Leadership
What nobody tells you about change
Most change efforts fail not because of strategy but because of people.

Priya Nair
Managing partner

Introduction
We've been involved in dozens of organizational change efforts. Restructures, strategy pivots, cultural transformations, leadership transitions. And in almost every case, the thing that determined whether the change worked had nothing to do with the quality of the plan.
It had to do with people. Specifically, with whether the people who needed to change actually did.
The myth of the change plan
Most organizations approach change the same way. They design the new state — the new structure, the new strategy, the new operating model. They build a change plan — communications, training, milestones. They launch the change with a town hall and a leadership message. And then they wonder why, six months later, the organization is still largely operating the way it always did.
The problem is that the change plan addresses the visible part of change — the structures, the processes, the communications. It doesn't address the invisible part — the beliefs, the habits, the unspoken agreements about how things work around here.
What actually drives change
In our experience, change happens when three things are true simultaneously.
People understand why the change is necessary. Not the official reason — the real reason. The one that makes sense when you understand the competitive pressure, the financial reality, or the strategic imperative behind the decision. People are smart. They can tell when they're being given a sanitized version of the truth. When they are, they disengage.
People believe the change will stick. One of the most common reasons people don't change their behavior is that they don't believe the change is real. They've seen initiatives launched and abandoned before. They've learned to wait and see. The only way to break this pattern is consistent leadership behavior over time — not a launch event.
People can see what's in it for them. Change asks people to give something up — certainty, status, familiar ways of working. For most people, that's a real loss. Acknowledging that loss and being honest about what people are being asked to sacrifice is more effective than pretending the change is purely positive.
What we tell our clients
Before you launch your next change effort, ask yourself: is my leadership team genuinely committed to this? Not to the plan — to the actual change. To doing things differently themselves.
If the answer is yes, you have a fighting chance. If the answer is no, fix that first.


