Organizational Change Approaches
Organizational Structures
Change Models & Theories
Talent Management & HR Practices
Organizational Change Types
100

This approach to change assumes employees will improve when they are motivated to strive for greater excellence rather than focusing on the negative aspects of their work.

Abundance-based change

100

This model of organizational structure is characterized by centralized authority, formalized procedures, and specialized functions, typically found in more rigid, hierarchical systems.

Mechanistic bureaucratic structure?

100

This model for change, developed by Kurt Lewin, includes three stages: unfreeze, change, and refreeze.


Lewin’s Change Model

100

This strategy focuses on finding and acquiring skilled candidates for long-term organizational needs, not just immediate recruitment.


Talent acquisition

100

This term refers to a change that occurs unexpectedly and informally, often arising from unplanned shifts in the organization.


Unplanned change

200

This model promotes a bottom-up, positive approach to organizational change, focusing on what is working well and how it can be expanded.

Appreciative Inquiry Model

200

In this organizational structure, authority is concentrated at the top, often creating a more rigid and controlled environment.


Centralization

200

This widely used framework for designing organizational change focuses on creating urgency, forming a guiding coalition, and consolidating gains, among other steps.

Kotter’s Change Model

200

This process involves assessing and developing employees to ensure the organization has a pool of future leaders.

Succession planning

200

This type of change affects the entire organization, requiring a realignment of structure, culture, or strategy across multiple units.

Organization-Level Change

300

This approach involves leaders believing that employees will resist change unless they are threatened with negative consequences for failing to comply.

Deficit-based change

300

In this type of structure, employees are grouped based on both their functions and product teams simultaneously.

Matrix structure

300

In this type of change, the organization adapts incrementally, refining existing practices without disrupting the overall system

Incremental change

300

This tool gathers feedback from multiple sources, including managers, peers, and direct reports, to assess an individual’s performance.

360 Assessment

300

This change involves small improvements or tweaks to existing systems and processes without disrupting the organization’s core operations.

Incremental Change

400

This type of change is about reshaping the core identity and values of an organization, usually involving shifts in behaviors and mindset.

Culture Change

400

This organizational structure is characterized by a horizontal hierarchy where decision-making is decentralized and employees are empowered across the system.

Flat Organization

400

This organizational model sees companies as constantly adapting to their environment, much like a living organism, in order to thrive.

Complex Adaptive Systems (CAS)

400

This framework ties individual performance directly to rewards, incentivizing high achievers and aligning compensation with organizational goals.

Pay-for-performance model

400

This term refers to changes that involve the overall architecture of relationships, roles, and reporting structures within an organization.


Structural Change

500

This type of change assumes that employees can drive the transformation of the organization by acting as agents of change within their roles.

Change Agents

500

This term refers to the degree of authority and control an employee has over their actions within the organization

Boundary conditions

500

This term refers to large, disruptive changes in the organization that may alter its core structure, processes, or values.

Transformational change

500

This concept refers to the increasing competition between organizations to attract and retain top talent in the market.


War for Talent

500

This process involves intentionally designing activities or actions that align an organization’s future state with its goals.

Planned Change

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