Workday is a cloud-based software platform for enterprises that integrates human capital management (HCM), financial management, and business planning and analytics into a single system. Organizations use it to manage core human resources (HR), payroll, finance, business operations, and management processes.Workday touches multiple business areas and becomes a critical component in how businesses operate. That’s why a change management strategy is non-negotiable for organizations that want to deploy Workday. In this guide, we’ll help you understand how an effective change management strategy can increase the value of your Workday implementation. {% module_block module "widget_be177585-c7ff-4...
Your ERP Adoption Rate Guide
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems are the backbone of large organizations. They orchestrate complex processes across critical departments, from finance to supply chain management. As organizations invest heavily in these platforms to compete in a dynamic market, measuring whether people actually adopt and use them as intended is critical to gauging success, justifying costs, and supporting long-term business growth. In this guide, we explain ERP adoption rates, the challenges of ERP adoption, and why change management is the secret ingredient for realizing the full value of your investment and achieving business outcomes. × Your ERP Will Go Live. Will It Deliver Value? What is ERP Adoption Rate? ERP adoption rate measures the extent to which employees consistently and correctly use the ERP system to perform their daily work. It goes beyond simple login metrics or training completion rates and helps organizations understand whether users are following standardized processes, entering accurate data, and relying on the system to execute and inform decisions. At its core, ERP adoption reflects behavioral change, highlighting whether individuals shifted from legacy habits to new, system-driven ways of working that enable scalable growth and sustainable success. Current ERP Adoption Rate Statistics & Measurement Methods What do ERP adoption rates look like in today’s landscape? Here’s what ERP market statistics have to say: Factors influencing ERP adoption rate statistics Adoption rate statistics are influenced by how adoption is defined, measured, and reported across different ERP projects. The scope of the rollout (enterprise-wide vs. phased), industry complexity, regulatory demand, organizational size, and change maturity also affect reported rates. Additionally, the ERP landscape includes industry-specific solutions, which impact the variation in rates across industries. Global ERP adoption rate predictions Gartner research predicts low global ERP adoption rates and widespread failure among ERP initiatives. According to Gartner, by 2027, more than 70% of recently implemented ERP initiatives will fail to fully meet their original business case goals, signaling low project success rates and raising questions about whether ERP costs are delivering value. This would put global ERP adoption rates relatively low, but it doesn’t have to be this way. Common ERP adoption rate measures and definitions In Prosci’s ERP research, user adoption metrics are the most frequently tracked success indicator in ERP implementations. Some examples of adoption targets and measurement approaches organizations work toward include the following: Targeting ≥90% user engagement within 30 days post-go-live Targeting 95%+ active users within 30 days post-go-live Measuring 90% adoption within 3 months, using user logins and activity Tracking adoption by module/functionality (useful when different functions/industries use different modules differently) Measures for ERP adoption rate Within overall ERP adoption, measures that support these rates include: Active user rates – The percentage of users who regularly access and perform work in the ERP system within a defined period. Login frequency or patterns – The rate and consistency with which users log into the ERP system. Adoption velocity – The speed at which users transition from the legacy system or processes to the new ERP system and use its functionality consistently and effectively. Training completion rates – The percentage of users who complete required ERP training programs during different stages of the implementation. User proficiency levels – A measure of how effectively users perform critical role-specific tasks within the ERP system without assistance or errors. Engagement depth by module – The extent to which users actively utilize each ERP module and its features beyond minimal functionality. System usage patterns – Behavioral trends marking how, when, and what users access the ERP system for during daily operations. Ultimately, to capture the ERP adoption rate within your organization, you need to understand how many of the total individuals are using the new ERP as intended, using a combination of metrics. Challenges with ERP Adoption Rates ERP adoption often faces several challenges, primarily stemming from organizational and human factors rather than the technology itself. Understanding the following common challenges allows leaders to proactively address adoption risks before an ERP implementation project fails. Organizational size and complexity Large, expanded organizations face inherent complexity during ERP implementations. Diverse business units, regional variations, and legacy process differences complicate standardization. The more complexity and silos there are throughout the enterprise, the more coordination and alignment are required to drive consistent adoption across the organization and improve the likelihood of project success. Resistance to change One significant challenge in ERP adoption is resistance to change, which can occur at all organizational levels. Resistance at leadership levels significantly affects implementation success. ERP implementations disrupt established habits and long-standing legacy ways of working. When employees feel uncertain about ERP changes, resistance naturally increases. High implementation costs ERP systems require significant financial costs and resources, which increase pressure to move quickly and show a return on investment. Most organizations spend an average of 92% of their ERP implementation budget on technical activities and 8% on change management (Best Practices in Change Management, 12th Edition). When budgets don’t account for, or allocate enough to, change management and the people side of change, organizations inadvertently increase the risk of low adoption and under-realized value. Long deployment timelines Extended implementation timelines can lead to fatigue and disengagement. As ERP projects stretch over years, it’s not uncommon for stakeholders to lose focus or shift priorities. Sustaining momentum and reinforcing the purpose and significance of the ERP is critical for maintaining adoption energy. User resistance and low adoption internally The work doesn’t stop at go-live. Even after the go-live milestone, users may revert to legacy systems and processes, especially when they encounter ERP challenges that require process refinement or a different configuration. Low internal adoption can signal weak reinforcement, misalignment between the ERP and how work actually happens, insufficient training, or insufficient opportunities to provide feedback. Data migration complexity Poor data quality or inconsistent data governance creates frustration early in the ERP lifecycle. If users encounter inaccurate or incomplete information, trust in the system declines quickly. Rebuilding confidence after initial data issues can be difficult and time-consuming. Security and compliance concerns (especially for cloud ERP) Cloud ERP solutions introduce additional considerations around data security, privacy, and regulatory compliance. When organizations don’t address these concerns, stakeholders may hesitate to adopt the system. Transparent governance and stakeholder involvement throughout the implementation process are necessary to build system confidence. The Role of Change Management in ERP Adoption Rate Prosci research shows that human factors matter 6 times more than technical factors in improving ERP benefits. The success of an ERP implementation project hinges on the people side of change. It’s a human transformation challenge that requires effective change management. ERP