Change is constant, but that does not make it any easier. Companies invest millions in change management strategies, yet employees still push back, projects stall, and frustration builds. The problem is how people experience change. John Kotter, one of the most well-known experts on leadership and change, once told me that people don’t resist change—they resist loss. Whether it is losing familiarity, routine, or control, change can feel like something being taken away rather than an opportunity to grow. That is why so many transformation efforts fail. Leaders focus on logistics, such as new systems, updated workflows, and reorganized teams, without addressing the psychological side of change. When employees do not feel involved in the process, they resist it.
Change Management Challenges: Why People Hold Onto the Past
Change triggers a stress response. Research shows that uncertainty can feel worse than an actual negative outcome. They call this the uncertainty effect. The brain prefers bad news over no news, which is why people often cling to what’s familiar, even when they know change is necessary. This is why organizations fail when they try to implement change through top-down mandates. The moment people feel that change is happening to them rather than with them, resistance kicks in. They push back because they feel out of control.
And history is filled with surprising examples of this. One of the most unusual cases of change resistance comes from the world of aviation. In the 1950s, the British introduced the de Havilland Comet, the world’s first commercial jet airliner. It was a leap forward in aviation technology, faster and quieter than anything before it. But pilots and airlines were hesitant to adopt it. Many felt more comfortable with traditional propeller planes, despite the Comet’s advantages. Airlines delayed purchases, training programs lagged, and public skepticism kept ticket sales lower than expected. Ultimately, the Comet’s early structural failures gave people a reason to stick with what they knew, reinforcing the fear of change. It took years—and the success of rival Boeing’s 707—for commercial jet travel to become the standard. The technology was ready, but people weren’t.
Change Management Failure: The Cost of Change Resistance
Resistance is frustrating and expensive. A McKinsey & Company study found that 70% of change initiatives fail, often because employees don’t buy in. This leads to wasted resources, declining morale, and a workforce that becomes even more skeptical of future changes.
Even in modern organizations, we see how hesitation to embrace change creates major setbacks. Consider the shift to remote work. When the pandemic forced companies to go virtual, many scrambled to implement digital collaboration tools like Zoom, Slack, and Microsoft Teams. But after the initial transition, some organizations insisted on returning to the old way of doing things, enforcing rigid in-office policies that employees had grown resistant to. The result? Talent losses, lower engagement, and a struggle to adapt to hybrid work models that competitors embraced more effectively.
The companies that thrive aren’t necessarily the ones with the best technology or the most resources. They’re the ones with teams willing to rethink how they work.
How To Get People To Buy Into Change Management Initiatives
To make change successful, leaders need to do more than just communicate the plan. They need to engage people in a way that reduces fear and increases ownership.
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Give Employees A Voice Before Rolling Out Change
Many change initiatives are decided in boardrooms, then passed down without input from the people most affected. Before making changes, leaders should ask: What’s frustrating about the current process? What ideas do employees have for making the transition smoother? When people feel heard, they’re more likely to participate in the solution.
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Reduce Uncertainty By Making Change Predictable
One of Kotter’s key insights is that change fails when it feels overwhelming. People aren’t just afraid of losing something—they’re afraid of the unknown. Leaders who provide clarity about what’s changing, what’s staying the same, and how employees will be supported can ease that fear.
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Frame Change As An Experiment, Not A Final Decision
If people think change is permanent, they resist harder. But if they see it as something that can be tested and refined, they’re more willing to try. Companies that run pilot programs and adjust based on feedback create environments where employees feel involved, not dictated to.
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Celebrate Progress, Not Just Outcomes
Harvard researcher Teresa Amabile found that the most powerful motivator isn’t money or praise—it’s a sense of progress. Breaking big changes into small, visible wins keeps teams engaged and prevents burnout. People are more likely to embrace change when they see real improvements along the way.
Change Management Is People Management
Companies that get change management right don’t just focus on strategies and processes. They focus on people. The organizations that thrive are the ones that recognize that employees don’t resist change because they’re lazy or unwilling. They resist it because they don’t feel like they’re part of the process. The best change leaders don’t force people to adapt. They create an environment where people want to move forward—because they understand the vision, see the benefits, and feel like they have a role in shaping what comes next. When organizations shift from forcing change to inviting participation, the process becomes less painful—and far more successful.