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A Guide on Integrating Change Management with Scaled Agile for Seamless Product Delivery – Part 1

A Guide on Integrating Change Management with Scaled Agile for Seamless Product Delivery – Part 1

by | Agile, Guides, Uncategorized

The need for organizations to remain flexible and responsive to market demands has never been more critical, and scaled agile (SAFe) provide the framework to achieve this. Integrating change management work with SAFe is essential for seamless product delivery but yet is not clearly articulated in literature. However, for agile product delivery to be successful, it must be supported by robust change management work steps.  Those that not ensures that all stakeholders are aligned and engaged throughout the process and also that the consecutive changes delivered are adopted. Let’s explore how change managers can effectively integrate their approaches with scaled agile methodologies to enhance product delivery.

Understanding the Intersection of Change Management and Agile

Change management and agile methodologies both aim to facilitate successful project outcomes, but they approach this goal from different angles. Change management focuses on the people side of change, ensuring that stakeholders are prepared, equipped, and supported throughout the transition through to benefit realisation. Agile methodologies, on the other hand, emphasize iterative development, continuous feedback, and rapid adaptation to change.  

Whilst SAFe acknowledges the importance of managing the people side of change and leading the change, it does not spell out how exactly this work should be integrated with the methodology in a detailed manner. References to change tends to be at a high level and focuses on communication and readiness activities.

What are key call outs of the SAFe methodology:

1) Lean-Agile Principles: SAFe is grounded in Lean-Agile principles such as building incrementally with fast, integrated learning cycles, basing milestones on objective evaluation, and making value flow without interruptions. These principles help ensure continuous improvement and adaptability​

2) Organizational Agility: To remain competitive, enterprises must be agile. SAFe enhances organizational agility by fostering Lean-thinking people and Agile teams, promoting strategic agility, and implementing Lean business operations​

3)  Lean Portfolio Management: Aligns strategy and execution by applying Lean and systems thinking. It includes strategy and investment funding, Agile portfolio operations, and Lean governance to ensure that the portfolio is aligned and funded to meet business goals​

4)  Continuous Learning Culture: Encourages a set of values and practices that promote ongoing learning and improvement. This culture is crucial for adapting to changes and fostering innovation within the organization​ 

5) Agile Teams: Agile teams in SAFe operate using methods like SAFe Scrum or SAFe Team Kanban. These teams are responsible for understanding customer needs, planning their work, and delivering value continuously through iterative processes​ 

6)  Built-in Quality: Emphasizes the importance of quality at all stages of development. Practices include shift-left testing, peer reviews, and automation to ensure high standards and reduce defects early in the process​ 

7)  Value Stream Management (VSM): Focuses on optimizing the flow of value across the entire portfolio. VSM helps organizations improve their value delivery processes by managing and monitoring value streams effectively​ (Scaled Agile Framework)​.

8) Lean-Agile Leadership: Leaders play a critical role in fostering a Lean-Agile mindset. They must model the values and principles of SAFe, provide guidance, and create an environment that supports Agile teams and continuous improvement​

9)  Decentralized Decision-Making: Promotes faster value delivery by empowering teams to make decisions locally. This reduces delays, enhances product development flow, and fosters innovation​ 

10)  Customer-Centric Approach: Agile teams are encouraged to maintain close collaboration with customers to understand their needs better and ensure that solutions deliver real value. Techniques like direct customer interaction and feedback loops are essential​ 

Below is a diagram from Scaled Agile Frameworks on key elements of a scaled agile product delivery framework.

Agile-Style Deliverable Artefacts

To support agile product delivery, change managers need to create agile-style deliverable artefacts early in the product delivery cycle. These artefacts serve as essential tools for aligning the team, stakeholders, and the overall change initiative with agile principles.  They are significantly ‘lighter’ in volume and more succinct in focusing on key analysis points that determine approaches and actions required to plan and implement the change.

Change artefact 1: Change Canvas

An Agile Change Canvas is a strategic tool designed to plan, manage, and communicate change initiatives effectively within an organization. It begins with basic identification details such as the Project NameBusiness Owner, and Author. This section ensures clear accountability and ownership from the outset.

The Change Vision & Objectives outlines the overarching project objectives and intended outcomes of the project. This architecture vision acts as a guiding star, ensuring all actions align with the desired future state of the organization. Following this, Core Challenges are identified to highlight potential obstacles that could impede progress. Recognizing these challenges early allows for proactive mitigation strategies.

Stakeholder Impacts analyses how different stakeholders will be affected by the change. This includes assessing both the positive and negative impacts on employees, customers, and shareholders, ensuring that their concerns are addressed and their needs met. 

The Key Milestones section, presented in a table format, outlines significant checkpoints in the project timeline, often represented in Gantt charts. Each milestone is associated with a particular function, ensuring that progress is measurable and trackable. Similarly, the Resources section details the necessary financial, human, and technological resources required to implement the change, ensuring that the project scope statement is adequately supported.

Why Change section provides the rationale behind the need for change, which could include market demands, competitive pressures, or internal inefficiencies. This section justifies the project’s existence and urgency. Complementarily, What Will Change (WWC) describes the specific changes to be implemented, including processes, technologies, behaviours, and structures, offering a clear picture of the project’s scope.

Key Metrics are identified to measure the success of the change initiative. These metrics are both quantitative and qualitative, providing a comprehensive view of the project’s impact. Change Interventions listed in a table format, detail specific actions or initiatives designed to facilitate the change, ensuring a structured approach to implementation.

To foster a culture of innovation and adaptation, Change Experiments are proposed. These pilot programs test aspects of the change in a controlled environment before full-scale implementation. Finally, Change Risks identifies potential risks associated with the change and outlines strategies for mitigating these risks, ensuring that the project can navigate potential pitfalls effectively.

By incorporating these elements, the Agile Change Canvas provides a comprehensive framework for managing change initiatives, ensuring that all critical aspects are considered, planned for, and communicated effectively to stakeholders.

For a template of the Change Canvas check it out here.

Change artefact 2: Kanban boards of Changes

Using a Kanban board for change management activities provides a visual and dynamic method for tracking, prioritizing, and managing the flow of work while implementing changes. A Kanban board typically consists of columns that represent different stages of work, such as “To Do,” “In Progress,” and “Done.” For change management, additional columns might include “Proposed Changes,” “Under Review,” “Implementation Planning,” and “Monitoring.”

Whilst most change practitioners are used to kanban boards In working with various change management activities, there is opportunity to use kanban to plan and prioritise a series of agile-style changes and the associated change activities with each change.  These ‘change cards’ within the kanban board presents a clear way to visualise a series of changes across the ‘delivery train’ where the project team continuously delivers pieces of change.

Prioritizing Change Management Activities

  1. Visualizing Workflow:
  2. Proposed Changes: This column lists all suggested changes, each represented by a card detailing the change’s purpose, impacted areas, and expected benefits.
  3. Under Review: Changes move here once they are being evaluated for feasibility, risks, and alignment with project goals.
  4. Implementation Planning: Approved changes are further detailed, including resource allocation, timelines, and specific tasks needed for implementation.
  5. In Progress: Changes that are actively being worked on are tracked here, showing current status and any blockers encountered.
  6. Monitoring: Recently implemented changes are monitored to ensure they are delivering the expected outcomes and to identify any issues early.
  7. Done: Fully implemented and stabilized changes are moved here, marking their successful completion.
  8. Setting Priorities:
  9. Value and Impact: In conjunction with the project team prioritize changes based on their potential value and impact. High-value changes that significantly improve project outcomes or stakeholder satisfaction should be addressed first.  From a change perspective, the input here is about the readiness of the stakeholder to receive the change, and what timing and work is required to get there.
  10. Urgency and Dependencies: Changes that unblock other work or are time-sensitive should be prioritized. Dependencies between changes must be mapped to ensure logical sequencing.  For example, work required to lift capability/leadership or readiness may be critical dependencies, without which the change cannot be delivered successfully.
  11. Feasibility and Risk: Assess the feasibility and risks associated with each change. High-risk assessment of changes might require more careful planning and monitoring but should not necessarily be deprioritized if their impact is critical.  The change input here is the people impact for the impacted stakeholders with other changes not just within this project/program, but with the overall portfolio or even outside the portfolio (including business-driven changes).
  12. Proposed Changes: This column lists all suggested changes, each represented by a card detailing the change’s purpose, impacted areas, and expected benefits.
  13. Under Review: Changes move here once they are being evaluated for feasibility, risks, and alignment with project goals.
  14. Implementation Planning: Approved changes are further detailed, including resource allocation, timelines, and specific tasks needed for implementation.
  15. In Progress: Changes that are actively being worked on are tracked here, showing current status and any blockers encountered.
  16. Monitoring: Recently implemented changes are monitored to ensure they are delivering the expected outcomes and to identify any issues early.
  17. Done: Fully implemented and stabilized changes are moved here, marking their successful completion.
  18. Value and Impact: In conjunction with the project team prioritize changes based on their potential value and impact. High-value changes that significantly improve project outcomes or stakeholder satisfaction should be addressed first.  From a change perspective, the input here is about the readiness of the stakeholder to receive the change, and what timing and work is required to get there.
  19. Urgency and Dependencies: Changes that unblock other work or are time-sensitive should be prioritized. Dependencies between changes must be mapped to ensure logical sequencing.  For example, work required to lift capability/leadership or readiness may be critical dependencies, without which the change cannot be delivered successfully.
  20. Feasibility and Risk: Assess the feasibility and risks associated with each change. High-risk changes might require more careful planning and monitoring but should not necessarily be deprioritized if their impact is critical.  The change input here is the people impact for the impacted stakeholders with other changes not just within this project/program, but with the overall portfolio or even outside the portfolio (including business-driven changes).