change management is a structured approach that empowers employees to embrace process changes and new systems more quickly and efficiently. While project teams focus on the technical aspects of configuring and implementing the new system, change management prepares, equips, and supports employees to transition to new behaviors. The result is that individuals, teams, and organizations move from the current state to your desired future state and then use the updated ERP systems in their daily work. Prosci Unified Value Proposition How does ADKAR® apply to ERP adoption rate? The Prosci ADKAR® Model is one of the two foundational models of the Prosci Methodology, and a trusted model for helping employees navigate the ERP implementation process at an individual level. The word “ADKAR” is an acronym for the five outcomes an individual needs to achieve for a change to be successful: Awareness, Desire, Knowledge, Ability and Reinforcement. Prosci ADKAR Model ADKAR is based on the understanding that organizational change can only happen when individuals change. The ADKAR Model drives ERP adoption at the individual level to achieve the organizational result of a successful ERP adoption. How Businesses Can Improve ERP Adoption Rates Improving ERP adoption rates requires intentional planning and effort throughout the ERP implementation lifecycle across strategy, leadership, and user enablement, including: Clear business case and goals – Clear goals align stakeholders and provide a reference point to reinforce adoption expectations. Without clarity, implementation teams may optimize for technical completion at go-live, neglecting the work needed to drive transformational outcomes. Stakeholder alignment – Participants in Prosci’s 2025 Unlocking ERP Implementations study emphasize the importance of engaging stakeholders early and defining clear success metrics from the outset of the project to improve success. Comprehensive deployment strategies – A structured rollout plan should integrate technical configuration alongside the people side of change. Coordinated deployment minimizes disruption and supports smoother user transitions. Phased implementation – Phasing rollout by function, geography, or ERP module can help organizations manage complexity while reducing overwhelm and risk. Incremental releases allow organizations to learn, adjust, and strengthen capabilities before expanding. User-centric training programs – In Prosci’s 2025 Unlocking ERP Implementations study, training led all recommendations for improving value realization in the People & Change Management category. Comprehensive, tailored training programs for all users before go-live, and post-go-live continuous learning opportunities, create long-term skill capabilities within organizations. Change management strategy – Participants in Prosci’s analysis also recommended following a structured change management approach to realize ERP value, as ad hoc efforts create chaos. Prioritizing the people side of change is non-negotiable for successful ERP implementation. Ongoing optimization post-go-live – Organizations that treat go-live as the finish line misunderstand when ERP value materializes. Deployment enables capability, but process refinements, user feedback, and data-driven insights bring business value to light in the post-implementation environment. ERP Adoption Trends Shaping the Future ERP adoption is evolving alongside broader technology and workforce trends. Organizations should adapt their implementation and change strategies to keep pace. The following trends are shaping how ERP systems are deployed, adopted, and optimized: Cloud-first and SaaS-only ERP strategies – Organizations are increasingly prioritizing cloud-based ERP platforms to improve scalability, flexibility, and cost predictability. SaaS models shift enterprises away from the infrastructure load, allowing them to focus on adoption, governance, and continuous optimization. User-centric design – Modern ERP platforms are investing heavily in intuitive interfaces and simplified workflows. When system design matches how people actually do their jobs, it's easier to learn how to use them, and more people are likely to use them. Digital transformation – More organizations are implementing ERP systems as backbones of broader digital transformation initiatives. This means successful adoption depends on aligning ERP strategy with other automation and cross-platform integration efforts. Artificial intelligence (AI) and automation within ERP systems – Advanced technologies and AI are enhancing forecasting, reporting, and decision-making capabilities. While these tools increase value potential, they also require user trust, data discipline, and change readiness to fully realize benefits. Low-code/no-code ERP customization – Low-code and no-code capabilities enable business users to configure workflows and reports with less reliance on IT. While this increases agility, it also requires governance and training to ensure consistency and prevent uncontrolled complexity. Drive ERP Adoption Rates with Prosci Your organization’s ERP adoption rates are highly dependent on your ability to successfully navigate change. ERP transformation promises faster workflows, better data, and smarter decisions. But those outcomes depend on people—not just systems. Change management turns that promise into adoption. That’s the power of change done right. FAQs What is a good ERP adoption rate? There’s no universal benchmark for a good ERP adoption rate, as it depends on several variables within each organization. However, generally speaking, a good ERP adoption rate will reflect consistent, enterprise-wide use of the system for core business processes. Organizations can aim for nearly universal usage within impacted roles, with minimal reliance on legacy systems or shadow tools. How can we improve ERP adoption rates after implementation? ERP adoption doesn’t end at go-live. After implementation, organizations can increase ERP adoption rates by offering opportunities for employees to provide feedback, providing ongoing training, and reinforcing new ways of working. When organizations follow a change management approach during implementation, they can account for these critical activities to improve ERP adoption rates after implementation. Which industries have the highest ERP adoption rates? Industries with high operational complexity or regulatory oversight, such as manufacturing and healthcare, often demonstrate stronger ERP adoption. They rely heavily on standardized processes, compliance reporting, and integrated data visibility, making ERP adoption nearly non-negotiable. However, adoption strength is typically driven less by industry and more by leadership engagement and effective change management practices from the start. What factors affect ERP adoption rates the most? According to Prosci’s 2025 Unlocking ERP Implementations study, human factors matter 6 times more than technical factors in improving ERP benefits. Organizations that want to achieve high ERP adoption rates must prioritize people and change management factors, including training, stakeholder engagement, and adherence to a change management approach, such as the Prosci Methodology. How does change management impact ERP adoption rates? Change management directly influences ERP adoption by preparing individuals to shift their behaviors and embrace new ways of working. Without change management, even well-planned ERP implementations can become nothing more than technical implementations with low adoption. Structured communication, resistance management, sponsorship engagement, and reinforcement planning increase confidence and accountability, leading to stronger and more sustained system use. What change management activities improve ERP adoption rates the most? Based on Prosci’s research, comprehensive, tailored training programs, stakeholder engagement, and transparent communication plans are crucial change management activities for improving ERP adoption rates. Following a change management approach ensures teams cover these activities effectively. What is the difference between ERP adoption rate and ERP success rate? ERP adoption rate measures how consistently and effectively employees use the system in their daily work. ERP success rate is a broader measure that includes whether the implementation met budget, timeline, and strategic objectives.
