The Doppler Quarterly Special Edition 2019 | Page 32

delay tactics such as extensive analysis, over engineering, or the addition of unneeded complexity. Their personal goals no longer align with the company’s goals. They seek to preserve the status quo at any cost, regardless of their employer’s business objectives. Phase 3: Integration Eventually, the chaos of realization passes. Integration is the phase where employees and stakeholders start to discover how the cloud adoption program benefits them spe- cifically. The group learns that cloud skills are in high demand and increase their value in the marketplace. People start to have a vested interest in a positive project outcome. They set expectations and norms on others and try to align to the company’s new way of thinking. Group members in this stage may need more support than might be expected. They can become easily frustrated when things fail to work perfectly the first time. Although the team may feel good, they are also concerned that the initiative may fail, forcing them back to the uncertainties of the Realization phase. The employees need reassurance and new methods for forging through the unplanned difficulties of this phase. Phase 4: New Confidence The final of the four Performance Curve phases is a transition point where cloud becomes the new norm. If the change is well conceived and assimilated, the group is in agreement and performance is in full alignment to the new cloud established practices. They feel a sense of accomplishment and are open and honest about what’s at stake should they be unsuccessful. Those directly involved in the project start to actively recruit new believers. Their implementation crawl is becoming more of a fast walk or slow jog. Your People Engagement Plan — Defining When and How to Engage Employees and Stakeholders A thoughtful plan to engage employees and stakeholders is a critical component to a successful cloud adoption program. Leadership needs to commission a governing body of cloud deciders, or what we call a Cloud Business Office (CBO), to draft a plan to ensure the right people are receiving the right message at the right time so they are prepared for what lies ahead. A thoughtful change strategy needs to address three dimensions of the people engage- ment problem. First and foremost, management needs to identify who is impacted by the cloud. For example, the company must categorize their employees into distinct stakeholder groups such as program sponsors, change agents, influencers, resistors and those directly transitioned. Secondly, management needs to outline the many activities needed to positively influ- ence people adoption. These activities vary in complexity and implementation effort. Each needs to break down its messaging and purpose by key people and stakeholder groups. We find the planning process more powerful if management organizes and 30 | THE DOPPLER | SPECIAL EDITION 2019