Ordering Change Planning and Implementation

Collaborative Planning:

Engage stakeholders and team members in planning sessions to discuss and agree on the priority of changes. This collaborative approach ensures that all perspectives are considered and that there is buy-in from those affected by the changes.  This includes change champions.

Regular Review and Adaptation:

The Kanban board should be regularly reviewed and updated, within the change team and within the project team. During these reviews, re-prioritize changes based on new information, shifting project needs, and feedback from implemented changes. This iterative approach aligns with Agile principles of flexibility and continuous improvement.

Limit Work in Progress (WIP):

To avoid overloading the change team and ensure focus, limit the number of changes in progress at any given time. This constraint encourages the team to complete current tasks before taking on new ones, promoting a steady and manageable workflow.

Use Metrics and Feedback:

  1. Utilize metrics such as cycle time (how long a change takes to move from start to finish, from awareness to engagement to eventual adoption) and work with the project team on the throughput (how many changes are completed in a specific timeframe) to assess the efficiency of the change management process.  For example, based on the size and complexity of each discrete piece of change delivered, how long did this take and what was the deviance from actual time period planned? Feedback from these metrics should inform decisions about prioritization and process adjustments.
  2. Engage stakeholders and team members in planning sessions to discuss and agree on the priority of changes. This collaborative approach ensures that all perspectives are considered and that there is buy-in from those affected by the changes.  This includes change champions.
  3. The Kanban board should be regularly reviewed and updated, within the change team and within the project team. During these reviews, re-prioritize changes based on new information, shifting project needs, and feedback from implemented changes. This iterative approach aligns with Agile principles of flexibility and continuous improvement.
  4. To avoid overloading the change team and ensure focus, limit the number of changes in progress at any given time. This constraint encourages the team to complete current tasks before taking on new ones, promoting a steady and manageable workflow.
  5. Utilize metrics such as cycle time (how long a change takes to move from start to finish, from awareness to engagement to eventual adoption) and work with the project team on the throughput (how many changes are completed in a specific timeframe) to assess the efficiency of the change management process.  For example, based on the size and complexity of each discrete piece of change delivered, how long did this take and what was the deviance from actual time period planned? Feedback from these metrics should inform decisions about prioritization and process adjustments.

Benefits of Using Kanban for Change Management

Implementing a Kanban board for change management in Agile projects offers several benefits:

  1. Transparency: Everyone involved can see the status of change activities, leading to better communication and coordination.
  2. Flexibility: The board can be easily adjusted to reflect changing priorities and project dynamics.
  3. Focus: Limiting WIP helps the team maintain focus and reduces the risk of burnout and task switching.
  4. Continuous Improvement: Regular reviews and adaptations promote a culture of continuous improvement, ensuring that change management processes evolve and improve over time.

Change artefact example 3: Change Impact Assessment

A Change Impact Assessment (CIA) is an essential component in managing organizational change, particularly in agile projects where the focus is on iterative and incremental improvements. The assessment helps to understand the scope and magnitude of the change, identify affected stakeholders, and plan interventions to manage impacts effectively.  An agile-friendly CIA is more summarised, and gets to the heart of what the impact is, who is impacted, how, to what extent, and when.

Below are the core elements of a change impact assessment, with a comparison to traditional methods:

1. Identifying the Impacts

Agile Approach: In scaled agile projects, the impact identification is ongoing and iterative. Each sprint or iteration is reviewed to assess the impacts of delivered changes. This dynamic approach ensures that emerging impacts are quickly recognized and addressed.

Traditional Approach: Impact identification is typically conducted at the beginning of the project, with periodic reviews. This method can be less responsive to new impacts discovered during the project lifecycle.

2. Stakeholder Identification and Analysis

Agile Approach: Continuous stakeholder engagement is crucial. Stakeholders are regularly consulted, and their feedback is integrated into the process. Agile methods ensure that stakeholders’ changing needs and concerns are promptly addressed.

Traditional Approach: Stakeholder analysis is often conducted early in the project, with limited ongoing engagement. This can result in less adaptability to stakeholders’ evolving requirements.

3. Extent and Nature of Impacts

Agile Approach: The extent of impacts is assessed incrementally, considering the cumulative effect of changes over multiple iterations. This allows for a nuanced understanding of how impacts evolve over time.

Traditional Approach: Typically focuses on a comprehensive initial assessment, with less emphasis on the evolution of impacts throughout the project.

4. Timing of Impacts

Agile Approach: Timing is aligned with the iterative delivery schedule. The impacts are mapped to specific iterations or sprints, allowing for precise planning and mitigation.

Traditional Approach: Timing is generally assessed at the project level, which can make it harder to pinpoint when specific impacts will occur during the project lifecycle.

Typical Sections of an Agile Change Impact Assessment

  1. Impact Overview:
  2. Explanation: Summarizes the nature and scope of the change, providing a high-level view of the anticipated impacts.
  3. Agile Twist: Updated regularly with each iteration to reflect new findings and emerging impacts.
  4. Stakeholder Impact Analysis:
  5. Explanation: Identifies who will be affected by the change and how. It details the extent of the impact on different stakeholder groups.
  6. Agile Twist: Involves continuous stakeholder feedback and updates to capture evolving impacts.
  7. Impact Extent and Nature:
  8. Explanation: Describes the extent (e.g., minor, moderate, significant) and nature (e.g., process, technology, cultural) of the impacts.
  9. Agile Twist: Assessed incrementally, considering both immediate and long-term impacts across iterations.
  10. Impact Timing:
  11. Explanation: Specifies when the impacts are expected to occur, mapped to the project timeline.
  12. Agile Twist: Aligned with sprint or iteration schedules, allowing for detailed timing predictions.
  13. Mitigation Strategies:
  14. Explanation: Outlines plans to manage and mitigate identified impacts.
  15. Agile Twist: Adaptive strategies that are refined continuously based on iteration reviews and stakeholder feedback.
  16. Monitoring and Review:
  17. Explanation: Describes how the impacts will be monitored and reviewed throughout the project.
  18. Agile Twist: Continuous monitoring with iteration-end reviews to ensure timely identification and management of impacts.
  19. Explanation: Summarizes the nature and scope of the change, providing a high-level view of the anticipated impacts.
  20. Agile Twist: Updated regularly with each iteration to reflect new findings and emerging impacts.
  21. Explanation: Identifies who will be affected by the change and how. It details the extent of the impact on different stakeholder groups.
  22. Agile Twist: Involves continuous stakeholder feedback and updates to capture evolving impacts.
  23. Explanation: Describes the extent (e.g., minor, moderate, significant) and nature (e.g., process, technology, cultural) of the impacts.
  24. Agile Twist: Assessed incrementally, considering both immediate and long-term impacts across iterations.
  25. Explanation: Specifies when the impacts are expected to occur, mapped to the project timeline.
  26. Agile Twist: Aligned with sprint or iteration schedules, allowing for detailed timing predictions.
  27. Explanation: Outlines plans to manage and mitigate identified impacts.
  28. Agile Twist: Adaptive strategies that are refined continuously based on iteration reviews and stakeholder feedback.
  29. Explanation: Describes how the impacts will be monitored and reviewed throughout the project.
  30. Agile Twist: Continuous monitoring with iteration-end reviews to ensure timely identification and management of impacts.

To read more about agile tools for change managers, check out Five Agile Change Tool Kits.

Stakeholder Engagement in a Scaled Agile Environment

Planning and designing stakeholder engagement activities in a scaled agile environment requires a dynamic, iterative approach that contrasts significantly with traditional, non-agile methods. In SAFe, the focus is on continuous collaboration, transparency, and adaptability, ensuring that stakeholders are actively involved throughout the project lifecycle.

