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NM Freemason · Skills & Drills · Chapter 71

Kotter's 8-Step Process: the published workhorse for leading change

Drawn from published Masonic monitor content. See site Credits for source citations.

Vocabulary (12)

Kotter's 8-Step Process (the published sequence)
John Kotter's published eight steps for leading change, in order: (1) Create a sense of urgency. (2) Build a guiding coalition. (3) Form a strategic vision and initiatives. (4) Enlist a volunteer army. (5) Enable action by removing barriers. (6) Generate short-term wins. (7) Sustain acceleration. (8) Institute change. The published claim: the sequence matters; skipping a step or running them out of order produces predictable failure modes. The 1996 book and the 2012 revision keep the order; later editions refine the language but not the structure.
Step 1: Create a sense of urgency
Kotter's published first step, and the most-skipped. Urgency is not manufactured anxiety; it's a clear, concrete, current reason that staying the same costs more than changing. The published claim: roughly half of all change failures trace to insufficient urgency at the start. The Lodge application: "we should refresh the candidate retention process" produces no urgency; "we lost five of the last eight new MMs within two years of raising" produces it. The urgency has to be data the room can verify.
Step 2: Build a guiding coalition
Kotter's published second step: assemble a small group with enough position power, expertise, credibility, and leadership to lead the change. Not a committee in the formal sense — a working coalition. The published failure mode: the leader who tries to lead change alone, or who pulls together a coalition that lacks one of the four ingredients (typically credibility), produces a change effort that stalls the first time it hits real resistance. In a Lodge: the coalition usually includes the WM, one or two Past Masters with credibility, and one or two newer brothers whose stake is in the future.
Step 3: Form a strategic vision and initiatives
Kotter's published third step: develop a vision of the future state that's specific enough to direct action but general enough to inspire effort. The published five-minute test: a good vision can be described to someone in five minutes and produce both understanding and interest. If you can't, the vision isn't ready. Initiatives are the specific work streams that move toward the vision; vision without initiatives is wishing, initiatives without vision is busywork.
Step 4: Enlist a volunteer army
Kotter's published fourth step (refined in the 2012 revision from "communicate the vision"): get a large group of people genuinely volunteering for the work, not just receiving the announcement. The published claim: change scales through voluntary commitment, not through hierarchical authority. The Lodge application: the change leader who announces a new direction at one stated meeting and expects compliance is working in the old model; the one who recruits twelve brothers to actively carry the work is in Kotter's model.
Step 5: Enable action by removing barriers
Kotter's published fifth step: identify the structures, processes, and people-level obstacles that prevent the change and remove them. The published failure mode: the leader who announces the change but leaves the old incentive structure, the old reporting line, or the old veto-holder in place — change blocked by a structure nobody bothered to update. In a Lodge: the new mentoring program that fails because nobody re-allocated the time at stated meetings, or the new website blocked by a single brother who has the password and isn't sharing it.
Step 6: Generate short-term wins
Kotter's published sixth step: deliberately produce visible, unambiguous wins within the first six to eighteen months. The published claim: short-term wins are not a nicety; they are the fuel that keeps the volunteer army committed, the skeptics neutralized, and the coalition supplied with evidence. Wins must be visible (others can see them), unambiguous (not subject to interpretation), and clearly related to the change effort. A win that requires explanation isn't a win.
Step 7: Sustain acceleration
Kotter's published seventh step: use the credibility from short-term wins to tackle bigger, harder change; don't declare victory too early. The published failure mode (the most common in his observations): a few visible wins lead the leader and the coalition to relax, the change loses momentum, and the organization quietly slides back toward the old paradigm. The Lodge equivalent: a refreshed candidate retention process that worked for six months, then nobody kept the cadence, and the practice quietly stopped within a year.
Step 8: Institute change (anchor in culture)
Kotter's published eighth step: anchor the new practices in the organization's culture so they persist after the champion leaves. The published claim: cultural anchoring is the longest step, often taking three to five years, and it can't be hurried. Anchoring means new behaviors that are now "how we do things," reinforced by stories told about the change, training, hiring, and selection. The Lodge application is in chapter 74; here, Kotter's frame is the eighth step that closes the loop.
Law of Navigation (Maxwell, Law 4)
Maxwell's published fourth Irrefutable Law: "Anyone can steer the ship, but it takes a leader to chart the course." The published distinction: management steers (executes the plan against the present conditions); leadership navigates (sees the conditions and the destination together and plots a route that may be different from what was planned). Kotter's 8 steps are the navigator's plan; the steerer follows them. The Lodge needs both, but the change leader's primary role is navigator.
Law of the Picture (Maxwell, Law 13)
Maxwell's published thirteenth Irrefutable Law: "People do what people see." The published claim: brothers learn the actual norms of the Lodge from what they see senior brothers do, not from what they hear said. A change leader who announces the new direction and then continues to behave consistently with the old direction has just told the room which model is real. Behavior is the medium; the announcement is incidental.
70% failure rate (Kotter's published finding)
The published claim from Kotter's research across hundreds of organizations: roughly 70% of significant change efforts fail to reach their goals. The published causes, in order of frequency: insufficient urgency, weak coalition, vague vision, poor communication of the vision, unaddressed barriers, no short-term wins, declaring victory too early, and failure to anchor change in culture. Each of the 8 steps maps directly to one of these failure modes.