Change Has Always Been Hard
Why Today’s Change Challenges Demand More Change Capability, Not Less.The change marketplace is crowded with strong opinions about why change has become more difficult and why certain approaches are no longer sufficient. Many of today’s dominant narratives are framed as objective descriptions of reality: accelerated change, rising complexity, volatility, and rapid advances in technology such as artificial intelligence (AI). In many cases, these narratives are well-intended attempts to acknowledge the real pressures leaders and organizations are facing. At the same time, they are often used to build a case for alternative solutions, to position Prosci’s structured, research-based approaches as outdated, or to explain or justify underinvestment in change management. But change has always been hard, and Prosci’s structured, research-based approaches are well-positioned to meet the demands of modern-day realities. This article challenges three common narratives by acknowledging real conditions while refocusing attention on building change capability, leadership accountability, and investment as the true drivers of change success. Narrative 1: “Change is increasingly complex, accelerated, and interconnected” Change today is described as so complex, fast-moving, and interconnected that intentional planning or structured approaches are no longer effective. What you commonly hear: “Change is too complex to plan anymore.” “Everything affects everything.” “Structured or linear approaches don’t work in today’s environment.” Why this narrative resonates Leaders are managing multiple overlapping initiatives, faster technology cycles, and competing priorities. From that vantage point, change can feel overwhelming and difficult to control. Where the framing undermines change success When complexity is used as an excuse for not delivering expected outcomes, it subtly lowers expectations for leadership and discipline. Reaction replaces prioritization. Structure is mistaken for rigidity. Accountability softens because the environment is assumed to be unmanageable. Reframing the complex, fast-moving, interconnected change narrative Navigating complexity is a change professional's superpower. Complexity is subjective. What overwhelms one person may be entirely manageable to someone trained to navigate it. Change professionals see a clear path forward in the swirl of human dynamics. While others feel overwhelmed by scale, uncertainty, or resistance, practitioners approach these challenges with clarity and confidence. They guide leaders and teams through complexity, transforming what seems overwhelming into something manageable. With expertise in people and process, change professionals do more than manage complexity. They simplify it, making it actionable and effective. Complexity doesn't eliminate the need for structure; it increases it. Structure enables focus, sequencing and clarity when everything competes for attention. How Prosci helps change professionals and organizations navigate complexity Prosci equips change professionals and organizations to navigate complexity with clarity, discipline, and results. Our structured, adaptable, and performance-oriented approach cuts through complexity by focusing on what drives outcomes, including effective sponsorship, clear people impacts, targeted actions, and sustained adoption. Instead of reacting to everything, practitioners learn to prioritize, sequence, and focus their efforts where they matter most. Beyond tools and training, Prosci’s Advisory services bring deep, hands-on expertise into organizations facing complex change, from enterprise transformations to digital, cultural, and AI-enabled shifts. Our advisors partner with leaders and teams to apply change principles in context, tailoring strategies to the organization’s scale, pace, and risk. Whether building internal capability or supporting execution, Prosci helps organizations turn complexity into focused action and measurable performance using structure to enable better decisions and stronger results. Case study: How Prosci helped a global bank drive high-risk regulatory changes The global financial industry is a highly complex environment filled with red tape and regulatory requirements, and it always has been. A large Global Bank recognized the need to enhance its change management capabilities to navigate its regulatory realities and be better prepared for internal transformations in its complex landscape. Prosci worked with the Global Bank to establish a dedicated Enterprise Change Management Office (ECMO), train approximately 100 internal change practitioners, and implement Prosci’s various tools and resources to illuminate the value of the people side of change. The Global Bank significantly enhanced its change management maturity and successfully navigated several key change initiatives. Before the engagement, the Global Bank faced significant challenges in its change management processes, exacerbated by its strict regulatory environment. What felt overwhelming without the necessary change capabilities became manageable with it because complexity is not the enemy of structure; it is the reason for it. Even in complex environments, human change dynamics follow predictable patterns. × Can you afford your change to fail? Narrative 2: “We’re living in a VUCA / BANI world” We’re living in a VUCA / BANI world, where conditions are volatile, uncertain, complex, and ambiguous, and increasingly brittle, anxious, nonlinear, and incomprehensible. Too often, this framing is used to argue that predictability, planning, and intentional leadership are no longer possible. What you commonly hear: “The environment is too unstable to plan.” “Small disruptions cause outsized failures.” “Resilience is about reacting, not preparing.” Why this narrative resonates Recent global shocks, economic volatility, and rapid technological shifts reinforce the perception that stability is fragile and certainty is gone. Where the framing undermines change success When volatility becomes an excuse, organizations stop investing in what creates genuine change: visible sponsorship, structured change processes and preparing people to adopt change. They signal that external forces, not intentional actions, determine outcomes. This shift erodes the foundation needed for successful adoption: the belief that people can learn, adapt and succeed with the right preparation and support. Instead of building organizational capability to navigate disruption, they accept it as inevitable and unmanageable. Reframing the VUCA / BANI narrative Volatility describes the context in which change occurs, not the cause of success or failure. Organizations rarely fail because the world is uncertain. They fail when sponsorship is weak, priorities are unclear, people are not enabled to adapt, and reinforcement is missing. Uncertainty does not reduce the importance of change leadership. It raises it. How Prosci helps organizations navigate VUCA / BANI conditions Prosci helps leaders bring clarity and focus in volatile conditions. We work with senior leaders to define what success looks like and establish a clear north star for performance through the Prosci 3-Phase Process. That clarity enables explicit trade-offs by defining what to prioritize, what to sequence, and what not to do, so teams can adapt to disruption without losing sight of outcomes. Through a structured, adaptable, and performance-oriented approach, Prosci helps leaders focus on what they can control: visible sponsorship, clear priorities, effective communication, individual enablement, and reinforcement. This approach is grounded in decades of research and a core belief that people can successfully adopt and use change, even amid uncertainty, when they are prepared, supported, and intentionally led. Beyond training and tools, Prosci’s Advisory experts partner with organizations to apply these principles in complex, real-world contexts, helping leaders turn volatility into focused action and sustained results. Case study: How Prosci helped Grupo Peña Verde navigate technological transformation to stay competitive Grupo Peña Verde, a leading insurance and financial services provider based in Mexico, needed to implement a new, comprehensive IT system. The transformation was critical to improve operational efficiency and to stay competitive in a rapidly evolving market. After previous attempts to execute similar enterprise IT changes were poorly executed and eroded employee trust, Grupo Peña Verde engaged Prosci to develop a tailored change management strategy, which included engaging senior leaders, tailored employee training and communication, and conducting regular ADKAR® Assessments throughout the project lifecycle. Grupo Peña Verde achieved