Iterative and Continuous Engagement

Scaled Agile Approach: Stakeholder engagement is an ongoing process. Agile frameworks emphasize regular touchpoints, such as sprint reviews, planning meetings, and daily stand-ups, where stakeholders can provide feedback and stay informed about progress. These frequent interactions ensure that stakeholder input is continuously integrated, enabling swift adjustments and alignment with evolving needs. This iterative approach fosters a collaborative environment where stakeholders feel valued and engaged throughout the project.  Engagement rhythms and processes should also be established not just at a project, but program, portfolio and enterprise levels as required.

Non-Agile Approach: Traditional methodologies often involve stakeholder engagement at fixed points in the project timeline, such as during initial requirements gathering, major milestone reviews, and final project delivery. This approach can lead to periods of limited communication and delayed feedback, which may result in misaligned expectations and missed opportunities for timely course corrections.

Flexibility and Adaptation

Scaled Agile Approach: Agile projects embrace change, allowing stakeholder engagement activities to be flexible and adaptive. As project requirements evolve, the engagement strategy can be adjusted to address new priorities or challenges. This flexibility ensures that stakeholder needs are consistently met, and any concerns are promptly addressed. Agile frameworks encourage a culture of openness and continuous improvement, where stakeholder feedback directly influences the direction of the project.  Change managers need to ensure that stakeholder understand this fully, and have the skills to work within this context, not just with the project team but in leading their teams through change, when ‘the change’ may be constantly shifting.

Non-Agile Approach: In contrast, traditional approaches tend to follow a rigid engagement plan that is set at the project’s outset. While this provides a clear structure, it can be less responsive to changing stakeholder needs or external conditions. Adjusting the engagement strategy mid-project can be challenging and may require significant effort, leading to delays and potential dissatisfaction among stakeholders.

Collaborative Tools and Techniques

Scaled Agile Approach: Agile environments leverage a variety of collaborative tools and techniques to enhance stakeholder engagement. Digital platforms such as Jira, Confluence, and Miro facilitate real-time collaboration, transparency, and documentation. Agile ceremonies, such as retrospectives and demos, provide structured opportunities for stakeholders to participate and contribute. These tools and techniques help maintain a high level of engagement and ensure that stakeholders have a clear view of project progress and challenges.

Non-Agile Approach: Traditional methods might rely more heavily on formal documentation and periodic reports for stakeholder communication. While these methods ensure thorough documentation, they can sometimes create barriers to real-time collaboration and immediate feedback. Meetings and reviews are often scheduled infrequently, which can lead to less dynamic interaction compared to agile practices.

Planning Stakeholder Engagement Activities

  1. Regular Touchpoints: Schedule frequent meetings and reviews to ensure continuous stakeholder involvement. Examples include sprint reviews, iteration planning meetings, and daily stand-ups.  Business-led rhythm that enable the dissemination and engagement of updates to teams is also critical.
  2. Flexible Engagement Plans: Develop engagement strategies that can be easily adapted based on stakeholder feedback and changing project requirements.
  3. Use of Collaborative Tools: Implement digital tools that facilitate real-time collaboration and transparency. Tools like Jira and Confluence can help keep stakeholders informed and involved.  Non-digital engagement tools may also be leveraged to fully engage with stakeholders, beyond one-way push communication.  Assessment needs to be made of the openness and ability to engage regarding the change through the chosen channels.
  4. Active Feedback Loops: Establish mechanisms for collecting and integrating stakeholder feedback continuously. This can be done through retrospectives, surveys, and informal check-ins.
  5. Clear Communication Channels: Maintain open and clear communication channels to ensure that stakeholders can easily provide input and receive updates on project progress.

As mentioned previously, the change approach, including engagement approaches, need to take into account the broader organisational context of program, portfolio and enterprise levels.  This may mean mapping out the various channels and how they can be used for different changes, stakeholders and organisational levels.

Supporting Agile Delivery Cadence

To align change management activities with agile delivery cadence, it’s essential to integrate them into the core agile events, such as PI (Program Increment) planning and demos. Here’s how:

PI Planning

PI planning, or program increment planning, is a critical event in the agile framework, where teams come together in the PI planning process to plan and commit to a set of objectives for the next increment. During PI planning sessions or PI planning events (including team breakouts), ensure that change management considerations are part of the discussion. This involves:

– Including Change Management Objectives within PI objectives and program vision: Ensure that change management objectives and organizational readiness are included in the PI planning agenda as a critical part of project management. This helps align the change activities with the overall delivery goals.

– Identifying Change Risks and Dependencies: Identify any dependencies related to the change initiative that may impact the delivery schedule and the overall agile release train. This ensures that potential risks are addressed early and do not disrupt the delivery process.  Common considerations include the various people change impacts across the program and how they intersect or overlap

– Engaging Stakeholders: Involve key stakeholders in the PI planning sessions. This ensures that not just product managers but business stakeholders understand the change objectives and are committed to supporting the change initiative during the implementation process.  PI planning is also a great opportunity to assess and see in action the level of engagement, support and potential leadership skills of key stakeholders to reach the common goals and business benefits.

Demos

Demos are an opportunity to showcase the progress of the agile teams and gather feedback from stakeholders as a part of the iteration plans and sprint planning. Use demos to communicate the benefits and progress of change initiatives within the entire agile release train. Engaging stakeholders in these demos can help them see the value and stay committed to the implementation plan. Here’s how:

– Highlighting Change Benefits: During demos, highlight the benefits of the change initiative and how it supports the overall product delivery goals. This helps stakeholders understand the value of the change and its impact on the project.

– Gathering Feedback: Use demos as an opportunity to gather feedback and user stories from stakeholders. This helps identify any concerns or areas for improvement and ensures that the change initiative remains aligned with stakeholder needs.

– Showcasing Progress: Showcase the progress of the change initiative during demos. This provides stakeholders with a clear understanding of how the change is evolving and the positive impact it is having on the project.

By embedding change management activities into these agile ceremonies, change managers can ensure that change initiatives are aligned with the delivery schedule and maintain stakeholder buy-in.

Implementing Change Activities as Small Experiments

One of the key principles of agile is to work in small increments and learn quickly. Change management activities can adopt this approach by implementing small experiments, such as:

Messaging

Test different communication messages to see which resonates best with stakeholders. Gather feedback and refine the messaging based on reactions. This iterative approach ensures that the communication strategy is effective and supports the change initiative. Consider the following:

– A/B Testing: Use A/B testing to evaluate different messages. This involves sending two variations of a message to different stakeholder groups and comparing the responses to determine which one is more effective.

– Feedback Collection: Collect feedback from stakeholders on the messaging. This can be done through surveys, focus groups, or informal conversations.

– Message Refinement: Refine the messaging based on the feedback received. This ensures that the communication remains relevant and impactful.

Stakeholder Involvement

Experiment with various levels of stakeholder involvement to determine the most effective way to engage them. Use these insights to inform future engagement and risk management strategies and your overall implementation strategy. Here’s how:

– Pilot Programs: Implement pilot programs with small groups of stakeholders to test different involvement strategies. This provides valuable insights into what works best and helps refine the engagement approach.

– Engagement Metrics: Track engagement metrics to evaluate the effectiveness of different involvement strategies. This includes participation rates, feedback quality, and overall stakeholder satisfaction.

– Iterative Adjustments: Make iterative adjustments to the involvement strategies based on the insights gained. This ensures that stakeholder engagement remains effective and aligned with the change initiative.

By treating change activities as experiments, change managers can adapt quickly to what works best, ensuring a smoother integration with the agile delivery process.

Best Practices for Integrating Change Management with Agile

Successfully integrating change management with agile methodologies requires a strategic approach. Here are some best practices to consider:

Foster Collaboration

Encourage collaboration between change managers and agile teams, as well as key business stakeholders within the business context. This helps ensure that different disciplines and functions are aligned and working towards the same goals. Consider the following strategies:

– Joint Planning Sessions: Conduct joint planning sessions to align change management activities with agile delivery approaches and schedules. This ensures that both disciplines are working towards the same objectives.

– Regular Communication: Establish regular communication channels between change managers and agile teams. This helps keep everyone informed and ensures that any issues or concerns are addressed promptly.  Specifically focus on various agile roles such as UX (user experience), business analysis, testing, and portfolio management.  There are key intersections of change work and each of these disciplines, beyond general project planning and coordination.

The below is an example of a portfolio level adoption dashboard from The Change Compass.

Enterprise change management dashboard

Change Data-Driven Insights is absolutely a Must-have for SAFe

In SAFe, change management driven by data insights is critical to ensure that changes are not only effective but also efficient and sustainable. Data-driven change management leverages quantitative and qualitative data to guide decisions, optimize processes, and align strategic goals across the organization. By incorporating metrics and analytics, organizations can gain a comprehensive understanding of the impact and progress of change initiatives, allowing for timely adjustments and informed decision-making.

