Future Performance Training

Instead of supporting deep analysis and large shifts, the McKinsey 7-S model is great for analyzing how coherent your company is. If you know that you need to change your act, but you’re not sure what to do, this is the change management model for you.
By analyzing the following seven aspects of your company and how they affect each other, you will highlight the changes you need to make to create a united approach to business:
· Strategy
· Structure
· Systems
· Shared values
· Style
· Staff
· Skills
The Method
Assess
your strategy
Your company strategy needs to be formal enough to allow you to move forward
with purpose and gain (or maintain) an advantage over your competitors, and
flexible enough to adapt to changes without destroying your progress. As such,
when assessing your strategy you need to answer questions such as:
Record the answers to each question (and any others you can think of), then move on.
Look at your structure
Ask yourself:
Analyze
your systems
Any of our returning readers will know the importance of having
processes and managing them effectively, and now is when the McKinsey
model applies that same belief. Here you need to assess your business
systems, including official processes, unofficial shortcuts, rules, and how
everything is tracked.
In other words, ask yourself:
Record
shared values
We’re back into abstract territory now, as the next step is to analyze your
shared values. This will typically include both your official company values
and your company’s (possibly also your individual teams’) culture.
While culture might seem irrelevant to managing change, if used correctly it can be a powerful tool indeed. Linking your values and culture to the changes you make will make them more agreeable to your work force, who will, in turn, adapt them more readily.
Take a look at:
Take
note of your style
This stage is all about assessing the management and leadership style used in
your business. While it might be tempting to present an idealized view of your
own leadership, resist that urge and be frank with how both you and the rest of
the company are managed/manage others.
The questions you need to be asking are:
List
your staff
This section is exactly what you’d expect. Take a look at your staff list and
assess whether you have the required positions filled, what gaps you have, and
so on.
Take a look at your staff list, their job descriptions, common tasks, and skill set in general to answer:
Assess
their skills
Finally, it’s time to look at the skills your staff currently have. This
shouldn’t end at a basic description – you’ll need to gather some feedback
around how your company is perceived, as this will give you an idea of what
your customers think your skills are (which is arguably just
as important).
Take a look at:
Cross-examine
the 7-S’ and find what changes you need to implement
Once you’ve analyzed all of the 7-S’ you should take the time to think about
how each affects the others. As with many of these change management
models, it’s worth meeting with at least the upper levels of your management to
do this, as you’ll get a more accurate idea of these things in practice.
You need to be looking at whether your 7-S’ support each other, and planning incremental changes to make that happen if it isn’t already. For example, look at whether your structure supports your strategy, how they are both helped by your systems, and how all three reflect your shared values.
Once you have an idea of what needs to be brought in line, plan out incremental changes you can make which won’t disrupt your regular operations too much or alienate your employees. After they’ve been deployed (or even after every change you make), go through the 7-S model again to reassess and find out what you need to do next.