a significantly higher adoption rate with the new IT system over previous initiatives. Employees reported feeling confidence and proficient, resulting in a positive shift in organizatinal culture. Adoption depends on building readiness, which later builds confidence. People adapt better when leaders lead changes intentionally because volatility raises the bar for change leadership. Narrative 3: “AI is moving too fast for humans and organizations to keep up” AI is evolving faster than people can adapt, making speed of technology implementation the dominant imperative and disruption inevitable. What you commonly hear: “AI is outpacing human capability.” “Skills become obsolete overnight.” “We need to move fast or be left behind.” Why this narrative resonates AI introduces real uncertainty about roles, value, and relevance, along with intense pressure to experiment quickly and demonstrate visible progress. Where the framing undermines change success When speed becomes the primary objective, implementation is mistaken for adoption. Fear is confused with urgency, and people readiness is deprioritized. The result is increased risk, fragmented use, and unrealized value, not faster success. Reframing the pace of AI narrative The pace of technological advancement should not be confused with the pace of human adoption. Technology may accelerate rapidly, but adoption—the source of real value—often lags without intentional leadership and enablement. People still need clarity, capability, confidence, and trust to work differently. When organizations conflate technical speed with human change, they create avoidable adoption gaps and leave value on the table. AI adoption is not a technology race. It is a human transition—and adoption is what ultimately turns AI into value. How Prosci helps organizations adopt AI Prosci helps organizations move from AI deployment to AI adoption. Our point of view is clear: AI creates value only when people adopt and use it effectively in their day-to-day work. Prosci focuses on the people side of AI adoption, helping leaders understand how AI affects roles, workflows, and ways of working, and preparing people to work differently with confidence. The AI Readiness Diagnostic and AI Integration Framework help organizations assess readiness, build role-based capability, and integrate AI into daily performance in ways that reduce fear, enable responsible use, and sustain value over time. Beyond tools and training, Prosci’s Advisory experts partner with organizations to apply these principles in real contexts, helping leaders align speed with readiness and turn AI investment into measurable adoption and results. Case study: How Prosci helped McCarthy Building Companies achieve 90% AI adoption McCarthy Building Companies had a critical business imperative: maintain their competitive edge as an innovation leader in commercial construction through enterprise AI adoption of Glean, an AI-powered work platform. McCarthy identified several key areas to partner with Prosci to achieve enterprise AI adoption, including coordinating across distributed teams and regional divisions, creating a single source of truth, demonstrating immediate value for field teams, building trust through transparent communication, and accelerating adoption within a compressed timeline. Prosci's consulting partnership delivered 90% adoption in 30 days, freed resources two months ahead of schedule, and created portfolio visibility across three major AI initiatives. Speed without adoption creates risk. Technology creates potential value, but adoption determines whether value materializes. McCarthy understood what some organizations miss: AI makes change leadership and putting people first more essential, not less. Change has always been hard, but Prosci can help Change has always been hard. What has changed are the conditions in which change occurs, not the fundamental drivers of adoption and change performance. When narratives about complexity, volatility, or speed are used to explain outcomes, accountability erodes and investment declines. Leaders who treat these conditions as a signal to strengthen capability will perform better, even in demanding environments. Structured, adaptable change management has not become irrelevant. It has become more necessary than ever before.
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8 Ways AI-Driven Change is Different (And What Change Leaders Must Know)
Organizations investing millions in AI technology often fail to realize expected returns, not because of technical failures, but because they're applying traditional change management approaches to a fundamentally different type of transformation. What Prosci’s AI Research Reveals About AI Change Recent Prosci research studying 1,107 professionals across organizational levels reveals the scope of AI adoption challenges which organizations are facing. The data is striking: Prevalence of Human vs. Technical Challenges of AI Adoption Human vs. Technical Challenges – User proficiency emerged as the primary challenge, accounting for 38% of all reported AI implementation difficulties. This breaks down into learning curve challenges (22%), prompt engineering struggles (11%), and inadequate training (6%). Technical implementation issues account for only 16%. This represents a fundamental shift from traditional technology rollouts where technical challenges often dominate. The Trust Gap is Measurable – The research reveals significant trust disparities across organizational levels. Frontline workers report minimal trust in AI (+0.33 on a -2 to +2 scale), while executives demonstrate significantly higher trust levels (+1.09). Leadership Support Drives Success – Organizations with "very smooth" AI implementations show dramatically different leadership characteristics. They demonstrate strong leadership support (+1.65) compared to struggling organizations (-1.50). These numbers underscore what workshop participants have been telling us—AI change is fundamentally different, and traditional approaches aren't sufficient. 8 Key Differences in AI-Driven Change Over the past six months, we've conducted AI adoption workshops with hundreds of change practitioners across industries in North America. Through polling data and feedback from attendees who are experts in their organizations, eight distinct patterns have emerged that separate AI transformation from traditional change initiatives. 1. The "never-ending phase 2" challenge Traditional change management operates on defined phases with clear endpoints. AI adoption breaks this model. As one workshop participant put it, "AI changes so fast—what are we chasing?" Another described it as a "never-ending Phase 2." The technology evolves rapidly, new capabilities emerge constantly, and organizations must adapt their implementations in real-time. Your change management plans need flexibility and agility, not one-time delivery. Reinforcement becomes an active process of continuous readiness rather than a finite goal. Successful practitioners are building adaptive, modular change plans and coaching sponsors to maintain visibility over longer, less predictable timelines. Aligning The Prosci ADKAR Model to Iterative Changes 2. Security concerns reshape risk management AI introduces elevated risks that traditional change management rarely encounters. Workshop participants noted a "heightened level of security concern" where "individual responsibility and risk mitigation become more important." AI systems can inadvertently expose sensitive data, generate inaccurate information, or create new vulnerabilities. The consequences in sensitive contexts—healthcare, finance, legal—can be severe. This demands that risk management be integrated directly into every change management activity. Awareness campaigns must prioritize responsible behavior alongside tool adoption. Training programs need security-focused messaging woven throughout, not added as an afterthought. 3. Ethics and governance take center stage Unlike traditional technology implementations, AI decisions can perpetuate bias, generate misinformation, or impact people's lives in ways that aren't immediately visible. Workshop participants consistently raised "ethical and responsible use" and "ethical and bias concerns" as central challenges. Building awareness must explicitly include ethical considerations, not just operational changes. Sponsorship coalitions need to visibly model ethical behavior to set the organizational tone. Forward-thinking practitioners are creating visible feedback channels to identify and course-correct ethical risks early, integrating policy updates directly into knowledge-building activities. 