Two-thirds of organizational change initiatives fail. Most leaders blame strategy, timelines, or bad tech. They’re wrong. The real culprit is culture.
I’ve watched this play out across industries for years. A company invests millions in a digital transformation. They hire consultants, build project timelines, and communicate the vision from the C-suite. Six months in, adoption stalls. Employees revert to old workflows. The change just… dies. And everyone ends up blaming the resistance of people instead of looking at what was actually broken.
Here’s what I’ve learned: organizational change management advice obsesses over process models and implementation timelines. But the real lever—the one that determines whether your change initiative actually sticks—is culture.
This isn’t soft philosophy. It’s backed by data. And once you understand how culture actually works in the context of change, you can stop fighting your organization and start channeling it.
Why Most Change Initiatives Actually Fail
The numbers are stark. Base-case success rate? 32%. When change management is done right? 88% (Prosci, 2023). That’s a 6.7x difference. Not an improvement. A transformation.
So what separates the winners from the 68% of failed initiatives?
When researchers dig into the failures, the culprits are almost always cultural:
33% of transformations fail due to inadequate management support. (McKinsey, 2023)
39% fail due to employee resistance. (McKinsey, 2023)
Both are cultural. Both prove that people behave based on what actually gets rewarded, not what the org chart says they should do.
One analysis across multiple industries found that 75% of popular change approaches fail because they neglect the human element entirely. (American Journal of Social and Humanitarian Research, 2022) Organizations roll out Six Sigma. They implement new software platforms. They restructure reporting lines. But they treat people as a problem to manage instead of a foundation to build on.
And here’s the kicker: only 25% of organizations report that their senior leadership excels at managing change. (Gartner, 2024) Which means the people who are supposed to champion these initiatives are often the least equipped to do it.
The Frameworks Everyone Knows (and What They’re Missing)
You’ve heard them all: Kotter, ADKAR, Lewin, Bridges, McKinsey’s 7-S. They work. But they all make the same mistake—they mention culture, then bury it.
Kotter’s model has “shaping corporate culture” as Step 8. That’s the final phase. By that point, you’ve already made most of your decisions. You’ve already designed your change, communicated it, and started the rollout. Culture becomes a checkbox, something to “consolidate and drive change home,” not the foundation everything’s built on.
This is backwards.
The best organizations I’ve worked with don’t use just one framework. They integrate multiple models, adapting them to their specific context. There’s no single change management strategy that works for every organization. But they all start with the same question: What is our culture right now, and is it aligned with where we’re trying to go?
For a deeper look at how different frameworks compare and where they’re best applied, see Change Management Models Compared.
“Culture Eats Strategy for Breakfast”—The Real Story
Everyone attributes this quote to Peter Drucker. It sounds like something he’d say. It has that Drucker gravitas.
The truth? Drucker never said it. The Drucker Institute has no record of it. It’s folklore. And the fact that it’s folklore is actually the most interesting part.
The quote actually comes from Mark Fields, Ford’s President of the Americas, speaking in 2006 about Ford’s transformation efforts. He said: “You can have the best plan in the world, and if the culture isn’t going to let it happen, it’s going to die on the vine.” (Ford, 2006)
What’s telling is that this insight resonated so powerfully across industries that executives everywhere independently recognized themselves in it. CEOs at tech companies, manufacturing firms, financial institutions—they all looked at their own strategic initiatives and thought, “Yeah, that’s exactly what happened to us.”
The data backs this up. 78% of Fortune 1000 CEOs identify culture as a top-3 performance factor. (Gartner, 2024) And research from Harvard Business Review found that cultural alignment accounts for nearly half the variance in successful strategy execution. (Harvard Business Review, 2019)
Take Nokia. Here’s a company that had the engineers, the resources, and actually invented many of the core technologies that powered the smartphone revolution. They understood where the market was going. But their culture rewarded incremental improvement and punished dissent. Risk-taking was career-limiting. Hierarchy mattered more than the quality of the idea. So when the iPhone showed up, Nokia’s brilliant engineers were trapped inside a culture that wouldn’t let them win. Culture didn’t just eat strategy. It quietly starved it.
The AI Adoption Proof Point
Here’s a live experiment happening right now in thousands of organizations.
78% of companies use AI in at least one function. (McKinsey, 2025) That’s adoption at scale. But here’s the gap: only 1% describe themselves as “mature” in their AI implementation. (McKinsey, 2025)
Why such a massive disparity?
Because only 28% of employees know how to use their company’s AI tools. (Gartner, 2024) And 74% of companies struggle to achieve and scale AI value. (McKinsey, 2025)
The technology works. The business case is clear. But the change isn’t sticking because the culture isn’t prepared for it.
Every successful AI implementation is a change management challenge, not just a technology deployment. You’re asking people to change how they work. You’re asking managers to trust that an AI tool can augment their team’s capability instead of threatening their authority. You’re asking risk-averse organizations to experiment with new tools when failure might be visible and costly.
That’s not a software problem. It’s a cultural problem.
