Last week was a busy week. We began work with a new client and I was battling a mini-depression over an assessment that my profession might add no value to society.

My battle started with an article I read about Wall Street wizards, hedge funds and derivatives. The author, an Andy Rooney-type, claimed if a person couldn’t explain what they did for a living in two sentences, they weren’t adding value to society. Farmers, doctors, plumbers and janitors were all on the good list. “Liquidity tranche default analysts” were definitely on the bad list.

So if I can’t define “organizational change management consultant” in two sentences, does this mean I am not adding value to society? Does my mother-in-law have any idea what I do when I say I:

“Help clients’ managers lead their people quickly through organizational changes. I help by being a project manager, strategist, writer, teacher, coach, scorecard keeper, presenter, analyst, tactician, assessor, trainer, and graphic artist.”

The answer is no. Those two sentences, although accurate, really don’t get the meaning across. I’m afraid I have failed the author’s test. I need more than two sentences.

If unbound by the two sentence definition constraint, I frame a conversation about the work to be done with questions about an organization’s relative potential for success:

  1. Does it have the right goals and plans? Are the right goals established for the situation? Will the plans enable the organization to reach the goals?
  2. Do people understand what they are to do? Great plans that aren’t understood have no value. How does the leader ensure people understand the plan? Are they organized to succeed and have all the enablers necessary to achieve the goals.
  3. How engaged are people to achieve the goals and work the plans? The right plans, even if well understood, will not be successful if people don’t want to make the necessary effort.

Depending on the answers, the organizational change management consultant’s job changes greatly. At the most general, the consultant’s job is to help the organization answer yes to all these questions. The specific work changes based on the nature of the challenge, the scope of services being retained, and the tactics required.

Regardless of the author’s perspective on whether certain jobs add value to society, there is value to an organization in moving past change and returning to its mission. The faster the move, the more value is created. If a consultant can speed that move, the consultant helps create value.

As an aside, I decided on Sunday the author was wrong – which just happened to be Father’s Day. Sometimes more than two sentences are needed. To prove the point – try defining “father” in two sentences. Or – obviously – “mother.” ;-)  

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