4. The shift to individualized learning Traditional training approaches fall short with AI adoption. The technology demands personalized, self-directed learning to build sufficient literacy. As one expert noted, organizations need to "build competencies to ensure resilience and flexibility to engage in continuous learning." AI tools apply differently across roles, departments, and individuals. A marketing specialist might use AI for content creation, while a financial analyst applies it to data analysis. Generic training programs can't address this variety effectively. Successful practitioners are offering multi-path learning experiences: AI academies, peer-to-peer learning networks, and resource hubs that people can access based on their specific needs. 5. Scale and complexity demand enterprise thinking AI implementations often affect multiple departments simultaneously, without clear boundaries. Workshop participants described "the scale of it all—change, speed, etc." with "AI potentially having no limits." Traditional project-based change management approaches struggle with this scope. AI adoption requires enterprise-wide perspective, broader stakeholder impact assessments, and sponsorship coalitions of senior leaders. The complexity isn't just technical—it's organizational. AI implementations trigger cascading changes across business processes, decision-making frameworks, and organizational structures. 6. Navigating ambiguity in future states Traditional change management excels at moving from clearly defined current states to well-articulated future states. AI adoption challenges this model. Participants noted "no clear 'tomorrow' state" and difficulty "defining the future state clearly." AI capabilities evolve rapidly, and organizations can't predict exactly how they'll use the technology six months from now. The solution isn't to wait for clarity—it's to equip people to navigate ambiguity confidently. Practitioners are framing communication around progress markers rather than final destinations, reinforcing organizational purpose to anchor people even as tactics evolve. 7. New forms of resistance require new responses AI evokes distinct resistance that goes beyond typical procedural concerns. Workshop participants described "different and new types of resistance, more fear-based, around risks, unknown factors, loss of relevancy, and societal impacts." The fears are deeper and more personal. People aren't just worried about learning new processes—they're concerned about their fundamental relevance in an AI-enhanced world. Standard resistance management techniques aren't sufficient. Practitioners need to address emotional drivers, not just procedural hurdles. Building desire becomes harder because the perceived threat feels existential. 8. Reshaping roles and work dynamics AI significantly impacts roles, responsibilities, and workplace dynamics. Participants noted major implications for the "future of work and roles" with "knowledge and ability varying from team to team." This isn't just about learning new tools—it's about fundamental work redesign. AI changes how people spend their time, what skills they need, and how they create value. Practitioners are building future-state role maps showing how AI complements human capabilities and reinforcing an organizational narrative of partnership with AI rather than competition. Early Warning Signs and Success Indicators Our research reveals clear patterns distinguishing successful AI transformations from struggling ones. Organizations with "very smooth" implementations demonstrate dramatically different characteristics: The Experimentation Gap – Organizations with "very smooth" implementations strongly encourage trying new tools, while those "making progress with challenges" show moderate encouragement. Organizations struggling with implementation actually discourage trying new tools. This stands out as one of the strongest predictors of AI implementation success. Leadership and Cultural Alignment – Successful organizations demonstrate strong leadership support and organizational culture that actively supports AI-driven change. Data Openness Balance – Organizations with smooth implementations show higher data openness compared to struggling organizations, demonstrating the importance of balancing security with accessibility. Warning Signs to Watch For: Executives expressing high confidence while frontline workers show resistance Security concerns being treated as separate from change management Training approaches that don't account for role-specific AI applications Discouraging experimentation rather than fostering safe exploration Adapting Your Change Management Toolkit Traditional change management tools require thoughtful adaptation for AI adoption success. Our Prosci ADKAR Model remains relevant, but awareness-building must encompass ethical considerations and continuous learning expectations rather than just operational changes. Communication strategies need to emphasize progress markers over final destinations while addressing the measurable trust gap between organizational levels. Training approaches must shift from one-size-fits-all to personalized learning journeys that build adaptability skills alongside technical competencies. Perhaps most critically, sponsorship requirements expand beyond individual project sponsors to coalitions of senior leaders who can maintain visibility and model ethical AI behavior over extended, less predictable timelines. Preparing for Continuous AI Evolution AI adoption isn't a destination—it's an ongoing journey of organizational capability building. The most successful organizations treat AI change management as a core competency, not a project deliverable. This means building internal expertise in AI-specific change patterns, developing organizational agility for continuous adaptation, and creating cultures that embrace rather than resist AI-driven evolution. AI adoption success depends more on managing the human side of change than on the sophistication of the technology. For change practitioners willing to adapt their approaches, this represents both a significant challenge and an unprecedented opportunity to demonstrate the strategic value of expert change management. Make A Strategic Investment in Adoption AI adoption is more than a technical implementation—it’s a transformation in how your people work, innovate, and deliver value. The path to success requires deliberate strategies to engage employees, align leadership, and integrate AI into workflows. By partnering with Prosci, you’ll gain a trusted guide with the research, methodologies, and expertise to manage the people side of AI adoption effectively. With Prosci, your organization will not only achieve the full promise of AI but also build the change resilience needed to navigate future transformations. Partner with Prosci to unlock the full potential of your AI initiatives—and secure lasting competitive advantage in an AI-powered future.
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Digital Transformation Made Real With Change Leadership
Everyone is racing toward digital transformation. But what separates those who talk about it from those who achieve it? The answer isn’t technology. It’s leadership. The promise is compelling: smarter operations, faster decisions, deeper connections. But transformation doesn’t succeed on tools alone. It demands bold vision, aligned leadership and cultures ready for change. Without these, even the best-funded initiatives stall. This article breaks down the trends shaping digital transformation—and more importantly, shows how to lead through them with clarity, coordination and a people-first mindset. What Is Digital Transformation? Digital transformation integrates technology across business functions, reshaping operations and customer experiences. The process involves reshaping business processes, company culture and customer experiences. But transformation only happens when people adopt new ways of working. The success of a new CRM or AI platform depends not on deployment, but on whether teams choose to engage, adapt and own the change. Digital tools create potential. People turn that potential into performance. Why Is Digital Transformation Important? Because the pace of change won’t slow down. Markets evolve. Expectations rise. And technology keeps pushing forward. If you delay, you risk falling behind. Digital transformation helps resilient, adaptive businesses stay ahead. It enables efficiency, allows for deeper customer relationships, and provides leaders with the clarity to make faster, smarter decisions. Here’s what the results may look like in practice: Operational efficiency – Intelligent systems and real-time analytics streamline day-to-day processes, reducing manual effort and freeing teams to focus on higher-impact work. Customer centricity – From personalized