What Culture-First Change Management Actually Looks Like
So if culture is the real lever, what does that mean in practice? How do you actually do this?
Start With Diagnosis, Not Deployment
Most organizations approach change like this: leadership makes a decision, hires a consultant, and launches a program. The culture is an afterthought.
Culture-first change management inverts this. Before you design your initiative, you need to understand your actual culture—not the one you think you have or the one you want, but the one that actually exists right now. What are the unwritten rules? Who gets rewarded, and for what? That’s your real culture. Everything else is just the org chart.
This diagnosis takes time. It requires honest conversations. But it’s the difference between designing change that works with your culture and designing change that ignores it.
Leadership Alignment Comes First
I’ve never seen a change initiative succeed when senior leadership was divided on it.
You can have the most elegant change strategy in the world, but if the COO doesn’t believe in it while the CEO is pushing it hard, everyone watches and waits to see who wins. The default behavior is inertia. Resistance becomes rational because people know the initiative might not last.
Before you communicate change to the broader organization, leadership needs to be genuinely aligned—not just aligned on the messaging, but aligned on the direction. And that alignment needs to be visible. People need to see leaders modeling the change before they’re asked to adopt it themselves.
Build Psychological Safety First
People won’t experiment if they’re afraid to fail. I’ve watched organizations with brilliant change ideas stall because the first failure cost someone their credibility.
Psychological safety isn’t abstract—it’s leaders saying “I don’t know” out loud and celebrating the failures that teach you something. If your organization punishes mistakes, you’ll get compliance. You won’t get the innovation that makes change stick. It’s uncomfortable. And it’s non-negotiable.
Involve Employees in the Design
Here’s what I’ve seen destroy change initiatives: leadership designs the change in isolation, then tries to convince people to adopt it.
Here’s what I’ve seen make change stick: leadership sets the direction, then brings employees into the design of how you get there.
The difference is ownership. Compliance is something you do because you have to. Ownership is something you do because you helped create it and you believe in it.
This doesn’t mean design by committee. It means identifying key voices across the organization—frontline employees, managers, skeptics—and genuinely incorporating their input into how the change gets implemented.
Measure Culture Alongside Business Metrics
Most organizations measure adoption: Did people take the training? Are they using the new system? Did we hit the KPI?
But adoption and impact are different things. You can hit your adoption numbers and still have a change that didn’t actually transform how the organization works.
Measure culture directly. Are people more psychologically safe after the change? Has collaboration improved? Are silos breaking down? Are people innovating more or just following the new playbook?
These metrics are harder to track than adoption rates. But they tell you whether the change actually stuck or just became another rule people follow while doing things the old way behind closed doors.
For guidance on designing metrics and tracking cultural change, see Measuring Organizational Change.
The Integration Point: Building Your Change Strategy
Kotter’s brilliant at creating urgency. ADKAR nails the individual transition. Bridges gets the emotional reality. McKinsey’s 7-S gives structural clarity. Most organizations treat them like competing models. That’s the mistake. Integrate them around a cultural foundation:
- Diagnose your current culture (foundation)
- Assess which frameworks align with your org’s needs (integration)
- Design change with cultural dynamics in mind (application)
- Communicate in ways that respect your culture (activation)
- Measure culture as your success indicator (accountability)
This approach respects the rigor of established frameworks while centering the human reality that makes or breaks change.
The Responsibility Is on Leadership
Here’s the hard part: none of this works if leaders don’t own it.
Culture doesn’t eat strategy for breakfast by accident. It happens when leaders hand culture off to HR or the change management office. That’s the abdication right there. Culture is a leadership responsibility.
Which means you have to look at your actual culture—not the values statement, the real one. You have to model the change yourself. You have to stay committed past the point where it’s comfortable. Change doesn’t stick in a quarter. It sticks when people see leadership is still prioritizing it two years in. And you have to tolerate the chaos of transition—things feeling slower, less efficient, more messy. That’s not failure. That’s what change looks like in the middle.
The Organizations Getting This Right
The companies I’ve seen successfully navigate significant organizational change share one thing: they looked at their culture honestly before they started.
They didn’t assume “we’ll just communicate better.” They asked what communication styles actually worked in their environment. They didn’t assume “resistance is natural.” They asked why people were resisting and what fears drove that resistance. They didn’t assume “adoption = success.” They asked what success actually meant and how they’d know when they got there.
These organizations are rarely the ones with the flashiest change management frameworks or the biggest budgets. They’re the ones willing to do the harder work of cultural diagnosis and integration before they start the more visible work of transformation.
The Challenge
Here’s my direct ask: What have you actually done to understand your organizational culture?
Not the culture you want. Not the culture your mission statement describes. The real, lived culture—the one that determines what actually gets done and why.
Because when you’re facing the next organizational change, the next transformation, the next initiative that requires people to work differently, your success won’t be determined by how well-designed your change management plan is.
It’ll be determined by how deeply you understand the culture you’re trying to evolve and how intentionally you integrate that understanding into every decision you make.
That’s organizational change management. That’s what actually works.
Dive Deeper
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Source: gothamCulture – gothamculture.com