At the portfolio level within a SAFe setting, data-driven insights are essential for prioritizing initiatives and allocating resources effectively.  More than this, change data including stakeholder capability, readiness and impact levels can be critical to determine when releases should happen, the priority of releases, and the sequencing of releases.

Ill-prepared or insufficiently skilled stakeholders may require longer time to adapt to the change.  Also, looking beyond the project itself, by understanding the overall change landscape for the impacted stakeholders, change releases may need to be chunked and packaged accordingly to maximise adoption success.

Key attention should also be paid to the impact on business performance of impacted stakeholders, not just from a change volume perspective, but also from a strategy perspective in terms of how best to reduce risk of performance disruptions.  Is it through exemplary middle leadership?  Or frontline engagement?  Or the power of change champions embedded across the business?

At the enterprise level, data-driven change management enables organizations to scale agile practices consistently and coherently across the entire team across multiple portfolios. This involves the use of enterprise-level dashboards and analytics tools that provide a holistic view of the organization’s agile transformation. Key performance indicators (KPIs) such as employee impact data, adoption rates, readiness metrics and productivity metrics help leaders assess the effectiveness of change initiatives and identify areas that require additional support or intervention. For instance, tracking the adoption rate of agile practices across different departments can highlight areas where additional training or coaching is needed to ensure consistent implementation.

Integrating change management with scaled agile methodologies is essential for seamless product delivery in today’s dynamic business environment. By creating agile-style deliverable artefacts early, continuously adapting engagement activities, supporting agile delivery cadence, and implementing change activities as small experiments, measure change progress and outcomes, change managers can effectively support agile product delivery. This integration not only enhances the success of change initiatives but also ensures that product delivery is seamless and aligned with organizational goals and the strategic plan.

By fostering collaboration, embracing agile principles, and using data-driven insights, change managers can create a cohesive strategy that maximizes the benefits of both change management and agile methodologies. This holistic approach ensures that change initiatives are successful, stakeholders are engaged, and product delivery is efficient and effective.

To read more about Change Measurement, check out our library of articles here.

Chat to us to find out more about how to leverage the power of a change measurement platform to sustain your single source of truth to support your scaled agile organisation.

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A practical guide for managing disruptions in change

A practical guide for managing disruptions in change

Disruptions are all around us. First, the various disruptions with Covid on all aspects of people’s lives around the globe. Now we have the riots across the US as well as other countries about racial inequality. With these, we have the backdrop of constant significant changes and changes in new technologies that constantly challenge how we run our lives. What next you may ask?

Disruptions to how change management initiatives are managed seem to never cease. You think you’ve been through the worst with Covid impacting the budget expenditure on projects and the implementation timeline thrown up in the air due to lack of business capacity. The racial riots are disrupting normal business operations and it is back to business continuity plans for some organizations. How might we continue to manage our various change initiatives amongst these constant disruptions?

Strategic approaches

In being able to effectively respond to constant business disruptions on initiatives, a set of routines and business processes need to take place prior to the individual disruptions. Developing a strategic plan is essential to achieve the desired results and navigate these challenges.

Use the three horizons of growth as a framework to focus efforts on initiatives

three horizons - Engage//Innovate

McKinsey’s three horizons of growth describe 3 horizons of which initiatives should be clustered. Each horizon forms a critical set of initiatives from which the organisation may continue to develop and grow. If all focus was placed on horizon 1 that are focused on the here and now shorter-term initiatives, then the organisation is not placed to deal with emerging challenges addressed under horizons 2 and 3. Vice versa if all the effort is placed on horizon 3 and not 1. 

With business disruptions, the effort and expenditure placed on initiatives can be evaluated in light of which horizon they are in. For example, if the Covid disruption is so significant on the business that it’s a matter of survival, then all efforts should focus on horizon 1 initiatives that contribute to organisational survival in terms of revenue and cost management. If the disruption is significant but not debilitating then it may be wise to spend half of the effort on horizon 1 with the rest on horizons 2 and 3.

Adopt a portfolio approach to manage changes

When initiatives are treated in isolation it is very difficult to flex and adjust to changes compared to a portfolio approach to manage change initiatives. Individual initiatives have limited resource capacity and project activities will have limited impact compared to multiple initiatives.

So how does one adopt a portfolio approach to manage changes? Read The Ultimate Guide to Change Portfolio Management or 7 change portfolio management best practices.

Having a portfolio approach to manage changes means having established the following:

  1. Data-based approach to manage change impacts with a view of change impacts across initiatives for business leaders.
  2. Ability to visualize and plan the change impacts from a business-unit-centric and stakeholder group centric perspective
  3. Ability to manage resourcing across initiatives so that as required resources may be flexed up or down across the overall portfolio based on prioritisation
  4. Ability to guide and prepare each business for multiple changes across initiatives
  5. Key stakeholder messages may be synchronised and packaged across initiatives versus an initiative by initiative approach
  6. Improved ability to map out clearly the various skills and capabilities being implemented across initiatives to avoid duplication and improve synergies

What can change practitioners contribute in planning for disruptions?

Derive different change scenarios

Scenario planning as a technique is rarely used in a project planning context. However, it is especially critical and relevant within an agile environment. Agile project practices mean that changes keep iterating and therefore it may be hard to anticipate what the end solution or incremental change will look like. It may also be hard to anticipate how the business models and business will respond to the changes being proposed if we don’t know what the changes will look like.

To allow adequate time to plan for changes it is very helpful to derive at least 2 scenarios. In an agile environment, change practitioners need to adopt a hypothesis-based approach to deriving change approaches. Let’s take an example of a standard system implementation project. In rolling out a new system these could be 2 likely scenarios based on the hypothesis being posed.

Hypothesis: The system being implemented is easy and intuitive for users and therefore the change approach will be sufficient with awareness raising and a 1 hour training session

Scenario 1: The hypothesis is true and all users have found it easy and intuitive to use and therefore the change approach proposed is sufficient to prepare the users for this change.

Scenario 2: The hypothesis is only partially true and there are some user groups who struggled to understand all features of the system and need additional help and guidance. Additional training sessions with coaches are proposed

A different way of contrasting different scenarios will be to derive different project expenditures and funding requirements and resulting change delivery work. For example, under the system implementation project, a ‘Toyota’ approach of delivery could involve minimum training and stakeholder awareness generation. For a ‘Rolls Royce’ approach of delivery which will cost significantly more could include tailored coaching sessions for each stakeholder group, 1:1 coaching for senior leaders, a long awareness campaign, and an extensive measurement system. This helps stakeholders understand the cost of delivery and will help them to select an appropriate delivery model.

The usefulness of planning ahead to anticipate for different scenarios mean that steps may be taken to be ready for either of the scenarios and so the project team will not be caught off guard in case the hypothesis proposed is proved false.

To be able to visualize different scenarios it is important to show the different impacts of the scenarios. This includes the impact of time, sequencing, and impact levels on stakeholder groups. With a different rollout approach will stakeholder groups have better bandwidth and ability to adopt the change or will the bandwidth be more limited?

Here is an example of a scenario planning visual where the user can simply drag the impact bars to different times and be able to save this as a scenario. After saving the scenario the next activity will be to analyse the scenario to make sense of the potential impacts of this scenario on the business and impacted stakeholders. Are there project dependencies that need to be taken into consideration? What is the overall change impact across initiatives as a result of the changes in this scenario? How does this impact the customer versus internal stakeholder groups?

For scenarios to be used in a practical way it is important to be able to list any ‘proof points’ that outline how we can tell that the scenario is becoming true or not. These proof points can include anything ranging from stakeholder reactions, the timing of the implementation, the complexity of the features or solution, cost, and other tangible measurements such as system response time, time taken to perform the process, etc.

Agree on decision making principle with stakeholder

Prior to any disruptions, it is important to agree with stakeholders key decision-making principles. Having clear, agreed decision-making principles means that key decisions can be made without subjecting to personal opinions or preferences. During any times of disruption Decision-making principles can be organised as ‘trade-off’ principles with a prioritised order of importance. Below are some examples:

  1. Cost
  2. Time
  3. People resource bandwidth
  4. Benefit realisation
  5. Stakeholder readiness and acceptance
  6. External media implications

Factor in critical path in project planning

The critical path method is a way in which a project’s key interdependencies are linked and mapped out in a linear way so as to understand the key logical points along the project. From this any potential disruptions, slippages or delays in project deliverables and how they impact the remaining deliverables can be clearly understood and planned for.

A clear understanding of the critical path within a project means that with any disruptions to activities the impacts of this on the rest of the deliverables can easily be articulated. To deal with the disruptions to the project a longer implementation may need to be negotiated with the impacted businesses, or depending on the nature of the disruption, a different project approach with different deliverables may need to be derived.