marketing to predictive support, digital transformation helps businesses understand and serve customers more effectively. Operational agility – A flexible digital foundation allows organizations to test new ideas, launch initiatives faster, and adapt to shifting market demands without major disruption. Competitive resilience – Digital maturity builds the structural flexibility and clarity leaders need to make smarter decisions and outpace competitors. Together, these capabilities position organizations to move with confidence—ready to pivot, grow, and lead in a constantly changing landscape. But staying ahead demands a clear view of what’s next. To lead effectively, organizations must understand the forces shaping the digital future and be ready to act. What’s Ahead: Trends in Digital Transformation Digital transformation trends will see the rise of AI-driven automation, hyper-connected ecosystems and the increasing importance of sustainability and cybersecurity. AI agents and spatial computing will also gain prominence. Let’s take a look at these trends in more detail: The rise of AI-powered technology AI is becoming the engine behind smarter, faster and more adaptive businesses. Organizations are embedding AI into core operations, transforming everything from customer service to supply chain management. The AI market surpassed $184 billion in 2024—a sharp increase of nearly $50 billion from the previous year. And the momentum isn’t slowing down. Projections show it could skyrocket to beyond $826 billion by 2030. This shift signals the transition from testing AI to actually putting it to work, and seeing real, measurable results. Here are some of the key AI technologies powering digital transformation: Generative AI – Gen AI improves creative and customer-facing workflows by generating text, images, code and more in real time. It helps personalize marketing campaigns, draft content, assist in product design, and even simulate business scenarios. Research shows that 40% of companies have already adopted Gen AI. AI-driven automation – Streamlines repetitive, manual tasks such as data entry, scheduling and report generation. Automating these time-consuming processes allows organizations to reduce errors, cut costs and free up time for employees to focus on higher-value work that requires human insight, like managing change. AI agents – Similar to chatbots but with more advanced capabilities, AI agents use natural language processing, machine learning and decision-making capabilities to perform tasks independently. They can manage calendars, handle complex customer service requests, monitor systems for anomalies, and take proactive steps. Adopting AI is one of the most complex and high-potential shifts organizations can face. Realizing its full benefits requires a deliberate focus on people, processes and change readiness. Cloud-native is the new normal Legacy systems are quickly becoming a thing of the past, with agile, scalable cloud solutions taking center stage. The shift is undeniable—nearly 92% of digital leaders say that their companies adopted cloud technology on a small or large scale. Here are some of the key approaches driving this transformation: Cloud-native applications – These are tools built specifically for the cloud environment. With cloud-native apps, organizations can scale faster, innovate more efficiently, and stay ahead of the curve. Multi-cloud strategies – These offer organizations the flexibility to combine multiple cloud services for their needs. They help businesses mitigate security risks by diversifying their cloud environment. Serverless computing – A cloud computing model where the cloud provider manages the infrastructure, such as servers and virtual machines. Developers can then focus on writing code, while the cloud provider handles all scalability and infrastructure concerns. Moving to the cloud requires a cultural shift that demands reskilling, collaboration across teams, and aligning leadership around a digital-first vision. The most successful organizations will be those that adapt quickly and foster an environment of continuous learning and innovation. Human-centric personalization Customers and employees now expect personalized, connected digital experiences that cater to their needs and behaviors. Research shows that 73% of customers expect better personalization as technology improves. This means that many organizations will focus on creating deeply relevant and intuitive interactions that anticipate what people want before they even ask. Here are the key technologies driving the future of personalization: Hyper-personalization – Takes customer engagement to the next level by delivering tailored experiences in the moment. This means offering the right content, products or services at the right time based on individual behaviors, preferences and context. Edge computing – Reduces latency by processing data closer to where it’s generated. This means faster, more responsive interactions—especially for real-time applications—enhancing user experience and reducing reliance on centralized data centers. IoT (Internet of Things) – Creates a network of connected devices that communicate and respond autonomously. With IoT, you can automate processes, track assets and deliver experiences that respond to real-world events in real time, creating a more dynamic and responsive environment. Leaders must ensure people know how to engage with and leverage these technologies. Providing the right training, fostering a culture of continuous learning, and aligning teams around a shared vision of personalization are key to achieving this. Improving security and data governance Security is increasingly becoming a strategic priority that impacts every part of the business. Protecting sensitive data and ensuring regulatory compliance are foundational to sustainable growth and building trust with customers. In fact, research shows that 76% of companies globally stated that cybersecurity was the leading priority for their IT initiatives. So, what technologies are leading the transformation? Zero trust architecture – An always-verified access model that assumes no one—inside or outside the organization—should automatically be trusted. Every user and device must continuously authenticate before accessing systems. This ensures robust protection against breaches. AI-powered threat detection – Traditional security measures often rely on static rules and human intervention, which can leave gaps in defense. In contrast, real-time, adaptive protection, powered by AI, continuously learns and evolves to detect and respond to threats before they escalate. To ensure these technologies are fully adopted, leaders must support employees in understanding and consistently following secure practices and integrate security into the company culture. The Prosci Methodology can help organizations manage this transformation. With its proven change management approach, you can drive culture-embedded, compliant transformation and make security and data governance integral to daily operations. Real-World Cases of Successful Digital Transformation Projects Companies that embrace new technologies are reaping the benefits, from improved operational efficiency to enhanced customer experiences. Here are three real-world examples of companies that have successfully done so: Proximus Proximus, Belgium’s largest telecommunications provider, spearheaded its digital transformation by piloting a focused, data-driven marketing initiative. Partnering with Digipolitans and Google, the company built a 12-week agile campaign around promoting Netflix subscriptions. By leveraging behavioral data and Google Marketing Platform tools, Proximus streamlined campaign delivery and personalized digital touchpoints. The results were striking: a sixfold increase in sales leads, a 14% conversion rate (up from 4%), and a 72% influx of new site visitors—all achieved with a smaller budget. The initiative also catalyzed long-term structural change across the organization. Siemens Siemens is a global technology company that specializes in industrial automation, digitalization and smart infrastructure solutions across sectors like manufacturing, energy and healthcare. The company is leading the charge in industrial technological innovation, unveiling breakthroughs in AI and digital twin technology at CES 2025. By digitizing its manufacturing operations with IoT, AI and digital twins, Siemens has transformed how it simulates, monitors and optimizes processes. The result: smarter solutions for clients, reduced downtime and greater supply chain transparency across its global footprint. Starbucks Starbucks is crafting the future of retail with AI. Through its “Deep Brew” initiative, Starbucks harnessed artificial