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  2. Change management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Change_management

    Change management involves implementing approaches to prepare and support individuals, teams, and leaders in making organizational change. Change management is useful when organizations are considering major changes such as restructure, redirecting or redefining resources, updating or refining business process and systems, or introducing or ...

  3. Change control board - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Change_control_board

    The authority of the Change Control Board may vary from project to project (see e.g. Consensus-based decision making), but decisions reached by the Change Control Board are often accepted as final and binding. A typical Change Control Board might consist of the development manager, the test lead, and a product manager.

  4. Theory U - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory_U

    The U Process of Co-sensing and Co-creating — Presencing. Theory U is a change management method and the title of a book by Otto Scharmer. [1] Scharmer with colleagues at MIT conducted 150 interviews with entrepreneurs and innovators in science, business, and society and then extended the basic principles into a theory of learning and management, which he calls Theory U. [1] The principles ...

  5. Theory of Change - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory_of_change

    People developing their theory of change in a workshop. A theory of change (ToC) is an explicit theory of how and why it is thought that a social policy or program activities lead to outcomes and impacts. [1] ToCs are used in the design of programs and program evaluation, across a range of policy areas.

  6. Formula for change - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Formula_for_change

    The formula for change (or "the change formula") provides a model to assess the relative strengths affecting the likely success of organisational change programs. The formula was created by David Gleicher while he was working at management consultants Arthur D. Little in the early 1960s, [1] refined by Kathie Dannemiller in the 1980s, [2] and further developed by Steve Cady.

  7. Transtheoretical model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transtheoretical_model

    The transtheoretical model is also known by the abbreviation "TTM" [2] and sometimes by the term "stages of change", [3] although this latter term is a synecdoche since the stages of change are only one part of the model along with processes of change, levels of change, etc. [1] [4] Several self-help books—Changing for Good (1994), [5 ...

  8. Appreciative inquiry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appreciative_inquiry

    Appreciative inquiry (AI) is a model that seeks to engage stakeholders in self-determined change.According to Gervase Bushe, professor of leadership and organization development at the Beedie School of Business and a researcher on the topic, "AI revolutionized the field of organization development and was a precursor to the rise of positive organization studies and the strengths based movement ...

  9. Command and control (management) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Command_and_control...

    Key critics of the command-and-control management ethos and techniques include members of the systems-thinking community and associated thinkers, including W. Edwards Deming, [1] John Seddon, [2] Kōnosuke Matsushita, [3] Taiichi Ohno, Russell L. Ackoff, [4] Donella Meadows, [5] Alfie Kohn, [6] and the outspoken Vanguard Method practitioner ...