Critical Path Method: A Project Management Essential

Here we discussed multiple ways in which the change practitioner can help the organisation get ready for various disruptions to change initiatives. During periods of disruptive change, it is even more critical for change practitioners to demonstrate their value to lead and maneuver around and plan for uncertainty. Agile organisations are well placed to deal with disruptions, however, an effective set of routines, practices, preparations, and capabilities are all critical to building overall organisational readiness.

How to use gamification for change: Your guide

How to use gamification for change: Your guide

Gamification is the application of game mechanics and elements to non-game activities, greatly enhancing the player experience. Whilst gamification has been around for a long time, it is only recently that it has been formalised as a structured method to achieve specific outcomes as a part of behaviour change.

We see the application of gamification all around us. Yes, most of the apps we use on our phones have game design elements. However, more broadly, we can see this all around us. Through gamification design, we can facilitate significant behaviour changes that contribute to social change.

How can we trigger behavioral change using gamification?

Gamification can trigger behavioral change by incorporating game-like elements, such as rewards, challenges, and leaderboards, into everyday activities. This approach engages users emotionally and encourages participation, making tasks more enjoyable. By fostering competition and collaboration, gamification effectively motivates individuals to adopt new behaviors for social change.

Two of my favourite examples are:

1.Improving aim and decreasing spillage in urinals.

Amsterdam airport wanted to keep the urinals clean and reduce spillage. They pinpointed the aimed spot within the urinal design where the least spillage happens. What happened was that men would aim for the fly as a fun activity (or even aiming subconsciously), and thereby reducing spillage.

2. Encouraging physical activity by taking steps vs. the escalator

In Sweden, they did an experiment to see if they could encourage people to take steps over the escalator by making it fun to use steps. This was at Odenplan (where I used to frequent regularly on my way to bars in my younger days), a major subway stop in central Stockholm. They turned the steps into a piano where stepping on a step would the be same as hitting a piano keyboard. The result was that 66% of people chose the steps over the escalator. Here is a video that shows the behaviour of people as they use the stairs. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7frzYFcbqjc

You will notice that these elements are not necessarily about playing a ‘game’ per se. Instead, they’ve borrowed elements of game design to engage people in social interaction and make it more fun. However, ultimately there is a very clear goal and clear behaviours to be achieved.

6-D model of gamification

The 6-D model of gamification is a very practical step-by-step framework to help you design an effective change intervention using gamification. The value of this framework is that it ensures that there are clear objectives and focus before jumping into utilising one of the many gamification tactics.

These are the 6 steps to follow:

  1. Define Business Objectives – Define the goal you are aiming for. Is it increasing stakeholder engagement scores? Is it increasing the viewership of articles? Or is it getting users to follow the new process?
  2. Delineate target behaviour – Define the target behaviours you are aiming to achieve. Note that behaviours need to be discrete and concrete. Then, decide how you are going to measure them. For example, let’s say you want to get users to follow the new additional process steps. What actions do you need users to perform? How do we know if these processes have been performed? Can the outcome of performing these steps be traced or observed? Are these documented? Are they easy to report on?
  3. Describe your players – How well do you know your target audience/users? In this step, you need to clearly articulate and define exactly what they are like. For example, what are their demographics? How do they tend to behave? Do they have a history of behaving in certain ways in certain situations? If you need them to add more steps in a new process will they tend to ignore it?
  4. Devise activity loops – In this step, we are identifying the key motivations involved to sustain the desired behaviour. Are there particular reinforcements required to sustain this behaviour? Do we need to design feedback loops? For example, if you need to ensure that the user performs 3 additional process steps, what triggers or reinforcements are required? What notifications need to be in place to remind the user and motivate him/her to perform these steps? And how do we reward those behaviours?
  5. Don’t forget the fun – This step may seem quite generic but nevertheless an important part of the design process. People prefer to perform tasks that are more fun. However, it is not always easy to determine what is considered fun. It is about incorporating the element of interest and fun where possible to increase engagement. For example, can the messaging or graphic design incorporate an element of fun? Or can the notification or reward elements be designed to incorporate fun?
  6. Deploy appropriate tools – This is the action step. It is about choosing the right gamification tactic to deploy your change. There is a very long list of various gamification tactics to be leveraged. Here, we will review 10 different tactics and demonstrate examples from The Change Compass.

Now that we understand the theory and steps required. Let’s put these into practice.

10 example of gamification elements and how The Change Compass has applied this

1.Onboarding tutorials

The classic approach for change practitioners in implementing changes has tended to rely on training. However, depending on the change being introduced there are more engaging ways to socialise the change.

For example, with a new system there are tools to create context-specific walk-throughs and detailed explanations that are more engaging. These are not necessarily part of the tool design itself. There are digital tools such as Stonly, Help Hero, as well as a myriad of others that may be leveraged to easily design context-specific onboarding.

Here are some examples how we use context-specific onboarding walk-throughs and information.

2. Theme

At The Change Compass we love using the airport analogy because it explains the various components within the system that needs to hum for holistic portfolio change management. Each plane is an initiative and how the airport is run is portfolio management. The available runway is the business change capacity. Stakeholders understand this because it’s a tangible analogy that they have experienced first-hand.

We’ve embedded the airport theme in different parts of the application to create a sense of fun and visually more interesting. For example, here are some examples of how we have done this.

3. Random rewards

This tactic is about creating excitement and unexpected reward to surprise users in a positive way. Ideally, it would bring a smile to users since they were not expecting this pop-up or another form of reward.

For example, we have created various automation features to make it significantly faster for users to enter data. And when the task is completed we surprise users with a pop-up that celebrates this task completion.

4. Status/points/leaderboard

The leaderboard concept is quite a common tactic to generate engagement and in this case competition. The idea is that those that have the highest points feel a sense of achievement and recognition. Please note that it depends on the motivation of users and may not work in all contexts.

We have created a user community to promote sharing of practices. In our platform there is a leaderboard that shows who has made the most comments.

5. Customisation

Customisation is a powerful tool that gives users the ability to tailor and customise their experience. The more users spend time and effort to ‘create their space’ the more wedded and engaged they become. Most people are familiar with the concept of using avatars as an expression of themselves. This is another way of expressing who they are digitally. This technique is also well adopted in social media.

In our application we allow users to upload their own avatars. In keeping with the overall airport analogy, we have ready-made avatars of different airline characters for them to choose from. Again, injection a bit of fun into the experience.

6. Challenges/quests

Challenges or quests keep users engaged and interested. It could arouse their curiosity and through this increase their likelihood of undertaking a particular task. It could be a question or a notification to let them know of a new feature. It could also be quizzes or Q&A to challenge users and thereby increasing their knowledge.

7. Sharing knowledge

Building features to allow users to share knowledge and support one another can be a motivating feature for some users. Helping others and building credibility can be intrinsic motivation for some. After all, helping others makes one feel good.

Our Change Tribe community has been a great educational platform for users to exchange tips and experiences. Different channels are setup to address different types of sharing. For example, ‘Feedback and features’, ‘Sharing practices’, ‘What’s new’, ‘Community tips’.

There are various platforms available for you to build community for users. It can be using your corporate Yammer platform, or others such as Slack or Tribe.

8. Voting/voice

Giving users the ability to have a voice and share their feedback can be powerful and engaging. It also incorporates inclusion. However, depending on the platform you are using you may need to manage the types of feedback that are openly shared. Giving users the ability to vote can also be quite powerful.

For example, at The Change Compass our features backlog is primarily determined by users and their feedback. This ensures that users feel that they determine how the application is designed and therefore feel more invested.

9. Meaning/purpose

Having a clear and strong of meaning and purpose may seem like a no-brainer for change practitioners. Yet this is a very important one for game design. The most engaging games that instill a strong sense of purpose for the user, where the user feels emersed into executing on the purpose.

In the same way, designing meaning and purpose into all facets of the change intervention is critical. Ideally, with every step of the change journey, the user can feel ingrained into carrying out steps towards the purpose of the change.

For example, in The Change Compass we have an Action Planning module where the application steps the user through the analysis of the data, key observations, patterns, and what actions to take to potentially package or re-sequence the change rollout. This helps to build empathy and directly address the overall purpose for the user in using the platform.

10. Social discovery

Social discovery is about enabling the support of users to find one another so that they can connect. This helps to support those with shared interests or connections. People are social creatures and we like to find others with whom we have shared interests. Think about designing your change intervention in a way that supports social discovery and networking.

For example, The Change Compass is about sharing initiatives across the organisation and the impacts they have on different parts of the company. Initiative drivers can discover other initiatives and how they may potentially impact the same stakeholders. This leads to better alignment and shared understanding and therefore makes it easier to collaborate for a better business outcome.

Now it’s your turn! What are some of the gamification tactics that you will deploy to improve stakeholder engagement and ensure your change initiative is designed with a view to creating a deeply involving experience for users?

