Over the past year, in my conversations with senior leaders across sectors, I have heard the same story repeated in different accents. Entire teams informed of structural changes by email, indirectly signaling their roles are at risk. Future-state organization charts circulate before conversations take place—names removed. Employees are told they remain “in role” while the structure around them has already shifted.
Leaders emphasize that the process was handled “with care.” Legal consultation completed, governance followed, communication plans drafted with supporting FAQs prepared and manager toolkits distributed. Change management, structurally, has never been more sophisticated. Yet the lived experience described by those on the receiving end is remarkably consistent: cold, transactional and sometimes calculated. Which raises a harder question: If change management capability has improved, why is trust eroding?
See also: People strategy under pressure: It’s time to pivot
The context we are operating in
This is not occurring in isolation. According to Gallup’s 2025 State of the Global Workplace report, global employee engagement fell from 23% to 21% last year—matching the decline seen during COVID lockdowns. Manager engagement dropped more sharply, from 30% to 27%. Seventy percent of team engagement is attributable to the manager. The global cost of disengagement is estimated at $438 billion. That is the workplace context in which we are asking organizations to absorb continuous change.
Now layer onto that: repeated restructuring cycles, investor pressure for margin discipline and transformation programs increasingly tied to automation and AI-driven efficiency. We are leading change inside already heightened systems, where speed is rewarded and reversals are costly.
Most change frameworks still focus on sequencing, stakeholder mapping and communication cadence—necessary, often well-executed, but no longer sufficient for the intensity of today’s environment.
The real distortion: Unexamined fear
Change does not usually fail because the structure is flawed. It falters because human response is mismanaged—particularly at senior levels. Fear in executive environments is rarely dramatic. It presents urgency framed as decisiveness, over-controlled messaging framed as risk management, premature consensus framed as alignment and silence framed as professionalism. And that distortion does not stay at the top of the system. It cascades.
In today’s environment, decisions around workforce redesign feel harder to reverse. The stakes are visible and personal. When those decisions are shaped under pressure, the emotional tone of the change is set long before it reaches the wider organization.
Gallup’s data shows managers are the most strained cohort in the system and their wellbeing has declined. Yet they are the layer responsible for absorbing shock and translating change into coherence for others. If managers are emotionally dysregulated, engagement follows.
When leaders are under sustained pressure, decisions move faster than people can absorb them, leadership debate shortens and announcements land before managers have processed the impact themselves. What is often labelled resistance is, more accurately, shock working its way through the system.
The illusion of responsible execution
One of the most concerning patterns I hear these days is this: Leaders genuinely believe they have handled change well. They held town halls, they allowed questions and they provided support resources. But when I speak privately with affected employees, the narrative shifts. They describe discovering their future through a spreadsheet. Being told their role exists “for now.” Receiving reassurance that does not match reality.
This is rarely intentional harm. It is the byproduct of organizations optimized for speed, control and legal defensibility. Modern corporations are built to be defensible. Every step documented, with every message reviewed and every legal exposure mitigated. And in that process, dignity—being spoken to directly, honestly and in good time—is often what disappears first.
When repeated change is experienced as impersonal, psychological contracts adjust. High performers become more cautious. Managers wait for the next wave before committing energy. Survivors of restructuring often sit in roles that have expanded but not been redesigned, carrying additional workload while wondering if they are next. Over time, commitment becomes more conditional.
So, what needs to change?
If change is accelerating—and it is—then governance must evolve with it. Three recalibrations matter. For HR leaders, this is a lived reality. Many sit at the table understanding both the commercial realities and the human cost. I sat in that seat—slowing the room down when margins are tight and timelines are public is not comfortable. But if HR does not surface the longer-term risk, it is unlikely anyone else will—not as opposition, but as stewardship of the whole system.
1. Make pressure visible in decision-making
Senior leaders operate under intense pressure—markets, boards, public scrutiny. Under that pressure, timelines compress and debate narrows. If pressure distorts judgment, governance must account for it.
Executive teams need disciplined space to test not only the strategy, but the forces shaping it. HR is uniquely positioned to do this—not as the emotional counterweight, but as the guardian of system capacity.
Instead of asking only, “Are we aligned?” HR can ask: What will this timeline mean for manager capacity? What will this mean for retention six months from now? Are we accelerating this decision because it strengthens execution—or because it relieves short-term pressure? These are questions about execution risk, not sentiment.
2. Protect organizational absorption
Markets may require pace. But pace does not remove the need for sequencing discipline if change is to embed rather than rebound.
When structures are announced before managers are briefed, when systems update before conversations happen, when work design is not adjusted alongside role redesign, absorption of the change fails.
HR’s role here is to sequence discipline. Ensuring conversations precede system updates. Ensuring managers are prepared before teams are informed. Ensuring workload redesign accompanies structural change.
When roles change but work does not, survivors absorb the strain. They work longer hours. They hesitate to speak up. The next restructure lands on an already depleted layer. Over time, fatigue becomes cultural. And performance becomes less predictable.
3. Strengthen managerial steadiness
Gallup’s data makes this plain: Managers drive engagement, yet manager wellbeing is declining most sharply. Much of current investment equips managers to deliver outcomes—metrics, systems, transformation tools. Far less equips them to hold difficult conversations without over-reassuring, distancing or shutting down.
There is also an opportunity here to help managers understand fear as data, not weakness. When leaders can recognize their own urgency or defensiveness as signals, rather than suppressing them, they make cleaner decisions and communicate with greater steadiness.
Many HR and change functions are understandably measured on program delivery. But the steadiness of managers under pressure is what determines whether change embeds or fractures.
Managers must be able to: Hold ambiguity without pretending certainty. Deliver difficult news without emotional withdrawal. Maintain composure while acknowledging impact.
A more honest question
Perhaps the issue is not that change management is failing. It is that the emotional conditions surrounding change have intensified, and our frameworks have not kept pace. We have perfected the process. We have not strengthened the human capability required to lead repeated change under pressure.
For HR leaders, this is the difficult edge of the role. It requires commercial fluency and moral courage. It requires understanding investor demands while still asking, “What will this do to the system six months from now?”
If we continue to treat change as structural choreography while ignoring the psychological load borne by managers and employees alike, engagement will continue to slide. The harder truth may be this: In our pursuit of efficiency and acceleration, leadership has become more controlled and less relational.
The question for today’s HR and executive leaders is not whether change is necessary. It is whether we are willing to examine how it is experienced—and how our own fear shapes the way we lead it. Because culture does not remember the slide deck. It remembers how people were treated when the structure moved.
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