Sept October Issue 2016 1 | Page 15

As a leader, you must work to identify specific objections of key stakeholders and diffuse them through education and communication. One key stakeholder group you want to make sure is onboard is your own marketing group. I’ve seen situations where the marketing team was not bought into this new vision and it created havoc for the plan. The outcome of this stage is a general acceptance of the need for change and the willingness to evaluate options. Expect a greater cross section of team members to begin to make a more significant contribution to the transformation during this stage. Action Guide: 1. Establish marketing’s persona as a change agent with a well-researched plan that takes into account all key stakeholders. 2. Communicate often and in many formats such as executive briefings, company meetings, sales meetings, marketing meetings, anecdotes, and case studies. This is a new concept for many companies and as a result, all key stakeholders need to hear the message and the plan. 3. Inclusion is a key tactic that drives gaining commitment. Hold facilitated brainstorming sessions with key marketing personnel to discuss possibilities of a future state of marketing. The outcome of this stage is a detailed plan and implementation begins in earnest. Acceptance: Acceptance of the new strategy occurs as the result of presenting and gaining buy-in of the Roadmap – a complete plan of action for how marketing will help drive revenue. Acceptance is the stage of change where you transition from talking about WHAT you want to do to HOW you are going to do it (turn strategy into action). One of the longer stages of change, Acceptance is characterized by putting more structure and definition around what will change and exactly how it will change, over what period of time and who is accountable for each activity. Action Guide: 1. Outline key strategic objectives of the change, tie each key process or task to the broader objective, and assign accountability. 2. Provide a plan to educate and upskill those who will be effected by the change. Communicate this plan to team members and stakeholders. 3. Create a PR plan to celebrate innovative ideas, key milestones, and next steps. Foster engagement by celebrating successes and highlighting milestones reached. Word of caution: Do NOT try to boil the ocean at this stage. Consider resources, time, cost and your culture when developing an implementation timeline. Acceptance evolves into adoption when strategy turns into action. Adoption: In this stage, stakeholder groups move from “going through the motions” of the new strategy to personally realizing the value of the changes and incorporating this paradigm into their daily roles and strategies. Strictly Marketing Magazine September/October 2016 15