Change Management

Structured frameworks and practical tools for managing organizational change, from initial assessment through adoption and reinforcement.

What This Section Covers

Change management is the discipline of moving an organization from a current state to a desired future state without losing productivity, trust, or key people along the way. It applies whenever you are rolling out new software, restructuring teams, changing a core process, or merging organizations.

The section covers three named frameworks: ADKAR (awareness, desire, knowledge, ability, reinforcement), Kotter’s 8 Steps for leading change, and Lewin’s freeze model. It also covers the tactical artifacts that make change happen: change management plans, change control processes, change orders, transition plans, knowledge transfer documentation, impact assessments, and readiness assessments.

How This Differs from Process Improvement

Process improvement fixes how work gets done. Change management addresses the human side of adopting that fix. You can redesign a process perfectly, but if people do not understand why it changed, do not know how to follow the new steps, or actively resist the transition, the improvement fails. Change management ensures the people side keeps pace with the process side.

Content for this section is being built. Check back soon.

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Common Questions About Change Management

Which change management framework should I use?
ADKAR works best when you need to diagnose where individuals are stuck in the adoption process. Kotter's 8 Steps suits large scale transformations that need executive sponsorship and coalition building. Lewin's model is the simplest and works for smaller, well defined changes. Pick based on scope and where resistance is concentrated.
What is the difference between change management and change control?
Change management is the people side: communication, training, resistance management, and reinforcement. Change control is the process side: formal requests, approvals, documentation, and tracking of changes to project scope, systems, or processes. Most organizations need both working in parallel.
Do I need a change management certification?
Not necessarily. Prosci's ADKAR certification is the most recognized credential and helps if you are building a dedicated change management practice. For most operations professionals, understanding the frameworks and applying them practically matters more than the credential itself.
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