John Kotter is an emeritus from Harvard Business School where he started teaching in 1972.[1] He is the founder of Kotter International, and started his business in 2010 with locations in Cambridge Massachusetts and Seattle Washington. He currently serves as Chairman of Kotter International alongside CEO, Rick Western, Chief Commercial Officer, Kathy Gersch, Chief Financial Officer, Tanya Kruger and many more.[5]
Kotter is also an author, speaker, and entrepreneur in the lines of business and leadership.[1]
Personal life
Kotter lives in Boston, Massachusetts with his wife, Nancy Dearman. They have two children, Caroline and Jonathan.[6]
Written work
Kotter is the author of 21 books, as listed below. 12 of these have been business bestsellers and two of which are overall New York Times bestsellers.[5]
Kotter, John P. (1974). Mayors In Action. John Wiley & Sons Inc. ISBN047150540-4.
Kotter, John P. (1979). Power in Management. Amacom Books. ISBN0814455077.
Kotter, John P. (1979). Organization - Texts, Cases, and Readings on the Management of Organizational Design and Change. R. D. Irwin. ISBN0256022267.
Kotter, John P. (1986). The General Managers. Free Press. ISBN0029182301.
Kotter, John P. (1988). The Leadership Factor. Free Press. ISBN0029183316.
Kotter, John P. (1990). A Force for Change. Free Press. ISBN0029184657.
Kotter, John P. (1991) [1978]. Self Assessment & Career Development. Prentice Hall. ISBN0138031487.
Kotter, John P. (1995). The New Rules. Free Press. ISBN0029175860.
Kotter, John P. (1996). Leading Change. Harvard Business School Press. ISBN978-0-87584-747-4.
Kotter, John P. (1997). Matsushita Leadership: Lessons from the 20th Century's Most Remarkable Entrepreneur. New York: The Free Press. ISBN9780684834603. OCLC35620432.
Kotter, John P. (1999). John P. Kotter on What Leaders Really Do.
Kotter, John P. (2002). The Heart of Change.
Kotter, John P. (2006). Our Iceberg is Melting.
Kotter, John P. (2008) [1985]. Power and Influence. Free Press. ISBN978-1439146798.
Kotter, John P. (2008). A Sense of Urgency. United States: Harvard Business School Publishing. ISBN978-1-4221-7971-0.
In Leading Change (1996), and subsequently in The Heart of Change (2002), Kotter describes an eight stage model of successful change in which he seeks to support managers to lead change and to understand how people accept, engage with and maintain successful organisational change. The eight stages or steps include the creation of "a sense of urgency" and the use of "short-term wins".[7]
Short-term wins, within a 6–18 month window, are considered necessary because "[an] organization has to realize some benefits from [a] change effort to maintain stakeholder commitment".[8] Kotter asserts that to be useful or influential, short-term wins need to be "visible and unambiguous" as well as "closely related to the change effort".[9]: 121–2 Arguing against a belief that there is a "trade-off" between wins in the short-term and wins in the long-term, Kotter argues from experience that both are achievable.[9]: 125