Managing Transitions: Making the
Most of Change, 4th Edition. By William Bridges, Ph.D., with
Susan Bridges. Da Capo. $16.99.
Although published by Da
Capo in a division called “Lifelong Books,” the new edition of Managing Transitions is actually an
example of a beyond-lifelong book: William
Bridges died in 2013, and this iteration of a book that originally dates to
1991 was prepared by his widow and consulting-business colleague. Although
somewhat adapted for the increasingly frenetic pace of the Information Age and
the companies striving to succeed and grow in it, the book retains the
essential insights of earlier editions and shares their significant pluses and
somewhat less prominent weaknesses.
The book’s title and
subtitle are a trifle misleading, implying a certain equivalence between
transition and change, when in fact Bridges’ basic argument is that the words
refer to very different matters: “change” is situational and essentially
external, while transition is a psychological “three-phase process that people
go through as they internalize and come to terms with the details of the new
situation that the change brings about.” Thus, change is comparatively fast and
reasonably easy to pinpoint; transition is slow, individualized, and takes
place over time, often considerable time.
Managing Transitions is specifically about workplace change,
although elements of the book could be applied to personal circumstances as
well – even more so now that so many people carry their work with them,
figuratively and sometimes literally, wherever they go and at all times. The
three basic elements of transition that Bridges identifies are
ending/losing/letting go, “the Neutral Zone,” and a new beginning. The first of
these requires separation from old ways of thinking or behaving to which people
have become attached – the parallel between business processes and
psychological counseling is especially clear here – with the result that staff
members can become scared, depressed, anxious, confused and otherwise unable to
handle the necessary movement to whatever new circumstances have arisen. One of
Bridges’ best insights has to do with the importance of respecting this phase
by creating a clear demarcation between then and now – and treating the past
with respect rather than dismissiveness, thus helping make up for the sense of
loss that people are sure to feel when the way things used to be (which worked
very well for some time for them and the company) is no longer satisfactory (which
is not the same as no longer being valued).
Getting this first phase
right is crucial to moving into the rather inelegantly named “Neutral Zone”
(something along the lines of “Transition Zone” would have been better and
clearer). Here, risk and opportunity are in balance as people vacillate between
the old that is gone and the new that has not yet fully taken hold. This is the
time for exploring alternative ways of doing things so that the new beginning –
in which employees take on new, more-suitable-for-the-future identities and
behaviors – can form and solidify. Interestingly, Bridges makes a distinction
between “start” and “beginning,” arguing that starts are scheduled and result
from decisions, while beginnings occur gradually and on a schedule determined
by psychological adaptation rather than fixed timetables.
Bridges’ emphasis on the
human side of change is what still makes Managing
Transitions a strong book, and the specific tools, lists and
recommendations here remain highly useful and reasonably easy for companies to
implement. However, the way Bridges parses his important distinctions between
“change” and “transition,” and between “start” and “beginning,” is less than
fully clear and smacks somewhat of semantic nitpicking. He is also somewhat
unclear about how the three transition phases work, at one point saying they
must occur in order and at another point saying they can all take place in
overlapping fashion, essentially at the same time. Also, the emphasis here on
individual psychological transitions, a significant strength in some ways,
becomes a weakness to the extent that Managing
Transitions does not effectively show how major change, especially rapid
change, has huge effects beyond the individual – that is, effects on employees’
collective identity and on a
company’s shared values and
behaviors. The imbalance between the individualized emphasis of this book and
the collective emphasis of many others is salutary to the extent that other
change-management books tend to overlook individual psychological impact unless
it looms so large as to disrupt the whole working environment. However,
companies are ultimately collections of individuals functioning in ways that
are greater (one hopes) than the sum of the individual parts. Bridges’ redressing
of the balance between individual and company-wide effects of change and
transition is a very good thing, but his comparative neglect of the real-world
nature of companies as collective entities makes Managing Transitions less readily applicable to the often-frenetic
pace of workday circumstances than it might have been, whether in its original
incarnation or in its latest update.
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