Every leader eventually faces the same tension: we have to change… but we also don’t want to lose what makes this place us.
Sometimes the change is exciting: new strategy, new initiatives, a fresh structure, a stronger way of operating. Other times, change is necessary but painful: budget constraints, layoffs, reorganization, a pivot in direction, or an urgent response to an external crisis.
But regardless of the reason, the question isn’t whether you can “roll out” change.
The real question is: Can you lead change in a way that strengthens trust, reinforces culture, and brings people with you instead of dragging them behind you?
That’s where many well-intentioned leaders miss the mark.
They focus on the plan, the timeline, and the deliverables and forget the human experience of disruption. They execute change like a project, when what they’re actually doing is asking people to let go of something familiar and risk believing in something new.
Change always costs something. It costs comfort. It costs certainty. Sometimes it costs identity.
And leaders who understand that don’t just manage change, they shepherd people through it.
John Kotter’s work on organizational change remains foundational for a reason. His research underscored what many leaders learn the hard way: most change efforts fail, not because leaders lack a plan, but because they lack the conditions required for real change to stick.
Kotter’s well-known 8-Step Process for Leading Change includes establishing urgency, building a guiding coalition, developing and communicating a vision, removing barriers, creating short-term wins, and anchoring the change in culture.
Even without listing every step, the big takeaway is clear:
Change isn’t primarily technical, it’s relational and cultural.
A leader can announce change in a meeting, but they cannot announce belief, trust, or buy-in. Those must be built.
Kotter also made a powerful point that’s easy to overlook: if the change doesn’t get anchored in culture, it won’t last. It may survive a quarter or two, but when pressure comes—or when the leader moves on—the organization will drift back to old norms.
Which raises an important truth: The greatest threat to your change initiative isn’t resistance.
It’s the silent, slow erosion that happens when the culture never truly embraces it.
Culture isn’t your values on a wall. Culture is the shared expectations that tell people:
When change is introduced, people don’t simply evaluate the change. They evaluate:
So if you’re leading change, you have to ask yourself:
“What does our culture cause people to assume when leadership asks them to change?”
Because people interpret change through their past experiences, not your PowerPoint slides.
If the culture has been healthy, honest, consistent, and relational, then people may respond with curiosity, even if they’re hesitant. But if the culture has been reactive, unclear, or politically complicated, even a well-designed change can feel like a threat.
Most leaders spend a lot of time thinking about “How do we implement this?” but most employees are asking a different set of questions:
Even if the change is positive, it often introduces:
1) Ambiguity
People don’t just fear change; they fear uncertainty. Ambiguity creates stress because it increases the mental load of daily work.
2) Loss
Change always brings loss. Even if something better is coming, people are still losing something familiar—a workflow, a leader, a role, a rhythm, a team, a sense of competence.
3) Threat to identity
People aren’t just doing a job—they’re attaching meaning to that job. When roles shift, people can feel like they’re being shifted.
4) Fear of being left behind
Not everyone adapts at the same pace. Some people feel behind immediately and begin hiding, resisting, or disengaging.
If you want to lead change with wisdom, you have to grow your empathy muscles:
Before you expect someone to commit to the future, acknowledge what they’re leaving behind.
Here are a few questions leaders can ask to evaluate the way they approach change and to step into the experience of those receiving it.
Questions about your approach to leading change
Questions to consider from the perspective of employees receiving the change
Whether you lead in business, ministry, education, or nonprofit work, change leadership is ultimately about people.
You’re not only moving an organization toward a new destination, you’re stewarding a culture, protecting trust, and honoring human beings who are trying to do meaningful work.
Kotter gave leaders a framework for change. But the heart beneath the framework is what matters most:
If you can lead change with clarity, empathy, and consistency, you won’t just implement a new initiative.
You’ll build a culture that can handle the next one.
And that may be the greatest leadership gift you can give an organization: not change that happens to people, but change that happens with them.