But what makes sense on paper often feels threatening in reality. Not because people are negative. But because they’re human.
Resistance isn’t the enemy of change - it’s a signal.
It tells you where trust needs strengthening, where purpose is unclear, and where people feel left behind.
Here’s what I’ve learned about leading through resistance, not around it.
When people resist change, they’re not usually being difficult. They’re protecting something:
If you ignore these questions, they don’t go away. They fester. So instead, name them. Open them up. Create space to explore what people are really afraid of.
Because once people feel seen, they’re far more likely to lean in.
False positivity is just as damaging as pessimism. Employees can tell when they’re being “sold” something. So be honest.
Change is hard. It’s disruptive. There will be confusion. But frame it with clarity:
At Mando Group, we’ve found that the more upfront we are about the bumps in the road, the faster people settle and engage.
People don’t resist change. They resist uncertain change. So give them anchors:
The more safety you create, the more curiosity you unlock.
Top-down strategy is important. But top-down delivery rarely sticks.
Wherever possible, involve teams in shaping the detail. Ask them how the change should land. Let them challenge assumptions.
They’ll not only feel more bought in-they’ll spot blind spots you missed. Because the people closest to the work are often the best architects of meaningful change.
The early phase of transformation is fragile. Energy is high-but belief is low. So build belief with evidence.
Show what’s working. Share small wins. Amplify behaviour that aligns with the new future.
We call this “evidence of better”.
It gives people a reason to keep going-especially when the outcomes still feel far away.
Resistance isn’t a wall to bulldoze. It’s a mirror. It reflects how well you’re leading through change-and whether your people feel seen in the process.
If you want a transformation that sticks, design it for humans, not just for systems.
Because at the end of the day, digital change is never just technical.
It’s emotional. It’s cultural. And it has to be earned.