Multiple-choice (10)
1. What are Kotter's published 8 steps for leading change, in order?
- Plan, do, check, act, repeat — five steps
- Urgency, Coalition, Vision, Volunteer army, Remove barriers, Short-term wins, Sustain acceleration, Institute change ✓
- Diagnose, design, deliver
- Vision, mission, values, goals, tactics, metrics, review, repeat
2. What's Kotter's published claim about Step 1 (urgency), and what makes urgency real?
- Urgency is manufactured anxiety
- 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 ✓
- Urgency is unnecessary in volunteer organizations
- Urgency is the same as panic
3. What does Kotter's published guiding coalition need?
- Just the most senior person
- Enough position power, expertise, credibility, and leadership; missing any of the four (typically credibility) produces a change effort that stalls at first real resistance ✓
- Anyone willing to join
- Strictly equal representation
4. What's Kotter's published five-minute test for a strategic vision?
- It must be exactly five minutes long
- 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 ✓
- Vision must be revised every five minutes
- Five minutes of debate per decision
5. What's the published refinement of Step 4 in Kotter's 2012/2014 revision?
- Send more emails
- 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 ✓
- Authorize compliance
- Hire a consultant
6. What's Kotter's published Step 5, and what's the typical Lodge failure?
- Add more meetings
- 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 ✓
- Generate more documentation
- Wait for the resisters to leave
7. What are the requirements for a Kotter short-term win?
- Anything that happened recently
- 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 ✓
- A formal report
- Approval from the Grand Lodge
8. What's the most common change failure Kotter observed, addressed by Step 7?
- Starting too late
- 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 ✓
- Spending too much money
- Overcommunication
9. What's Maxwell's published Law of Navigation?
- Anyone can lead with enough training
- 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 ✓
- Leaders must captain every voyage personally
- Navigation is for naval contexts only
10. What's Maxwell's published Law of the Picture?
- Use visual aids in presentations
- 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 ✓
- Pictures speak louder than words in ads
- Always carry a camera