To read more articles about agile practices within change management please click here. Or, to read more about different change approaches click here.

Successful Change Journeys: 7 Outstanding Ways to Transform

Successful Change Journeys: 7 Outstanding Ways to Transform

Right now I am writing this article from a Four Seasons resort in Hawaii after having 3 flights cancelled in a row. It has been quite a stressful experience as you can imagine and it’s the fourth day of delay. I’m not able to get back home! However, this started to get me thinking about the change experience for the employee or the customer. As change drivers or leaders we tend to focus on how to design the change at a program level and it’s rare for us to really get down to the lowest level of people experience and how this is perceived at a humanistic level throughout the change process.

In the past I’ve used the airport analogy to describe the change journey and how we work to design each of the elements of the whole ecosystem, including pre-departure, transit, in-flight experience, runway preparation and post-landing experience. To read more about each of these elements refer to this article on Landing multiple changes in a complex environment.

Now let’s take a look at my recent bad flight experience and you will see that this easily translates to a typical change experience for those impacted. My first flight was cancelled, and after several hours all passengers were feeling frustrated, wondering what was really going on, and when or if the flight will take off. The announcement did not provide any substantive information and so as a result each passenger had to queue up to ask for further information. This is similar to a restructuring announcement or other major changes whereby there is a generic corporate email sent to all impacted, however the information is so generic that employees will need to resort to their managers (or rumours) to get further information that will meet their individual needs.

For the managers, they often don’t receive the right information or it is insufficiently tailored so that they are not able to translate the organisational level impact to how their specific department or team will be impacted. This could be due to lack of information or skill set in translating the impact for their teams. To this end, we need to ensure we engage with those managers to ensure that their questions are answered and that they’re able to field employe questions, versus having no information.

Part of a good change experience is in anticipating any reactions, feelings and designing an effective process that tackles these head on. To do this, use a human-centred design approach of observation, interviewing, analysing precious incidents and basically adopt a human-centred mindset to pick out key experience insights that need to be addressed. To read more about the human-centred design process please click here.

So what can we learn from the bad pre-departure experience when applied to change?

1. Provide managers and leaders with sufficient information so that they are able to engage with and consult with their impacted employees to ensure that their needs are met, including gathering new ideas from them.

2. Conduct a detailed analysis from an end-user perspective to pre-determine potential humanistic needs and reactions and address these head-on. For example, What types of information are needed to reach the ultimate goal? What are potential employee questions? How do we provide them with effective engagement prior to them asking for it?

3. Proactive engagement to manage potentially negative feelings. Being on the receiving end of a flight cancellation or a successful change initiative is often frustrating and stressful. How do we anticipate these experiences to redesign it into a more positive one? For example, are there certain employee groups we can garner to be change champions to provide additional people support and foster resilience? What artefacts can we provide to shape these experiences? Visually-catching cheat sheets, posters, branded sweets, morning-tea, and effective social media communication, etc.

4. Involve all layers of management so that they are well-equipped to support the change management process and are clear with their role in the process. Are we simply asking them to be on-hand to answer questions? Or do we expect certain layers of management to be change coaches to guide first-line managers on how to lead change and foster a culture of continuous improvement through hard work? What are we asking our Human Resources colleagues to be doing? Or our Risk partners or Finance partners? Be explicit about what specific behaviours and outcomes we are asking for.

5. Empathy. When people are frustrated, feeling vulnerable or stressed, the most important thing to do to address their feelings is to acknowledge and address these feelings by showing empathy. After all we are dealing with people’s emotions. Emotions are not logical and therefore data and facts usually do not create empathy. Empathy is between two individuals. One person showing another person that their feelings are valid, acknowledged and supported. Empathy is best demonstrated through verbal or nonverbal behaviours rather than through emails and online information. This is about a leader or another colleague showing genuine acknowledgement that a fellow colleague feels a certain way, without providing any judgment or even advice. During one of the days when the flight was cancelled, a staff walked around and chatted to everyone in the queue to just listen to them and acknowledge their frustrations – this did more good than anything else the airline did.

6. Create an element of surprise in designing the change process. Most corporate change processes are similar in that they follow a set way of engaging with employees according to the corporate norm of what has worked in the past. However, there are some organizations that keep following norms and do not create a good change experience and keep repeating the same mistakes over a long time. I’m sure we have all experienced this J. For example, it could be a new way for a senior leader walking the floor to connect with impacted employees and stakeholders during the change process, or corporate artefacts that were not anticipated and could be perceived in a positive light.

7. Appealing to the senses. A lot of people remember sensory information more than data or facts. How do we leverage this to create the overall experience? Retail stores often dispense aromatherapy scents to create and environment or calm or excitement depending on the desired experience. Visual information is also important to create the right imagery so that employees can visualise the light at the end of the tunnel and be inspired to go through the tunnel. One can design visual images that help employee remember themes, or analogies that are easily understood and visualised (and therefore easily memorised).

My experience with The Four Seasons hotel from when I entered the hotel through to using its various amenities is that there is significant care and detailed anticipation of user needs. From personal interactions with staff that show care and rapport, through to facilities that are carefully designed to incorporate guest needs. For me the surprise element was the room iPad greeting me with my name and giving me a run down of the weather, things to do and other location and hotel references. The challenge for us as change leaders is to learn from this and think through how we design great change experience that are out of the ordinary and far from the typical ho-hum corporate approaches in initiative roll out.

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The Secret Powers of Change Data: How Insights Unlock Enterprise-Wide Transformation and Performance

The Secret Powers of Change Data: How Insights Unlock Enterprise-Wide Transformation and Performance

Why Change Data is the Hidden Superpower Every Business Leader Needs

The Untapped Potential of Change Data

For years, many senior leaders have viewed organisational change as an art, a blend of communications, stakeholder engagement, and leadership sponsorship. While these elements remain vital, something extraordinary has been unfolding under the surface: the rise of change data as a strategic asset.

What if the way we think of change is too small? What if, instead of treating it as a series of projects that need “change management,” we began to see the data generated by these efforts as a strategic lens into how organisations actually function, adapt, and perform?

Across industries, and over the years, we’ve observed first-hand that when organisations begin to harness change data, the outcomes go far beyond “project readiness.” They reshape how leaders make strategic decisions, how work gets done across divisions, and even how the board manages overall business performance.

The true, and often underestimated, secret is this: change data is not just about preparing people for change. It is about transforming the way an organisation leads, manages, and grows.

This article explores how organisations have unlocked these secret powers, and why senior change and transformation practitioners cannot afford to overlook them. In this part, we’ll uncover the foundational role change data plays in shifting mindsets, supporting readiness, and laying the groundwork for enterprise maturity.

Why Change Data Matters More Than Ever

Let’s start with the bigger picture. Today’s organisations face constant transformation: digital initiatives, regulatory adjustments, product innovation, workforce re-skilling, operational efficiency drives, sustainability imperatives, mergers, and more. The volume, speed, and complexity of change is not slowing down.

Most organisations respond by mobilising structured change management practices at the project level. This includes communication strategies, training, stakeholder maps, and readiness assessments. Valuable, yes — but only a narrow slice of the full change impact picture.

What we’ve noticed is that change practitioners typically begin their data journey seeking to address change readiness and saturation, focusing on questions such as:

  • What initiatives are happening when, and where are they hitting the same stakeholder groups?
  • How much change are people experiencing at any given time?
  • Are there upcoming “hot spots” where the risk of overload or disruption is high?

These are good starting points, and addressing them immediately reduces risk and helps leaders and workforce groups feel supported. But this is only the tip of the iceberg.

The deeper value, the secret power of change data, is how it enables organisations to:

  1. Redesign structures of work to better support people through business change. For example, moving from purely project-focused change roles to embedded business change partners, who carry insights across initiatives.
  2. Prepare leaders far more effectively. Division executives who receive targeted change data can anticipate disruption, balance transformation with business-as-usual priorities, and sequence initiatives in ways that protect performance while still delivering progress.
  3. Elevate organisational conversations. At the enterprise level, change data doesn’t just observe disruption; it enables executives to evaluate trade-offs between delivery performance vs. business performance risks.

Put simply: change data transforms transformation — because it turns change into something tangible, measurable, and ultimately manageable at scale.

The First Unlock: Readiness and Saturation Data

Most organisations begin their change data journey addressing two of the most persistent pain points in transformation:

  1. Readiness: Are stakeholders equipped and prepared for upcoming changes?
  2. Saturation: Are people experiencing too much change across overlapping initiatives?

Without data, answers to these questions often rely on perception, anecdote, or late-stage feedback. This reactive approach leads to the classic symptoms of change fatigue: low morale, declining adoption, higher resistance, and frustrated leaders.

