Change Management in 2026 – Supporting Organisational Change

March 2026
Mosaic

By Theo D'Souza, Senior Change Consultant

Coming into this year, organisations are going to face a high volume of varied change as they try to transform aspects such as their ways of working, technology, regulatory requirements and potentially product offerings (Gjerald et al., 2026).

How change is delivered and supported can vary from project to project and organisation to organisation. For those who may not be familiar with change management practices, here are three simple tips that can guide with better change outcomes. 

What is Change Management?

Simply put, change management is the practice of guiding and supporting people through a change initiative from what they currently do to what they will be doing in the future. It involves planning, implementing and sustaining changes in business processes, technology, organisational structure or company culture (Ross, 2020). Activities can include 

  • Change strategies that align with project goals, 
  • Change plans that map out the journey of the people, 
  • Training plans that support knowledge sharing, 
  • Comms & engagement plans that support continual updates, 
  • Risk identification & mitigation that ensure risks in change are not only highlighted but also reasonably mitigated 
  • Measuring change adoption, comfort levels and success throughout and beyond the change programme as change doesn’t happen overnight 

While this is not an exhaustive list, it provides some insights into what a change management specialist may do to support your people succeed. 

Why Change Management Matters for Business Transformation

As a business, starting a transformation project comes with its set of ROI or success metrics and often these metrics are heavily reliant on your people doing something differently from what they do today (Prosci, n.d.). By taking a structured approach utilising any number of methodologies and frameworks, Change Management can help organisations meet these project goals by supporting in change adoption well beyond the go-live of these projects. Change can feel scary, especially when the future is unknown and especially when what you are used to is going to be different and that’s exactly where the art of change management comes in. It’s not always about having the answers, but rather listening and assuring people that it’s a journey that you will guide and support them through. 

Whether you have a change professional working within your organisation or not, here are three initial tips that you can incorporate within your transformation initiative right now that can help your people with their change journey. 

3 Tips to Improve Project Adoption During Organisational Change

Tip 1: Stakeholder Analysis – Understand your stakeholder groups

Also known as a Stakeholder Analysis, this activity can easily be carried out without the use of fancy tools. This activity involves identifying all stakeholders that need to be engaged in one way or another for this project (Sippl et al., 2022). This can include 

  • Groups that are decision makers; who have high influence on the project but are not directly impacted, 
  • Silent observers who just need to be informed about project outcomes who are neither impacted nor have influence on the project, 
  • Highly involved groups who are highly impacted by the project and change outcomes and equally have a high level of influence on how the project decisions are made and how the outcomes can be designed, and
  • The receivers of change, who may not have a high level of input into the design of the change but are groups that will be impacted by the change and as a result have to change the way they work 

Carrying out an activity like this early in the project will help support your engagement type with each of these groups, bringing the right voices to the table and ensuring all key stakeholders are on the journey. 

Tip 2: Change Impact Assessment – What is changing, for whom and by how much?

Known as a change impact assessment, this activity is a staple for all change professionals when applied appropriately (Bevan, 2015, Ross, 2020, Prosci, n.d.). The aim here is to simply identify for each change, who does this change impact, what are the key changes and what is the degree of change. The format of how this collated can be as simple as using an excel spreadsheet or table using existing current and target state information. The two key important factors of this process include 

  1. Carrying out this process with your stakeholder groups so you can validate their target states and impacts
  2. Using this information to inform the rest of the change plan including the type and cadence of engagement activities, communication and check in points. 

Tip 3: Plan with your people

Co-creation brings about a sense of ownership. If those who are going through the change have a stake in how that change is delivered, they are more likely to support the outcomes (Earth2Mars, n.d.). By building out plans such as the training, comms, and support plans with your end users, you get their perspective and needs first hand. Through the transformation initiative, check in with your stakeholders, if plans are not meeting their needs look to adapt. This is their journey and the more we can help them during the process the greater the level of adoption at the end. 

If you are looking for more information on how you can support your people through your transformation initiatives this year, Mosaic would be thrilled to get in touch

References

  1. Bevan, Richard. (2015). The Changemaking Checklists: A Toolkit for Planning, Leading, and Sustaining Change. Change Start Press.
  2. www.earth2mars.com.au 
  3. Gjerald, O., Lupina-Wegener, A., Crevani, L., Kuipers, B., Kars-Unluoglu, S., Murphy, J., … Zabicka-Wlodarczyk, M. (2026). Reframing Leadership and Organizational Change: 25 Years of Inquiry at JCM. Journal of Change Management, 1–7. https://doi.org/10.1080/14697017.2026.2627006
  4. www.prosci.com
  5. Ross, L. (2020). Change Management. The Essentials. Green Hill Publishing.  
  6. Sippl, F., Magg, R., Gil, C. P., Düring, S., & Reinhart, G. (2022). Data-Based Stakeholder Identification in Technical Change Management. Applied Sciences, 12(16), 8205. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12168205

Change Management in 2026 – Supporting Organisational Change

Published
March 2026
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

By Theo D'Souza, Senior Change Consultant

Coming into this year, organisations are going to face a high volume of varied change as they try to transform aspects such as their ways of working, technology, regulatory requirements and potentially product offerings (Gjerald et al., 2026).