intelligence to optimize inventory, streamline staffing and deliver hyper-personalized marketing. By embedding tech into every touchpoint, the company created smarter, more seamless customer and employee experiences, driving higher efficiency, more mobile orders and stronger loyalty program engagement. (Image Source) These real-world examples illustrate what’s possible when digital transformation is approached with clarity, alignment and a focus on people. Yet success stories are only part of the equation. Transformation at scale is rarely straightforward. Even the most prepared organizations encounter difficulties and uncertainty. Common Challenges of Digital Transformation Technology is only half the equation. Without the right leadership and support, even the most advanced solutions fall short. Misalignment, resistance and cultural inertia are the real barriers. Let’s examine the most common barriers that can stall digital transformation, and why overcoming them requires more than technology alone. Measuring return on investment (ROI) Unlike traditional investments, the ROI of digital transformation can be harder to quantify, especially in the early stages. Benefits like improved customer experience or greater agility are intangible or long-term, so how do you prove their financial impact? Organizations must define clear success metrics from the start, ones that go beyond immediate revenue and cost savings. This means tracking qualitative outcomes (like employee engagement or customer satisfaction) and quantitative results (such as efficiency gains or time-to-market improvements). ROI must also account for adoption metrics. Without widespread use, even the most advanced solutions won’t deliver value. Leaders need to monitor how well new technologies and processes are embraced across teams, not just whether they’re deployed. Prosci helps organizations put this into action with structured outcome tracking. Our change experts help organizations measure the real impact of change by linking adoption and usage to business results. Prosci Performance Levels Effective communication within organizations Transformation efforts often fail when vision and strategy aren’t well communicated across departments. Teams may work in silos, misunderstand objectives, or lack visibility into how their work connects to broader initiatives. To avoid these pitfalls, communication must be ongoing, cross-functional and directly connected to the "why" behind the change. It’s not enough to share updates. You need to create a communications plan so that every person in your organization understands the broader purpose of the change, their role in achieving it, and how each department’s efforts fit into the bigger picture. A well-designed communications plan ensures messaging is consistent, timely and aligned with business goals. The plan should outline: Key messages Target audiences Preferred communication channels Frequency of updates When communicating updates around change, it’s also important to consider who’s delivering them. Prosci research shows that people prefer to receive certain change messages from specific roles in the company: Preferred Senders of Messages During Change To ensure people are receptive to communication, it’s important to consider their preferences. Aligning communication with trusted voices helps leaders foster an organizational culture of transparency, strengthen credibility and inspire confidence across the organization. Cultural shift and adaptation Digital transformation requires a fundamental shift in mindset across the organization. One of the biggest challenges is bridging the cultural gap between the old way of working and the new approach required for transformation. Leaders must shift from directive management to transformational leadership. Simply implementing new systems or processes is not enough. You need to consistently demonstrate the mindsets and behaviors that set the tone for others to follow. Creating safe spaces for experimentation is also important. Innovation labs, pilot programs and internal communities allow teams to explore new tools and approaches, and fail forward without the risk of major disruption. This creates an environment where change becomes a constant opportunity, rather than a threat. To overcome these challenges, digital transformations need to be built on trust, clarity and engagement—from the C-suite to the front line. That’s where change management becomes the differentiator. Why Change Management Is The Missing Link Change management isn’t a side task—it’s the work. If people aren’t supported through the change, transformation is destined to fail. Without the right support, employees may be apprehensive about new systems, underutilize tools or revert to old habits, undermining the entire initiative. Digital transformation struggles when change is done to people, not with them. A structured, people-focused approach is critical to driving successful transformation. Structured, intentional change leadership aligns people with purpose, equips them for the transition, and significantly improves adoption. Prosci helps organizations navigate transitions smoothly, creating lasting adoption and securing long-term success. It’s the bridge that connects digital technology implementation with real, sustainable cultural shifts within the organization. Supporting people with the Prosci ADKAR Model At the heart of the Prosci Methodology is the Prosci ADKAR® Model, a proven model that breaks down individual change into five key elements: Awareness, Desire, Knowledge, Ability and Reinforcement. Prosci ADKAR Model These elements represent the building blocks of successful transformation on an individual level. By understanding where people are in the digital transformation journey, leaders can pinpoint specific barriers and provide targeted support, whether that’s through communication, training or coaching. The ADKAR Model also helps people understand why the change is happening, what’s in it for them, and how they’ll be supported through the transition. And when people see the purpose and benefits clearly, they’re more likely to engage, adopt and champion the change. Aligning at scale with the 3-Phase Process The ADKAR Model drives successful change on a personal level, but the Prosci 3-Phase Process scales that impact across the organization. It provides a structured framework to lead enterprise-wide transformation. Here’s an overview of the three phases: Phase 1 – Prepare Approach – In this phase, change leaders define success, assess readiness and build a tailored strategy for change. Phase 2 – Manage Change – In this phase, the team develops and delivers the bulk of change management activities, from communication and training to resistance prevention and assessments. Phase 3 – Sustain Outcomes – In this phase, the organization measures adoption, collects feedback and takes steps to ensure the change sticks. Guiding organizations through these phases help teams lead digital transformation initiatives with clarity, consistency and a sharp focus on their people. Prosci 3-Phase Process In the context of digital transformation, aligning at an organizational level is essential. It connects the dots between digital technology rollouts and human adoption, ensuring that new tools and systems are used to their full potential. Supporting change with Prosci technology To drive meaningful change at scale, you need the right tools. Prosci’s innovative technology solutions can make all the difference: Proxima is a web application that guides users through the Prosci Methodology to help them achieve change success. With built-in templates, tools and dashboards, Proxima keeps teams aligned and focused on what matters most—achieving successful outcomes and delivering measurable value. Kaiya™, Prosci’s expert change management AI tool, supports change leaders in real time, giving you instant access to change management insights, best practices and tailored solutions. Whether you’re building a communications plan or scaling across multiple initiatives, Kaiya helps you move faster, think smarter and extend your impact across the organization. Preparing for Digital Transformation in 2026 and Beyond Digital transformation offers immense promise, but it only delivers when led with clarity, conviction and a commitment to people. The organizations that succeed won’t be those with the flashiest tools, but those who treat change as a capability. That’s where Prosci comes in. With structured, flexible, and research-based approaches like the ADKAR Model and 3-Phase Process, Prosci equips organizations to lead with purpose, align their people, and make transformation stick. Because digital change isn’t just about moving fast. It’s about moving forward, together.