Sequences (4)

Running Kotter's 8 steps for a real Lodge change

Use this as the working sequence for a significant Lodge change (a new program, a meeting move, a major committee restructure). The steps are in order; running them out of order is the published failure mode.
  1. Step 1 — Urgency: write the why-now in one sentence with verifiable data. Then test it on three brothers individually; do they feel the urgency, or do they shrug? If they shrug, you don't have Step 1 yet.
  2. Step 2 — Coalition: recruit four to seven brothers covering position, expertise, credibility, and leadership. At least one Past Master, at least one newer brother. The coalition meets before any public proposal.
  3. Step 3 — Vision: write the future-state vision in one paragraph that passes the five-minute test. Test it on someone outside the coalition. Did he understand it? Was he interested?
  4. Step 4 — Volunteer army: recruit twelve to twenty brothers who will actively carry pieces of the work, not just vote yes. Each volunteer gets a specific role.
  5. Step 5 — Remove barriers: identify the structures (bylaws, committees, calendars, budgets) and people (gatekeepers, veto-holders) that block the change. Update or work around each one before launching.
  6. Step 6 — Short-term wins: design two or three visible wins for the first six months. Announce them when they happen. Wins build credibility; absence of wins evaporates it.
  7. Step 7 — Sustain: at month six, do not declare victory. Use the credibility from the wins to tackle the next harder thing. Most change dies here; the discipline is to keep going.
  8. Step 8 — Anchor: at month eighteen, audit what's now "how we do things" vs. what reverted. Reinforce the new norms with stories, officer selection, and rituals. Chapter 74 covers this step in depth.

Building the guiding coalition (Step 2 in detail)

The coalition is the most-skipped step and the one that most reliably determines whether the change survives. Use this sequence to assemble one well.
  1. Identify position power: who can authorize the change to actually happen? Usually the WM, possibly the District Deputy, sometimes the Grand Lodge if the change requires approval.
  2. Identify expertise: who knows the specifics — the bylaws, the calendar conflicts, the financial implications, the operational details? You need at least one brother who can speak to the practical level.
  3. Identify credibility: who do the brothers trust? At least one Past Master with established trust; preferably one whose endorsement carries weight even with the resistant cohort.
  4. Identify leadership: who can keep the work moving when the rest of the coalition gets busy or discouraged? Usually one brother whose role is the operational anchor.
  5. Test the coalition. Walk a hypothetical objection from a known resister past the group. If the coalition fumbles it, the coalition isn't strong enough yet. If it answers well, you're ready for Step 3.

Diagnosing a stalled change against Kotter's 8 steps

When a change effort is losing energy, walk the eight steps backward to find where it actually stalled. Most stalls are at one of two predictable steps.
  1. Is the urgency still real to the room? If brothers have forgotten why this matters, Step 1 has eroded. Re-establish the current cost of staying the same.
  2. Is the coalition still active and aligned? If the coalition stopped meeting or split, Step 2 broke. Reconvene or rebuild.
  3. Can brothers still articulate the vision? If you ask three random brothers what the change is for and you get three different answers, Step 3 needs revisiting.
  4. Are volunteers still doing the work, or has it concentrated back on the leader? If the leader is the only one carrying it, Step 4 collapsed. Recruit again.
  5. Have any new barriers appeared? Structures and people change; what was clear at month two may be blocked at month eight. Step 5 is ongoing, not one-time.
  6. Has there been a visible win in the last three months? If not, Step 6 needs attention. Design and deliver one.
  7. Was victory declared too early? Step 7 failure shows up as quiet drift back to the old paradigm. If you see drift, name it and re-engage the coalition.