How change is delivered and supported can vary from project to project and organisation to organisation. For those who may not be familiar with change management practices, here are three simple tips that can guide with better change outcomes. 

What is Change Management?

Simply put, change management is the practice of guiding and supporting people through a change initiative from what they currently do to what they will be doing in the future. It involves planning, implementing and sustaining changes in business processes, technology, organisational structure or company culture (Ross, 2020). Activities can include 

  • Change strategies that align with project goals, 
  • Change plans that map out the journey of the people, 
  • Training plans that support knowledge sharing, 
  • Comms & engagement plans that support continual updates, 
  • Risk identification & mitigation that ensure risks in change are not only highlighted but also reasonably mitigated 
  • Measuring change adoption, comfort levels and success throughout and beyond the change programme as change doesn’t happen overnight 

While this is not an exhaustive list, it provides some insights into what a change management specialist may do to support your people succeed. 

Why Change Management Matters for Business Transformation

As a business, starting a transformation project comes with its set of ROI or success metrics and often these metrics are heavily reliant on your people doing something differently from what they do today (Prosci, n.d.). By taking a structured approach utilising any number of methodologies and frameworks, Change Management can help organisations meet these project goals by supporting in change adoption well beyond the go-live of these projects. Change can feel scary, especially when the future is unknown and especially when what you are used to is going to be different and that’s exactly where the art of change management comes in. It’s not always about having the answers, but rather listening and assuring people that it’s a journey that you will guide and support them through. 

Whether you have a change professional working within your organisation or not, here are three initial tips that you can incorporate within your transformation initiative right now that can help your people with their change journey. 

3 Tips to Improve Project Adoption During Organisational Change

Tip 1: Stakeholder Analysis – Understand your stakeholder groups

Also known as a Stakeholder Analysis, this activity can easily be carried out without the use of fancy tools. This activity involves identifying all stakeholders that need to be engaged in one way or another for this project (Sippl et al., 2022). This can include 

  • Groups that are decision makers; who have high influence on the project but are not directly impacted, 
  • Silent observers who just need to be informed about project outcomes who are neither impacted nor have influence on the project, 
  • Highly involved groups who are highly impacted by the project and change outcomes and equally have a high level of influence on how the project decisions are made and how the outcomes can be designed, and
  • The receivers of change, who may not have a high level of input into the design of the change but are groups that will be impacted by the change and as a result have to change the way they work 

Carrying out an activity like this early in the project will help support your engagement type with each of these groups, bringing the right voices to the table and ensuring all key stakeholders are on the journey. 

Tip 2: Change Impact Assessment – What is changing, for whom and by how much?

Known as a change impact assessment, this activity is a staple for all change professionals when applied appropriately (Bevan, 2015, Ross, 2020, Prosci, n.d.). The aim here is to simply identify for each change, who does this change impact, what are the key changes and what is the degree of change. The format of how this collated can be as simple as using an excel spreadsheet or table using existing current and target state information. The two key important factors of this process include 

  1. Carrying out this process with your stakeholder groups so you can validate their target states and impacts
  2. Using this information to inform the rest of the change plan including the type and cadence of engagement activities, communication and check in points. 

Tip 3: Plan with your people

Co-creation brings about a sense of ownership. If those who are going through the change have a stake in how that change is delivered, they are more likely to support the outcomes (Earth2Mars, n.d.). By building out plans such as the training, comms, and support plans with your end users, you get their perspective and needs first hand. Through the transformation initiative, check in with your stakeholders, if plans are not meeting their needs look to adapt. This is their journey and the more we can help them during the process the greater the level of adoption at the end. 

If you are looking for more information on how you can support your people through your transformation initiatives this year, Mosaic would be thrilled to get in touch

References

  1. Bevan, Richard. (2015). The Changemaking Checklists: A Toolkit for Planning, Leading, and Sustaining Change. Change Start Press.
  2. www.earth2mars.com.au 
  3. Gjerald, O., Lupina-Wegener, A., Crevani, L., Kuipers, B., Kars-Unluoglu, S., Murphy, J., … Zabicka-Wlodarczyk, M. (2026). Reframing Leadership and Organizational Change: 25 Years of Inquiry at JCM. Journal of Change Management, 1–7. https://doi.org/10.1080/14697017.2026.2627006
  4. www.prosci.com
  5. Ross, L. (2020). Change Management. The Essentials. Green Hill Publishing.  
  6. Sippl, F., Magg, R., Gil, C. P., Düring, S., & Reinhart, G. (2022). Data-Based Stakeholder Identification in Technical Change Management. Applied Sciences, 12(16), 8205. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12168205
Contributors
No items found.