Digital transformation is supposed to energise teams. But more often than we’d like to admit, it does the opposite.
It’s not because your people aren’t committed. It’s because they’re exhausted.
Transformation fatigue is real.
And if we don’t design for it, we don’t just lose momentum - we lose trust.
It’s rarely one single initiative that causes fatigue. It’s the stacking of effort, ambiguity and pressure over time.
It looks like this:
This “project stacking” creates cognitive load, unclear priorities, and decision fatigue.
Eventually, even your most engaged teams start to stall.
We wouldn’t run every machine at 100% CPU. We wouldn’t spend every pound in the bank on a single bet. Yet we rarely treat our people’s capacity for change as finite.
Change capacity is a real, measurable resource. And like any budget, it must be: Monitored, Prioritised, Protected.
📌 Leadership tip: Consider mapping a “change budget” by team.
Factor in delivery cycles, comms saturation, training load and decision friction. If you wouldn’t put it in your financial plan, don’t put it in your roadmap.
Let’s kill this myth: “Being agile means you’re always changing.” It doesn’t. True agility is structured adaptability.
It means teams have the rhythm, tools and culture to absorb change without burning out.
What does that look like?
📌 Leadership tip: We’ve seen teams trying to prove agility by reinventing everything - processes, formats, even value definitions. They wore themselves out. The solution? Standardise the predictable. Adapt where it matters.
Done well, governance is not about control. It’s about protection.
Governance should filter noise, not create more of it.
📌 Advanced play: Set up a transformation triage board - cross-functional, cross-seniority - whose job is to ruthlessly assess what fits the strategic arc right now. If it doesn’t fit, it doesn’t fly.
Fatigue breeds when teams feel like nothing ever gets done. Progress becomes invisible. Combat that with micro-momentum:
These wins may seem small but they send a vital message:
We’re moving. We’re improving. It’s working.
If your transformation effort is exhausting your people, it’s not your people who are the problem. It’s the programme design.
Pacing, sequencing, decision hygiene and human empathy aren’t soft factors. They’re leadership imperatives.
Because no digital ambition survives without the people to power it - sustainably.