Why Change Fails: The Blockers Leaders Ignore

Why Change Fails: The Blockers Leaders Ignore

Change is a constant in business, but you wouldn’t think so judging by how poorly many businesses handle it. The truth is, change doesn’t fail because “people don’t like it” — it fails because leaders ignore the real barriers that get in the way. And the data proves it.

The Real Blockers to Change


A recent survey asked 171 professionals to name the top challenges they face when change is introduced. The top three?
Unclear leadership direction – 47%
Unclear communication – 44%
Uncertainty around responsibilities – 39%

Let that sink in. Almost half of respondents said the biggest reason they resist change is because leadership is vague. It’s not about stubbornness. It’s not about people hating new systems. It’s about not knowing where they’re headed, why it matters, or what their role is.

The Excuses Leaders Use

Far too often I hear:
“People just don’t like change.”
“They’re stuck in their ways.”
“It’s just a teething issue.”
That’s lazy thinking. People embrace change all the time — promotions, new cars, better software, fitness challenges. What they don’t embrace is chaos, poor communication, or leadership-by-assumption.

The Blockers Within Your Control

Here are the most commonly ignored — yet fixable — blockers to change:
Direction: If you can’t clearly articulate the purpose and destination of the change, don’t expect your team to get on board.
Communication: A town hall meeting and a bullet point email won’t cut it.
Ownership: People need to know exactly what they’re responsible for post-change, or they’ll freeze.
Tips to Stop Killing Change Initiatives
Pre-empt the resistance: Run a ‘pre-mortem’. What might derail this change? What fears will your team have?
Over-communicate: Be visible, be vocal, be available. Once isn’t enough.
Delegate with clarity: Vague briefs create confusion. Spell it out.
Pace it properly: 19% said the change was ‘too much, too fast’. Break it into digestible chunks.
Involve people early: One in four said not being consulted was a blocker. Don’t announce — invite.

Change fails when leaders assume people will just adapt. That’s not how it works. If you want change to stick, start by removing the blockers you’ve probably been ignoring.
Want help diagnosing where your change initiative is stuck? Let’s talk.

Nicholas Bills
Business Growth Coach
Consulting and Coaching Ltd