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Overcome Resistance to ERP Systems Changes With ADKAR
Investing in Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) software can unify your business information resources, improve productivity, and create other long-term benefits. However, adoption challenges and resistance often create unforeseen risks and detract from the ERP system's benefits. Here’s how the Prosci ADKAR® Model can help you succeed. ERP Systems and the Need for Change To gain efficiency and reduce long-term costs, large and small companies are transitioning to ERP systems. Businesses use the systems to manage and improve processes ranging from procurement and manufacturing to financial and human resources functions across the enterprise. All these efforts help eliminate waste, improve productivity, and increase employee satisfaction. Because an ERP system integrates data into a common database, data can flow easily between operations. As a result, the system eliminates data duplication, enhances data integrity, improves ease-of-use, and helps your teams overcome siloed operations. Integrated data and processes also give your managers and teams greater insight into decision-making from real-time information. Given your significant investment in time and resources, as well as the importance of the expected benefits from the project, it’s critical for your business to recognize and overcome resistance to ERP changes through effective change management. Resistance to ERP Systems and Other Adoption Challenges More than likely, your employees have grown accustomed to familiar legacy systems. Even with all the benefits offered through an ERP tool, the migration from familiar applications to a new system sets up a series of challenges for technical and people leaders. As impacted employees move from the comfort of the current state to the disruption of the transition state and ultimately to the future state, technical challenges often provoke people challenges that lead to resistance. As part of your planning for the ERP implementation, leaders and the project team should carefully establish the business requirements and expected benefits for the project. Without clearly established requirements and benefits, people who work with the system can create unrealistic expectations. In turn, unrealistic expectations often evolve into customization requests that increase the project scope and slow the schedule. During implementation, impacted people can struggle with completing their current work while learning a new system. Project teams need to focus on all the milestones for reaching the “go live” date while implementing technological, functional and process changes at a rapid pace. And the push to learn new skills, terms and processes elevates stress levels even further. Cascading Technical and People Challenges Each of these challenges increases project risk. The need for understanding and mitigating that risk underscores the need for building strong change management capabilities in your organization. If you don’t adequately manage those challenges, the technical and people challenges of an ERP implementation can lead to dissatisfied employees and other stakeholders, increased stress, and loss of trust. Fear and Resistance to Change During an ERP Implementation The changes caused by an ERP implementation often seem intensely personal and overwhelming to employees. Newly defined processes sometimes move tasks from one department to another or even lead to organizational restructuring. Some department workloads may increase while others decrease or shift to different areas. Each of those changes break apart comfortable working relationships. And all this occurs within a project schedule that seems to have a life and vocabulary of its own. The result is often fear and resistance. Fear of Change Certainly, the fear of change feeds resistance behaviors. With any shift to a different technology, fear of the unknown shapes how your staff responds to change. Migration to an ERP system amplifies this fear because no one sees the finished product until close to the project go-live date. Even though vendors and project leads work to assure teams that more efficient workflows and a more collaborative environment are coming—and ask for patience as the process unfolds—people who use the new system may not fully accept the assurances. Fear of the Unknown Implementing an ERP system creates the need for people to learn new skills, creating pressure to upskill and reskill within a limited time. People also need to stay productive with their current workloads while learning new skills, which stresses even the most experienced people. For mid-career employees in particular, the fear of learning new skills can increase stress, complicate decision-making, and even cause physical illness. Fear of Failure The fear of failure translates into reluctance to try new processes or practices. If people work around or otherwise avoid the root causes of their fear (i.e., the learning curve), the fear leads to other resistance behaviors. How the ADKAR Model Helps You Overcome Resistance to ERP Systems Effective change management is critical during ERP implementations because of the impact on everyday work and morale. From my vantage point, the Prosci ADKAR Model offers optimal alignment with an ERP implementation and helps individual people and similarly impacted groups move through the transition in a structured way. Because the ADKAR Model emphasizes the people side of change, people managers also become more aware of the complexity in the work people do, as well as the impact software development and testing has on it. Along with its focus on the people side of change, the ADKAR Model emphasizes project success. Change management through the ADKAR Model helps business leaders mitigate resistance, highlights the ability of employees to adopt the change, and then checks back to reinforce those abilities. The Prosci ADKAR Model Here’s how each ADKAR element applies when mitigating or overcoming resistance to ERP systems: Awareness Building Awareness helps mitigate resistance by answering the questions people have about the change and its impacts on their work. Implementing any change that cuts across organizational and cultural lines requires excellent communication from leaders, people managers and project leads. As you apply the ADKAR Model, you will also need to build Awareness of the need for implementing an ERP system and communicate information about the project itself. I have found that communication must flow vertically and horizontally with clear lanes for sharing and receiving information. Desire Building Desire addresses resistance by answering the questions people have during a change, including the business “Why” behind the change and personal “What’s in it for me?” The Desire to participate and support the change begins with business leaders delivering transparent communications about the reasons for the change and then advocating for the new vision. Successful ERP implementations depend on change practitioners gathering feedback from impacted groups, people managers quickly responding and addressing barriers, and sponsors encouraging people to participate and role modeling the right behaviors. Productive communication and active participation build alignment with the objectives of the ERP strategy. Knowledge Knowledge of how to adopt the ERP system lessens fears and doubts, and helps people prepare for their role as users in adopting the change. When considering Knowledge, change practitioners should advocate for ERP training programs that address both the technical aspects of the new system as well as any process and workflow changes people need to adopt and use. While your human resources department may need training about new recruiting and onboarding procedures, finance teams will need training that addresses accounts receivable and payable processes, invoicing, purchase requisitions, and end-of-fiscal year procedures. Along with specific training for staff in impacted departments, project leads must also consider how those and other procedures affect people and stakeholders, and the type of training that best serves their needs. Ability Giving people the opportunity to apply and demonstrate new skills acquired through training helps them prepare for the go-live date while building confidence in their Ability to implement the required skills and behaviors. Change practitioners can help your organization achieve its goals by ensuring that employees have the ability to adopt and apply the changes enabled by the ERP implementation. To build Ability, change practitioners should work with people managers to provide hands-on practice and coaching. As employees across the enterprise become proficient with the new ERP tools, they can help others learn new skills. Reinforcement Resistance occurs at all stages of change, and it’s common for people to develop workarounds or revert to old ways of working. Reinforcement enables you to help people stay the course through additional support and resistance management tactics. When reinforcing the ERP system change with the ADKAR Model, change practitioners should work with the project team to gather feedback from impacted groups about how they use ERP tools. Using insights from surveys and face-to-face meetings, the project team can make changes that help people do their work most effectively. When measuring performance, change practitioners often use scorecards that show progress towards implementing changes and realizing benefits. Preparing to Overcome Resistance to ERP Changes When implementing an ERP system, change practitioners need to start managing resistance at the project’s initiation and all throughout its lifecycle. The process of managing resistance begins with assessing the organizational readiness of your business for the change, usually in partnership with the project manager and vendor representatives. The process continues with identifying primary and secondary stakeholders, assessing impacts and risks, and engaging stakeholders before the ERP implementation. I ask that change practitioners also begin to address the ADKAR barrier points for staff impacted by the change before the implementation begins. When assessing the possible resistance to change, I encourage change practitioners to apply the Prosci 10 aspects of change impact. It’s a helpful tool for defining the change for individuals, addressing individual and group impacts, and as the basis for building adoption metrics. In addition, the aspects establish a framework for becoming more responsive to employee needs and improving engagement. Prosci 10 Aspects of Change Impact Reframing and Overcoming Resistance to ERP Changes Effectively understanding and managing resistance requires you to look at it through a different lens that removes negativity and blame. Reframing resistance in this way will help you better identify types of resistance and their root causes, and build the right tactics to help people move through their barriers. Your organization can realize even greater benefits from an ERP implementation by applying a robust change management methodology that incorporates the ADKAR Model. This ensures alignment between the organizational requirements for the ERP system and the needs of the people who are impacted by the change while ensuring a solid return on your ERP project investment.
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