Leading Change
by John Kotter
📖 About the book
Leading Change by John Kotter, published in 1996, is widely considered the definitive work on the subject of organizational transformation. Based on decades of observation of both successful and failed corporate changes, Kotter, a Harvard Business School professor, identifies the eight most common errors that leaders make when trying to alter the status quo. To combat these pitfalls, he presents a comprehensive, sequential framework that has become the gold standard for navigating mergers, acquisitions, and strategic overhauls in businesses worldwide.
The core of the book is Kotter's Eight-Step Process for Leading Change. It begins with establishing a Sense of Urgency and creating a powerful Guiding Coalition. The framework then moves through developing a clear vision, communicating that vision for buy-in, and empowering broad-based action by removing obstacles. Finally, Kotter emphasizes the importance of generating Short-Term Wins, consolidating gains to produce more change, and crucially, anchoring the new approaches in the Corporate Culture so the organization doesn't regress to old habits.
Essential for CEOs, project managers, and anyone tasked with driving transformation, this book provides a structured roadmap through the chaos of change. Readers gain value by understanding that skipping steps or rushing the process almost always leads to failure. Real-world applications include identifying and removing structural barriers that contradict the new vision and aligning reward systems to support new behaviors. By systematically applying Kotter’s eight steps, leaders can significantly increase their chances of executing successful, lasting organizational change.
💡 Key takeaways
Initiate any transformation by creating a strong Sense of Urgency, ensuring that the majority of your organization understands why maintaining the status quo is dangerous.
Empower broad-based action by systematically identifying and removing structural obstacles, outdated policies, or resistant managers that block the implementation of the new vision.
Ensure the transformation lasts by deliberately anchoring the new behaviors and processes in the Corporate Culture, making them "the way we do things around here."