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The problem
As Ancient Greek philosopher Heraclitus is said to have observed: “The only constant in life is change“. That is even truer today with all of the change we are experiencing in the world and the impact that that is having on global security, economic conditions, cost of living and people’s wellbeing.
All of that aggravates the problem for organisations trying to adapt to changing circumstances and so having to implement frequent and significant change.
Added to that, the introduction of the statutory duty to minimise psychosocial risks from poor change management has brought the way that organisations manage change into the spotlight.
Organisational change is often treated like a clinical operation: identify the “broken” parts and fix them and consultation commonly occurs only after a definite decision has been made to make a change, regardless of the consequences of the change for employees.
When change is managed poorly eg with a lack of transparency and voice for employees affected, that becomes a psychosocial hazard which can trigger chronic stress and erodes trust.
To mitigate these risks, forward-thinking organisations are looking to move toward more transparent and engaging methods of managing change using a collaborative approach which involves their people in the change process from start to finish.
This is where methodologies like Appreciative Inquiry (AI)—a strengths-based process that views change not as a problem to be solved, but as a potential to be unfolded through the power of reciprocity – can be of value.
Reciprocity: Moving from “Consultation” to “Collaboration”
At the heart of overcoming change-related hazards is the principle of reciprocity. In a workplace context, reciprocity is the mutual exchange of value, ideas, and respect. When integrated into the change process, it moves the dial from complying with “consultation” obligations to engagement in meaningful dialogue.
By practicing reciprocity, leadership offers transparency and a genuine seat at the table; in return, employees offer their institutional knowledge and creative problem-solving. This exchange satisfies formal consultation obligations while building the psychological safety necessary to innovate.
This is a feature of our BETTER Workplace Teams process. It is essentially a representative group of management and employees who work together on projects to make their workplace better for everyone.
The 5-D Cycle and the Power of Co-Design
Appreciative Inquiry flips the change management process from a deficit mindset (what’s wrong and how do we fix it) to a strengths mindset (what is working and how do we build on that to get the best result). it operates through a structured framework known as the 5-D Cycle. When infused with reciprocity and co-design, it significantly mitigates the risks of poor change management.
Define (Identify the challenge)
Be clear about the challenge facing the organisation so that people understand what that is and can engage in action to address it.
Discovery (The Search for the Best):
Undertake a stocktake of your organisation’s strengths that can be leveraged to address the challenge in a positive way and areas for development.
Dream (Envisioning What Might Be):
Using the strengths identified, the team imagines what good will look like in the context of the challenge ie the outcomes that are to be sought from the process.
Design (Co-Designing What Should Be):
This is where co-design becomes the primary vehicle for buy-in. Participants collaborate to build the “social architecture” of the new system. When employees help design the processes they will eventually use, “resistance” vanishes because they are protecting a system they helped create.
Destiny (Delivering What Will Be):
The final stage focuses on implementing the new system in collaboration with ownership by all parties.
Overcoming Risks through Empowerment
Integrating AI and reciprocity acts as a protective factor against psychosocial hazards in three key ways:
1. Satisfying Consultation Obligations: Authentic co-design ensures that consultation is deep and iterative, meeting safety standards by involving workers in every step that affects their health and wellbeing.
2. Agency and Autonomy: Powerlessness is the root of change-related stress. Reciprocity restores agency, giving employees a sense of control over their professional environment.
3. Sustainable Buy-In: Traditional change management “sells” a vision; AI and reciprocity “build” one. Buy-in is no longer an uphill battle because the change belongs to everyone.
Conclusion
Change doesn’t have to be a hazard but poor change management has been identified as a psychosocial hazard because it is too often done “to employees” rather than “with employees”.
Switching the conversation to a collaborative process changes that.
And there are lots of tools like the Appreciative Inquiry process that are freely available to help build that collaborative spirit and positive outcomes.
If you would like to explore how we can help you to make yours a BETTER Workplace and manage change with psychosocial safety and engagement, contact us using the form below to arrange a chat.
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PosWork
A Division of Ridgeline Human Resources Pty Ltd
ABN : 24 091 644 094
info@poswork.com.au
0438 533 311
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