The purpose of this report is to diagnose the need for organisational change in a rapidly growing manufacturing company and to outline a structured approach for moving from a traditional, hierarchical structure to a learning organisation. The company currently employs a top-down management style with limited employee input, outdated systems and no investment in training following international expansion to 500 employees. Using established change management frameworks, the discussion addresses the requirement for change, the characteristics of learning organisations, planning and implementation processes, and strategies for sustaining change.
A. The Need for Change: Systems Contingency Model
The systems contingency model posits that organisations must align their internal systems with external environmental demands to maintain effectiveness. In this case, rapid sales growth from $1 million to $100 million, combined with international expansion, has created misalignments between the company’s rigid hierarchies and the need for innovation and adaptability. Antiquated inventory systems and absence of employee development further indicate that current structures no longer fit the complex, dynamic context. Without adjustment, performance risks decline as global competition intensifies.
B. Learning Organisations versus Traditional Organisations
A traditional organisation typically features centralised decision-making, rigid hierarchies and limited employee empowerment, with knowledge concentrated at senior levels. In contrast, a learning organisation promotes continuous learning, shared vision and experimentation across all levels, enabling rapid adaptation and innovation (Senge, 1990).
The company currently occupies the first stage of Woolner’s five-stage model, the unaware organisation. At this stage, firms have not yet recognised the value of systematic learning or the gaps in their capability. The absence of training programmes and encouragement for creativity demonstrates that leadership has not identified learning as essential for competitiveness.
To progress through Woolner’s stages, the company should apply Senge’s five disciplines. Personal mastery would involve developing individual skills through targeted training. Mental models require challenging assumptions about top-down control. Building shared vision engages employees in defining future goals. Team learning encourages collaborative problem-solving, while systems thinking helps employees understand interconnections between processes and international operations.
C. End Result and Nature of Change: Balogun and Hope-Hailey’s Model
Using Balogun and Hope-Hailey’s model, the appropriate quadrant is the evolution quadrant, representing a transformational end result achieved through incremental change. This combination suits the scenario because the company must fundamentally alter its culture and structure, yet an abrupt, big-bang transformation risks resistance in a large, internationally dispersed workforce.
Evolution is appropriate because incremental adjustments allow time to embed new behaviours, update systems and develop learning capabilities without destabilising ongoing operations.
D. Application of the Action Research Model
The action research model provides a cyclical approach to change. The first step, diagnosis, would involve gathering data on current processes and employee perceptions through surveys and system audits. In the second step, action planning, consultants and leaders would jointly design interventions such as new training initiatives. The third step, action taking, implements pilot programmes in selected departments. Finally, evaluation measures outcomes against innovation and efficiency metrics, feeding back into further cycles.
E. Recommended Innovation Strategies
Two suitable innovation strategies are the introduction of cross-functional teams for continuous improvement and the adoption of digital collaboration platforms. Cross-functional teams would enable employees to experiment with solutions to inventory and process issues, directly addressing the lack of creativity.
Management would use cross-functional teams by assigning members from operations, logistics and sales to review inventory workflows. Regular meetings would generate ideas, test small-scale changes and share learning, gradually shifting the culture towards empowerment.
F. Application of Kotter’s Eight-Step Model
Four steps of Kotter’s model are particularly relevant. Creating a sense of urgency involves presenting data on lost efficiency due to outdated systems. Forming a powerful guiding coalition requires assembling influential managers and emerging employee champions. Developing and communicating a vision would articulate the benefits of becoming a learning organisation. Empowering broad-based action includes removing hierarchical barriers by authorising teams to implement improvements.
G. Sustaining Change through the Five Pillars
The five pillars of sustainable change comprise leadership commitment, employee engagement, continuous communication, capability development and aligned systems. Leadership commitment is demonstrated through visible support for learning initiatives. Employee engagement ensures staff participate in decision-making. Continuous communication keeps everyone informed of progress. Capability development is realised via ongoing training. Aligned systems involve replacing antiquated software with platforms that support knowledge sharing. Together, these pillars embed the learning culture.
In conclusion, addressing misalignments identified through contingency thinking and systematically applying Woolner’s, Senge’s, Balogun and Hope-Hailey’s, action research and Kotter’s frameworks offers a coherent pathway. Implementing innovation strategies and sustaining change via the five pillars should enable the company to become adaptive and innovative while reducing the risks associated with rapid growth.
References
- Balogun, J. and Hope Hailey, V. (2004) Exploring Strategic Change. 2nd edn. Harlow: Financial Times Prentice Hall.
- Kotter, J.P. (1996) Leading Change. Boston: Harvard Business School Press.
- Senge, P.M. (1990) The Fifth Discipline: The Art and Practice of the Learning Organization. New York: Doubleday.
- Woolner, P. (1995) ‘The 5 stages of the learning organization’, in The Learning Organization. Toronto: Woolner Associates.

