Future of HR: Blog 7: Why Traditional Change Management No Longer Works

Jun 22, 2026

We Fixed the Processes. Now We Need to Transform the System.

Over the last decade, many organisations have invested heavily in improving:

  • employee experience
  • talent management
  • learning
  • workforce planning
  • digital HR
  • AI-enabled people practices

Yet despite these advances, transformation efforts continue to disappoint. Research consistently shows that large-scale transformation programmes struggle to achieve their intended outcomes. The issue is rarely technology or strategy. The issue is usually change itself.

Many organisations continue to apply change models developed for a world that no longer exists. A world that was:

  • predictable
  • hierarchical
  • stable
  • linear

Today's world is none of those things.

The Change Management Problem

Traditional change management assumes:

  1. Leaders know the answer.
  2. The future state can be designed in advance.
  3. People need help accepting the solution.
  4. Change follows a predictable sequence.

The model is simple:

Diagnose → Design → Communicate → Implement → Sustain

This worked reasonably well when organisations operated in relatively stable environments, but today's challenges are fundamentally different.

Digital disruption. AI adoption. New ways of working. Skills shortages. Hybrid work. Cultural transformation. These are not technical problems. They are adaptive challenges and adaptive challenges cannot be solved through traditional change programmes.

Why Many Transformations Fail

One of the most interesting concepts from the OD literature is the distinction between:

Leaders defining the change

versus

Stakeholders helping create the change.

The evidence is striking. Transformations are significantly more successful when leaders provide direction while employees participate in shaping the solution. People support what they help create. When organisations attempt to impose change from the top down, resistance increases. When people become active participants, ownership emerges. The lesson is simple: Change cannot be done to people. It must be done with them.

The Evolution of Organisation Development

Organisation Development OD) has always focused on helping organisations adapt, but OD itself is changing.

Historically OD concentrated on:

  • culture
  • leadership
  • team effectiveness
  • behavioural change

Those capabilities remain important, however, the modern OD agenda is much broader. Today's OD function increasingly focuses on:

  • Culture and Purpose Activation. Embedding values into everyday decisions.
  • Leadership and Team Effectiveness. Building adaptive leaders and psychologically safe teams.
  • Future Capability Building. Creating learning ecosystems and digital fluency.
  • Systems-Level Change. Helping organisations transform at scale.
  • Organisational Sensing. Using data and feedback to understand emerging issues.
  • Inclusion and Belonging. Designing systems where diverse perspectives thrive.
  • Mindset and Narrative Change Helping organisations make sense of uncertainty.
  • Organisation Design Designing structures capable of adapting continuously.

From Diagnostic OD to Dialogic OD

One of the biggest shifts in modern OD is moving from diagnostic thinking to dialogic thinking.

Traditional OD asks:

What is broken and how do we fix it?

Dialogic OD asks:

What conversations will help create a better future?

The distinction is profound.

Diagnostic OD

Assumes:

  • reality is objective
  • problems can be identified
  • root causes can be found
  • experts design solutions

The goal is behaviour change.

Dialogic OD

Assumes:

  • reality is socially constructed
  • multiple perspectives exist
  • meaning shapes behaviour
  • change emerges through conversations

The goal is mindset change.

In increasingly complex environments, dialogic approaches often outperform purely diagnostic ones because they help organisations navigate uncertainty rather than eliminate it.

From Forcing Change to Generating Change

Many transformation programmes still operate using what might be called the "burning platform" approach.

  • Create urgency.
  • Increase pressure.
  • Drive compliance.
  • Push harder.

Yet history suggests that fear-driven change rarely produces sustainable transformation. People often comply temporarily while resisting privately.

Generative change takes a different approach. Instead of forcing change, it nurtures change. Instead of amplifying fear, it amplifies possibility. Instead of imposing solutions, it creates conditions where solutions emerge.

The focus becomes:

  • curiosity
  • experimentation
  • participation
  • learning
  • adaptation

Organisations grow into change rather than being pushed into it.

Planned Change Versus Generative Change

Traditional change follows a familiar sequence:

  1. Define the problem
  2. Analyse the data
  3. Create the solution
  4. Plan implementation
  5. Execute
  6. Measure results

Generative change starts somewhere very different.

  1. Identify the adaptive challenge
  2. Create a compelling possibility
  3. Engage diverse voices
  4. Run experiments
  5. Learn quickly
  6. Scale what works

The difference is subtle but important. Planned change seeks certainty before action. Generative change creates learning through action.

Why This Matters in the Age of AI

This shift becomes even more important as organisations adopt AI. Most organisations do not yet know:

  • how jobs will evolve
  • what future skills will emerge
  • how human-AI teams will operate
  • what new organisational structures will be required

You cannot design the perfect future state because it does not yet exist. The future must be discovered. This is precisely where generative and dialogic approaches become essential. They allow organisations to learn their way forward.

Leading Dual Transformation

One of the most important concepts for leaders today is dual transformation. Organisations must simultaneously:

Transformation A

  • Improve and optimise today's business.
  • Increase efficiency.
  • Drive performance.
  • Strengthen resilience.

Transformation B

  • Create tomorrow's business.
  • Build new capabilities.
  • Explore new opportunities.
  • Develop future growth engines.

Transformation C

Build the capabilities that connect both worlds.

  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  • Organisation design.
  • Change capability.

Without this third element, organisations often become trapped between protecting the present and building the future. HR and OD play a critical role in creating this bridge.

The New Role of OD

Historically OD professionals were often seen as facilitators of change programmes.

Today their role is much more strategic.

The modern OD leader becomes:

  • organisation designer
  • systems thinker
  • culture architect
  • capability builder
  • transformation partner
  • sense-maker

Most importantly, they help organisations build the capacity to change continuously, because in a world shaped by AI, digital disruption and constant uncertainty, change is no longer an event. It is an organisational capability.

Conclusion: The Future Belongs to Adaptive Organisations

The most successful organisations of the next decade will not necessarily have the best strategy. Nor will they necessarily have the best technology. They will have the ability to continually adapt. That requires a new approach to transformation.

One that moves:

  • from control to participation
  • from forcing to nurturing
  • from certainty to experimentation
  • from planned change to generative change
  • from change management to change capability

The future of Organisation Development is not helping organisations survive change. It is helping them become organisations that thrive because of it.

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