Organizational
Change Conference Educates Local Leaders
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Professor
Susan Taylor, co-director of
the Center for Human
Capital, Innovation and
Technology, opens up the
conference. |
Managing change in an increasingly
dynamic and turbulent global marketplace
environment can differentiate
organizations that are ultimately
successful from those that are not.
About 75 executives left the Smith
School′s Center for Human Capital,
Innovation and Technology′s Leading
Change at All Levels of the Organization
conference with innovative new ideas and
visions for their organizations.
During the daylong conference, held
in Van Munching Hall on September 30,
2005, participants had the opportunity
to network and learn from those who have
had significant leadership roles in
large scale and dramatic organizational
change efforts.
Keynote Speakers
Included:
Michael D. Brannigan,
President, North American
Solutions Group, Xerox Corp.

Michael D. Brannigan (′70
BSOS), president of
North American Solutions
Group for Xerox Corp.,
discussed Xerox′s dramatic
turnaround through
reorganization and how they
regained their lost
competitiveness. "Our single
biggest investment was in
leadership," said Brannigan.
"Xerox paid for leadership
training for all of its
middle management."
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Ginger Malone, Chief
Nurse Executive, Childrens
Hospitals & Clinics of
Minnesota

Ginger Malone, chief
nurse executive for
Childrens Hospitals and
Clinics of Minnesota, spoke
on the role of leaders in
creating a vision for large
scale culture change through
the experience her hospital
had when initiating a
dramatic patience safety
initiative.
"We created a culture of
safety... trust. It′s about ′what
happened,′ and not ′who was
involved.′ It′s a different way to
lead," said Malone.
Russell Chew, COO, ATO, FAA

Russell Chew, chief
operating officer for Air
Traffic Organization, talked
about leading change through
new structures, business
processes, reporting
relationships and
budgetary/financial
approaches.
After being with American
Airlines for 18 years, Chew
moved to the Federal
Aviation Administration,
where he oversees 38,000
employees. "Challenges are
different at the FAA. They
restructure every few years,
but nothing really changes,"
he said.
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Associate
Professor Paul Tesluk,
co-director of the Center
for Human Capital,
Innovation and Technology,
introduces keynote speaker
Ginger Malone. |
Change is not the domain of only one
sector of our economy or one set of
industries -- as the breadth of the
different types of organizations
represented by our speakers and
panelists attest. Our panelists have all
been members of organizational change
transition teams and can speak to the
role of transition teams in the change
management process and how change agents
can work with leaders to enable change
success, said Paul Tesluk, co-director
of the HCIT Center and associate
professor of management.
Added Susan Taylor, co-director of
the HCIT Center and Deans Professor of
Human Resources, Executives and change
management professionals will have a
chance to hear first-hand the challenges
faced and resolved by other
organizations in sectors such as the
government, health care, electronics and
telecommunications sectors, while
implementing large scale change.
Practical insights from these conference
speakers will enable the participants to
understand how organizational transition
teams for leading change are staffed,
what aspects of change they are
effective in handling as well as the
difficulties they encounter and methods
to overcome them.
The last HCIT conference Leading
through Innovation held on January 23,
2004 generated overwhelming interest and
support. Around 100 participants
attended the conference to listen to
distinguished addresses by Clayton
Christensen, professor of business
administration at the Harvard Business
School on The Innovators Solution, and
Rand Blazer, CEO of BearingPoint on The
CEOs Role in Leading through Innovation.
The HCIT Center also organizes other
events including research breakfasts
which recently featured companies such
as Citigroup on leadership development.
Visit
http://www.rhsmith.umd.edu/hcit
for more information.