When organisations start capturing and reporting change data, however, the picture changes. Suddenly leaders see clear visibility of:

  • Change calendars that reveal how shifts overlap across projects and BAU activities.
  • Impact mapping that shows who is affected by what, when, and to what degree.
  • Hot spot reports that flag functions or business units at risk of overload.

This creates an immediate shift in dialogue. Where once change fatigue was a nebulous concern, leaders now have transparent indicators that guide practical actions like:

  • Adjusting timelines to avoid overload.
  • Sequencing initiatives so that employees face logical, not chaotic, transitions.
  • Allocating resources more intelligently to at-risk teams or functions.

In other words, readiness and saturation data gives leaders evidence-driven tools to manage complexity proactively, not reactively.

From Project Silos to Business Division-Level Change Partnership

However, the story does not end here. After building this readiness and saturation visibility, many organisations realise another breakthrough: change data encourages structural innovation in how change support is delivered.

Traditionally, change management capability is tied closely to individual projects. Each initiative brings in dedicated change resources, who manage impacts and adoption within their project scope. While effective at the micro-level, this creates silos: each project optimises for itself, but no one is accountable for the end-to-end employee experience across multiple changes.

By analysing change data across initiatives, organisations discover the opportunity to reorganise change capability around the business division, not the project. This leads to the creation of business change partners — roles embedded within divisions who leverage data insights to prioritise, balance, and guide cumulative change impact.

This structural shift is powerful because it:

  • Ensures continuity across initiatives and prevents duplication of stakeholder engagement.
  • Aligns change work to business priorities and outcomes, not only project metrics.
  • Provides leaders with trusted advisors embedded in their unit, armed with data describing the total reality of their workforce’s experience.

The impact is transformative. Instead of asking “How do we implement change for this project?” business units start asking “How do we optimise how change lands in our world over the next quarter or year?”.

This is where change management is no longer as a functional service, but as a strategic business capability.

Empowering Leaders to Anticipate and Design Around Change

The shift continues when organisational leaders, especially division heads, receive change data in usable, digestible forms. Suddenly, leadership conversations broaden from project execution to strategic performance.

When data is available, leaders:

  • Plan BAU activities with foresight. Instead of being blindsided by overlapping project timelines, they can stage internal improvements and initiatives so that business-critical periods (sales peaks, new product launches, market shifts) are not disrupted.
  • Balance business and transformation goals. With saturation hot spots visible, leaders can argue not only for speed but for sustainable adoption. This reframes transformation success as not just “delivered on time” but “delivered without degrading business performance.”
  • Design end-to-end transitions at the human level. When you know how employees are being impacted across multiple concurrent initiatives, you can tailor support and reduce fatigue in ways that would never be possible from a single-project lens.

In our experience, these leader-level conversations often spark “lightbulb moments.” Suddenly, senior executives realise change management is not solely about comms and training, it is a strategic enabler of business continuity and performance in times of transformation.

Setting the Stage: The Secret Power of Enterprise-Level Insights

Everything we’ve covered so far, readiness, saturation, structural redesign, business partnership, leader foresight, is just the beginning. These are the foundational benefits organisations experience as soon as they begin systematically capturing and working with change data.

But the real transformation happens when this data scales up to the enterprise level. At this scale, change data becomes a cross-enterprise performance management tool, providing clarity into adoption levels, risk balancing, and even what drives successful behaviour change.

For executives who constantly say “our people are our most important asset,” this is the moment where data finally converts that rhetoric into measurable insights about how people truly experience and deliver change.

From Insights to Impact – How Change Data Transforms Leadership, Governance, and Enterprise Decision-Making

Introduction: Moving from Local Impact to Enterprise Strategy

In the previous section, we explored how organisations begin their journey with change data, tackling readiness and saturation, experimenting with structural improvements like business change partners, and empowering division leaders to design change around business realities. These steps are critical foundations.

But at a certain point, the implications of change data begin to transcend the local or divisional lens. When aggregated and applied effectively, change data becomes a strategic capability at the enterprise level.

At this stage, executives and boards use change insights not only to manage risk but to actively optimise transformation success, protect business performance, and steer organisational strategy in real time.

This marks the transition from using data tactically to leveraging it as part of enterprise governance and maturity. In this part, we’ll explore how organisations use change data to:

  • Drive effective enterprise and division-level decision-making.
  • Establish performance-driven governance using change insights.
  • Embed enterprise adoption, behaviour, and performance metrics.
  • Create leadership forums and cohorts dedicated to leveraging change data.

Enterprise-Level Decision Making: Balancing Change Risk with Business Performance

Most organisations are adept at managing delivery risk: risks to timelines, budgets, scope, and quality. But what about business performance risks that emerge when too much change hits the organisation at once, or when leaders underestimate the adoption curve required to translate “delivered” into “realised” outcomes?

This is where change data serves as a powerful balancing mechanism between delivery ambition and business reality.

Three Key Levers Enterprise Data Enables:

  1. Visibility of Cumulative Impact
    • Aggregate data across projects allows executives to see where the “burden of change” is truly falling.
    • For example, two transformation streams may be well sequenced in PMO timelines, but change impact data reveals their effects converge on the same frontline teams.
  2. Performance Trade-Offs
    • Using data, leaders can weigh whether accelerating change puts business performance at risk.
    • Instead of relying on generic “people may be fatigued” cautions, they see quantified measures of readiness, adoption likelihood, and saturation.
  3. Proactive Sequencing and De-Risking
    • Leaders can now make informed calls on whether to reschedule projects, boost local support, or phase rollouts — before issues manifest.
    • This reframes steering committees away from firefighting delivery slippage and toward strategic sequencing of value realisation.

The result? Enterprise-level decision forums shift from delivery tracking to transformation performance management.

The Rise of Governance Through Change Insights

At the heart of this enterprise maturity is governance. Change data equips governance bodies: steering committees, transformation councils, boards, with insights that go far beyond RAG status reports.

What Modern Change Governance Looks Like

  • Integration with Enterprise PMO and Risk Functions
    Change insights become a complementary dimension of existing project portfolio oversight. This means transformation risks are assessed not only in scope, time, and cost terms, but also in people adoption terms.
  • Leading Metrics, Not Just Lagging Ones
    Instead of focusing exclusively on post-rollout surveys, governance discussions use predictive data: “Based on our saturation and readiness analysis, here are the divisions most at risk of under-adoption next quarter.”
  • Decision-Making Forums
    Some organisations establish an enterprise change council comprising division heads, HR leaders, and transformation sponsors. Armed with data, these forums monitor adoption, risk distribution, and behavioural alignment, making collective decisions on sequencing and prioritisation.

In practice, this form of governance strengthens accountability. Business leaders can no longer say “change failed because people weren’t ready”, because readiness and adoption metrics were visible, tracked, and governed.

Beyond Readiness: Driving Behavioural Change and Adoption

One of the most significant leaps in value occurs when organisations move past tracking readiness and saturation to deep adoption and behavioural insights.

Senior leaders increasingly ask:

  • “What actually drives adoption in our context?”
  • “How do we know whether behavioural change is sticking?”
  • “Can we predict where we will face resistance or quick uptake?”

How Change Data Supports Adoption Insights

  1. Adoption Pathway Analytics
    • By tracking adoption over time and correlating it with factors such as communication involvement, leadership sponsorship, or local network champions, organisations can identify adoption predictors.
  2. Behaviour Tracking
    • Surveys, system usage analytics, and performance KPIs can be cross-referenced with project timelines to assess whether people actually shift behaviours aligned to new ways of working.
  3. Change “Drivers” and “Blockers”
    • Insights reveal not just whether adoption is happening but which interventions (e.g., leader support, peer champions, targeted comms) accelerate success versus which gaps undercut adoption.

In mature organisations, these metrics elevate the conversation at the board level: Are we investing in change interventions that work, or are we simply rolling out change “playbooks” or models without evidence of effectiveness?

Case in Point: Shifting into Business Management Metrics

Perhaps the most profound step we’ve witnessed is when organisations begin to integrate change metrics into their general business management scorecards.

At this point, change metrics stop being “nice to have” project documentation and become seen as indispensable business performance management tools.

For example:

  • Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) include sections not just on operational KPIs but also on cumulative change impact and adoption progress.
  • Board Reports incorporate indicators on behavioural shift, workforce adaptation, and portfolio-wide saturation levels.
  • Divisional Scorecards measure not only EBIT contribution, but “change health” indicators such as employee adaptability, adoption rates, and resistance risk.

The symbolic and practical power of this integration is immense. For leadership teams, it elevates change from “a project issue” to a strategic input into enterprise performance conversations.

And culturally, it signals a decisive shift: change is no longer managed at the cost margins.  It is part of how we run the business. Every quarter. Every board meeting. Every leadership conversation.

