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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 8-page paper discusses change management in the ophthalmic industry. Included is an overview of the industry in general, as well as the concept of corporate genetic code and its impact on change and the 10 principles of effective change management. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTdenmgmnt.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
basic steps for change management as it pertains to an ophthalmic practice. Though the concept of change management is pretty consistent across industries, its a good idea to have a
thorough understanding of the "macro" view. In other words, its helpful to understand what current trends are in a particular industry, before leaping into effective change management strategy.
Though the assumption right now is that the specific ophthalmic practice about to undergo change has a good understanding of its vision, goals and
objectives (and why theres a need for change in the first place), another important step is an overview of whats going on industry wide. With an understanding of the industry,
change management in an organization can better fit into a big picture. In this paper, well examine the trends that might be
impacting the specific ophthalmic practice at hand and discuss criteria for managing change both in the business and industry. Well also examine the impact of denominator management and corporate genetic
coding on change, and then put the principals of effective change into the context of this specific practice. At the end, its hoped to have an understanding of how change
management will impact not only the ophthalmic practice, but this practices position in relationship to the industry. The Ophthalmologic Industry -- Trends
As with many health-care oriented industries, ophthalmology is being buffeted by increased costs, along with increased demands from insurance providers in terms of the delivery of health care (Pinto, 2005).
Added to that is the ever-changing technology (Pinto, 2005). For example, the concept of ocular mapping, in place of eye drops, was just some fantasy back in 2000. Today, its
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