Managing Organizational Change: A Multiple Perspective Approach,Palmer Managing Organizational Change, by Palmer/Dunford/Akin, provides managers with an awareness of the issues involved in managing change, moving them beyond "one-best way" approaches and providing them with access to multiple perspectives that they can draw upon in order to enhance their success in producing organizational change. These multiple perspectives provide a theme for the text as well as a framework for the way each chapter outlines different options open to managers in helping them to identify, in a reflective way, the actions and choices open to them. The authors favor using multiple perspectives to ensure that change managers are not trapped by a "one-best way" of approaching change which limits their options for action. Changing organizations is as messy as it is exhilarating, as frustrating as it is satisfying, as muddling-through and creative a process as it is a rational one. This book recognizes these tensions for those involved in managing organizational change. Rather than pretend that they do not exist it confronts them head on, identifying why they are there, how they can be managed and the limits they create for what the manager of organizational change can achieve. Key Features: Chapter Two outlines 6 dominant images and challenges managers of change to identify their own "in-use" images of change and assess their strengths and weaknesses. Chapter Four focuses on what kinds of changes occur in organizations, particularly downsizing and restructuring changes, technological changes, and mergers and acquisitions - the most common types of changes that change managers are likely to experience. The chapter identifies key issues and challenges associated with each, and outlines how for some organizations these changes are strategic and proactive whereas for others they are reactive. Chapter Five outlines a number of "macro" models and techniques for mapping and assessing where changes are needed in an organization, which direct attention to areas like organizational structure, strategy, management skills and styles, communication patterns, reward mechanisms, decision-making procedures, and human resource and cultural modes of interaction. It also outlines other more "micro" tools such as force-field analyses, gap analyses, stakeholder analyses and news-reporter techniques. Chapter Six delves into understanding why people may resist change along with techniques that change managers can use to counteract such responses. Chapters Seven