll?
  • How does this affect revenue?
  • Drill-down to the root causes
    • Why is this happening?
    • Where are we falling short?
    • What are we forgetting to do?
    • Where are the checks and balances?
    • Is there built-in redundancy?
  • Develop new procedures and modifications to correct current practices
  • Align coworkers and subordinates to form a team-based improvement effort
  • Set an implementation schedule that is closely followed and monitored
  • Adapt and adjust as needed

There is a cause and effect in all we do. Change agents understand that their success is dependent on providing value to their customers, supervisors and investors.

It is steadfastly developed through a consistent improvement process subject to the desire and aspiration of those willing to embrace change and strive for the best.

So, are you a change agent or king of status quo?

Author: Guest Author

Published On: 1st Nov 2016 - Last modified: 29th Jan 2019
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