Building an Enterprise Change Cohort

Finally, one of the most effective mechanisms to embed enterprise change data into decision-making is forming a change cohort drawn from business division leads.

This group becomes a cross-functional brain trust, armed with data, tasked not with “doing change management” but with driving enterprise change outcomes.

  • They review impact and adoption data across initiatives.
  • They align recommendations back to business performance needs.
  • They build accountability for change not in the project office, but in the business.

This is a powerful maturity marker. It signals the organisation recognises that change is not something “delivered to” the business.  It is something driven by the business, informed by real data and insights.

The Second Unlock: Enterprise Effectiveness Through Insights

By now, the secret powers of change data are undeniable. Once adopted into enterprise decision-making and governance, organisations begin to:

  • Mitigate transformation and performance risks proactively.
  • Redefine governance practice by treating adoption, behaviour, and readiness as measurable priorities.
  • Integrate change health into performance scorecards, making it inseparable from other business metrics.
  • Elevate cross-functional leadership forums to align business and transformation agendas.

These are the practices that differentiate organisations still “managing projects” from those building strategic, data-driven, adaptive enterprises.

But the journey does not end here. In fact, the most advanced organisations unlock a third level of maturity: where change data becomes part of talent development, board-level performance reporting, and organisational culture itself.

High Performance Organisations: Embedding Change Data into Leadership, Culture, and Competitive Edge

When Change Data Becomes a Cultural Superpower

Earlier, we explored how organisations begin their journey by tackling readiness and saturation, shifting from project silos towards business partnership. Then, we elevated the conversation to the enterprise level, where governance and leadership use change data to make informed, risk-balanced decisions, manage adoption, and embed “change health” into business performance scorecards.

Now, we move to the final progression, the point where change data and insights are so embedded in leadership, governance, and culture that they become a source of ownership, talent development, and competitive differentiation.

This is the journey from effective change management to change leadership maturity at the highest level.

The three levels of change maturity as supported by change data insights

Foundational: AwarenessSucceeding: Effective decision making  High performance: Ownership and drive  
– Clarity of what initiatives do we have and impact levels, including BAU – Stakeholder awareness of key hotspot risks for increased change volume – Business division-focused (vs. project focused) change partner support– Clear change governance for business decision making leveraging change data insights (enterprise and business division levels) – Enterprise level business readiness and adoption driven through metrics, reporting and continuous improvement, including behavioural change – Enterprise change cohort consisting of Business division leads to drive change outcomes using data insights– Change metrics embedded as a part of general business for senior leaders, driving ownership of change outcomes – Board level reporting across various facets of change, including behavioural change, adoption and risk – Enterprise change champion network a talent factory where insight data is leveraged and talents get promoted and poached

The High-Performance Tier: Ownership and Drive

At this stage, the use of change data and insights is no longer owned primarily by project teams, central transformation offices, or even dedicated change practitioners. Instead, senior leaders themselves own change outcomes, and they actively institutionalise change insights in everyday business practice.

Three High-Performance Markers

  1. Change Metrics as Senior Leadership Accountability
    • Change outcomes: adoption rates, behavioural shifts, stakeholder readiness, and risk forecasts, are included in senior leadership scorecards.
    • Leaders no longer talk about “delivering projects” without reference to how their teams are adapting, adopting, and sustaining new ways of working.
  2. Board-Level Reporting
    • Change health becomes part of board packs alongside financial performance, compliance, and risk oversight.
    • Directors don’t just ask, “Are we meeting transformation milestones?” They ask, “Do we have the organisational capacity and adoption to sustain strategic change?”
  3. Change Champion Networks as Talent Factories
    • Employees who serve as champions or liaisons in major transformations gain exposure, leadership experience, and enterprise-level influence.
    • Organisations find these roles become stepping stones for emerging leaders, talent pipelines are strengthened, and “change fluency” becomes baked into leadership culture.

These markers demonstrate that the organisation has crossed a key threshold: change insights no longer just support leadership — they drive leadership.

Board-Level Visibility: A Catalyst for Strategic Attention

Boards typically prioritise financial, compliance, and reputational risks. Yet, in today’s change-saturated environment, the greatest unmitigated risk often lies in failed adoption and disrupted business performance.

When change data is integrated into board-level reporting, three powerful shifts occur:

  1. Change Becomes Measurable Governance
    Boards can demand evidence-based assurance: how many initiatives, what impact, readiness levels, adoption progress. Vague status reports are replaced with data-driven foresight.
  2. Strategic Prioritisation Improves
    Boards often oversee a portfolio of transformation investments. Change data enables prioritisation: which programs to accelerate, slow, or pivot based on organisational capacity, not just financial ROI.
  3. Cultural Signals Cascade
    When boards ask targeted questions about adoption, leadership sponsorship, and behavioural change, the organisation as a whole notices. This raises the visibility and legitimacy of managing human-centered change as an enterprise concern.

In practice, board-level visibility embeds long-term discipline. Just as financial mismanagement is unacceptable, so too becomes transformation mismanagement. Change data becomes part of corporate accountability.

The Enterprise Change Network as a Talent Engine

One of the most surprising dividends of using change data effectively is its role in talent growth and leadership development.

Many organisations form change champion networks, employees across functions who advocate, influence, and support adoption. In immature organisations, these networks are ad hoc and under-utilised. But in high-performing enterprises, they evolve into systematic leadership development ecosystems.

  • Data-Backed Roles of Influence
    Champions have access to change impact, readiness and adoption data, equipping them with real insights to guide their colleagues and leaders.
  • Pipeline of Future Leaders
    Champions operate across silos, build enterprise visibility, and practice skills in communication, influence, and resilience, qualities boards and executives prize in future leaders.
  • Competitive Differentiation in Talent Retention
    Organisations known for embedding employees in enterprise change networks build reputational capital. These individuals are promoted internally and sought externally, creating a talent marketplace where change fluency is a form of career currency.

In effect, change data is not just driving transformation; it is shaping the leadership DNA of the next generation.

Cultural Transformation: Change as Business-as-Usual

Perhaps the greatest secret power of change data is how it shifts culture. At the high-performance stage, data-driven insights move beyond being a “change tool” and become part of everyday business management practice.

What does this look like?

  • Leaders View Change as Continuous, Not Episodic
    With impact and adoption metrics consistently visible, leaders accept that transformation is not a project to “complete” but a continuous cycle of adaptation.
  • Change Conversations Become Part of the Operating Rhythm
    Quarterly reviews, leadership meetings, and town halls consistently include forward views on change impact and adoption progress. It stops being an afterthought.
  • Learning Loops Drive Continuous Improvement
    Data doesn’t just describe change; it teaches the organisation how to get better at it. Each initiative provides lessons on what drives adoption, insights that compound across time.

At this point, organisations move from asking, “How do we manage this specific change?” to “How do we become more adaptive as an enterprise?”

This cultural shift is profound. It shifts change away from being experienced as disruption and repositions it as a core muscle of competitive advantage.

Unlocking Competitive Advantage: The Strategic Dividend of Change Insights

Why does all this matter? Because in industries disrupted by digitalisation, customer expectations, regulatory shifts, and global competition, the ability to adapt is itself a sustainable advantage.

Change data and insights arm organisations with:

  • The foresight to avoid fatigue and disruption risks before they materialise.
  • The ability to sequence transformations strategically, protecting business performance while innovating.
  • The intelligence to scale only the interventions that drive adoption and results, not generic templates.
  • The discipline to couple strategic ambition with human-centred accountability at board level.

And perhaps most importantly:

  • A workforce and leadership culture where adaptability is seen as the norm, career-enhancing, and strategically valuable.

In this way, data doesn’t simply make change more manageable. It makes the organisation more resilient, adaptive, and competitive, even in the most volatile environments.

The Secret Powers Realised

We have observed with the organisations that we’ve worked with that what started for many organisations as a tactical tool to solve readiness and saturation challenges unfolds into something far greater. Change data has the power to:

  • Redefine how work is structured (business partnerships vs. project silos).
  • Enable leaders to design around change impacts, protecting business continuity and maximising performance.
  • Transform governance into enterprise-level performance management.
  • Embed accountability for adoption and behavioural change at the executive and board levels.
  • Create talent engines and cultural transformation that strengthen adaptability as a way of life.

For senior change and transformation practitioners, the lesson is clear: change data is not a side tool, but a strategic superpower. Those who champion it are not just enabling today’s transformation projects; they are shaping the enterprise capability to thrive in a world of constant change.

The organisations that we have seen reach this level of maturity realise that change is not something to manage. It is something to own, optimise, and leverage for competitive advantage. And the key that unlocks it all? Change data and insights.

What we’ve outlined in this article is not just a conceptual framework, but what we’ve observed in the organisations we’ve worked with over the years.  To find out more about how your organisation may benefit from change data insights chat to us to find out more.