

Organizational Culture Change: Unleashing your Organization's Potential in Circles of 10
A**R
Three Stars
its OK
H**I
Two Stars
Not getting Hooked to it ...
S**N
Not what I expected.
I thought ot would delve moee into conducting a cultural audit but it didnt.
A**O
Must read if you want to transform your organization
Doing more of the same won’t make the organization strive. Our organizations must be transformed. This book represents a great manual for action for any cultural change. It shows the path, presents the procedure, its full of stories, cases and research findings that make it solid.It’s not to be read in one night. You must put its ideas at test, get into action and adapt it to your field. Yet it is an excellent guide for the tour.
J**Y
Bravo! Offers step-by-step culture change - like a cook book
Organizational Culture Change: Unleashing your Organization's Potential in Circles of 10 is a worthwhile contribution to this vitally-important subject. I work in NY as a management consultant and use the Competing Values Framework with my clients. I've found this book to be a one-of-a-kind reference tool and I can easily see how useful such a guidebook can be to business leaders, too. After all, Corporate culture is the only sustainable business advantage available today.Marcella Bremer's new book demystifies the process of changing culture by first helping readers understand how to determine the kind of culture you have - with a 15 minute assessment tool. Then, she offers specific steps to determine the kind of culture that will be necessary in the future for the organization to be successful. What I particularly liked is how the author drew upon her own consulting experiences. For example, she offers corporate culture profiles of the various industries in which she's worked, including banking, healthcare, high schools, engineering, IT consulting and maintenance, and more. This is interesting because the culture of an organization must match the expectations of its customers. For example, if a hospital's culture doesn't reflect consistency, stability, reliability, and attention to the rules, patients will not have the confidence, comfort, and trust to go there. If a bank does not pay attention to building long-term, trusting relationships and only cares about its transactions, sales revenue, and profits, then customers might look for another bank.Leaders in organizations will find this book helpful because it guides them through each step of the process, and provides time-tested practices to get employees involved and participating in the change process in a fun, meaningful way. She even offers an outline for conducting a workshop.Culture change has always been a topic like psychology - people know of it and respect it, but often feel it's too risky to fix themselves. With this new book, Bremer gives us a practical guide, like a cook book, for successfully creating the exact culture an organization needs to be as successful as it can be. I highly recommend this book! Organizational Culture Change: Unleashing your Organization's Potential in Circles of 10Organizational Culture Change: Unleashing your Organization's Potential in Circles of 10
P**Y
An excellent guide to organisational culture change - by someone who has done it!
I came across Marcella's book, and the OCAI-online website, relatively recently and wish I had found them earlier. The Cameron-Quinn 'Competing Values Framework' was an interesting tool I had come across while researching for my own book 'The Change Equation', in 2008/9, but I didn't really appreciate how useful it was until reading Marcella's book and working through her online version of the model.The key to her approach is in the strapline:'Unleashing your Organization's Potential in Circles of 10'. It's this practical, participative aspect which works for me, with its focus on measuring the gap between 'as is' and to be', defining the direction and nature of the changes, then working from the bottom up to put these into a change programme that is owned and understood by the workforce, not imposed from above. I particularly like the emphasis on getting the guys at the top to recognise the need to 'walk the talk' and not just expect others to change.I recommend the book and will be exploring the video training etc. that is on offer from the website, in the coming months.
J**M
An important book
A clear, detailed explanation of understanding culture, changing culture and intimately involving the employees in the process. It is suitable for all managers and employees in the profit and not-for-profit sectors.It is highly practical, written by someone who has done the job successfully and, as she admits, sometimes less successfully. In addition, it is based on academic research.The author highlights fundamental rules with regard to change that should never be ignored.I found the examples and approach mostly focused on measuring the existing culture, defining the desired culture and then detailing specifc actions to close the gap. However, change often arrives as a result of the environment, due to technology evolution for example, and in these cases the culture or the change that is being imposed on the organisation from the outside, although necessary, may not be desired. This was touched on in the book, but a more expansive discussion would have been welcome.
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