The Law of the Picture audit — what are you actually showing?

Law 13 says brothers do what brothers see. Use this sequence to audit whether your behavior matches the change you're asking for.
  1. List the three to five specific behavior changes the new direction requires. Be concrete; "better communication" doesn't qualify, "reply within 48 hours to every brother's request" does.
  2. Audit your own behavior against each change. Are you doing the new thing? Honestly? Or are you announcing it and continuing the old thing?
  3. Audit the coalition's behavior against each change. Senior brothers in the coalition who keep doing the old thing have just told the room which model is real.
  4. Identify the gaps. Where your behavior matches the announced change, the change is real. Where it doesn't, you're telling the room the change isn't real.
  5. Fix your own behavior first. Then call the coalition to do the same. Then, and only then, ask the broader room to change. Law 13 in operation.

Multiple-choice (10)

1. What are Kotter's published 8 steps for leading change, in order?
  1. Plan, do, check, act, repeat — five steps
  2. Urgency, Coalition, Vision, Volunteer army, Remove barriers, Short-term wins, Sustain acceleration, Institute change ✓
  3. Diagnose, design, deliver
  4. Vision, mission, values, goals, tactics, metrics, review, repeat
2. What's Kotter's published claim about Step 1 (urgency), and what makes urgency real?
  1. Urgency is manufactured anxiety
  2. Urgency is a clear, concrete, current reason that staying the same costs more than changing — "we lost five of eight new MMs within two years" produces urgency; "we should refresh retention" does not ✓
  3. Urgency is unnecessary in volunteer organizations
  4. Urgency is the same as panic
3. What does Kotter's published guiding coalition need?
  1. Just the most senior person
  2. Enough position power, expertise, credibility, and leadership; missing any of the four (typically credibility) produces a change effort that stalls at first real resistance ✓
  3. Anyone willing to join
  4. Strictly equal representation
4. What's Kotter's published five-minute test for a strategic vision?
  1. It must be exactly five minutes long
  2. A good vision can be described to someone in five minutes and produce both understanding and interest; if you can't, the vision isn't ready ✓
  3. Vision must be revised every five minutes
  4. Five minutes of debate per decision
5. What's the published refinement of Step 4 in Kotter's 2012/2014 revision?
  1. Send more emails
  2. Enlist a volunteer army — get a large group genuinely volunteering for the work, not just receiving the announcement; change scales through voluntary commitment, not hierarchical authority ✓
  3. Authorize compliance
  4. Hire a consultant
6. What's Kotter's published Step 5, and what's the typical Lodge failure?
  1. Add more meetings
  2. Enable action by removing barriers — the change blocked by an unrevised incentive structure, an old reporting line, or the one brother holding the password; structure that wasn't updated kills change ✓
  3. Generate more documentation
  4. Wait for the resisters to leave
7. What are the requirements for a Kotter short-term win?
  1. Anything that happened recently
  2. Visible (others can see them), unambiguous (not subject to interpretation), and clearly related to the change effort — a win that requires explanation isn't a win ✓
  3. A formal report
  4. Approval from the Grand Lodge
8. What's the most common change failure Kotter observed, addressed by Step 7?
  1. Starting too late
  2. A few visible wins lead the leader and coalition to relax, the change loses momentum, and the organization quietly slides back to the old paradigm — declaring victory too early ✓
  3. Spending too much money
  4. Overcommunication
9. What's Maxwell's published Law of Navigation?
  1. Anyone can lead with enough training
  2. Anyone can steer the ship, but it takes a leader to chart the course — management steers, leadership navigates; the change leader's primary role is navigator ✓
  3. Leaders must captain every voyage personally
  4. Navigation is for naval contexts only
10. What's Maxwell's published Law of the Picture?
  1. Use visual aids in presentations
  2. People do what people see — brothers learn the actual norms from what senior brothers do, not what they hear said; behavior is the medium, the announcement is incidental ✓
  3. Pictures speak louder than words in ads
  4. Always carry a camera