Change resistance management is always about communication.
Identify what the resistance is based on, talk with (and listen to) the stakeholders who have displayed resistance, and negotiate a way through it. The earlier that conversation happens, the better.
But when the change you are managing is in an organisation with strict compliance legislation, or that work in high-risk environments, your approach needs to adjust.
Change resistance in these environments is often rational, embedded in policy, and reinforced by fear of non-compliance. But change must still happen. Markets evolve, customers expect more and digital transformation waits for no one.
As always, it goes back to stakeholder engagement, but this time with enhanced focus.
Where is the resistance coming from?
In additional to the usual sources of resistance found in any significant organisational change (fear, uncertainty and doubt), resistance in regulated environments often stems from:
And these are all reasonable concerns. People are protecting something they see as critical. Your job as Change Manager is to listen and understand before you lead.
Bring the compliance team into the tent early
Treat the risk, legal and compliance teams as change partners, not potential blockers. Workshop the journey from the as-is to the to-be environment so they had a good understanding of the risk, legal and compliance issues that need to be addressed. Include their contributions in the change plan, and announce broadly in the organisation that they are change partners.
Involving risk, legal and compliance stakeholders in early discussions:
When you bring compliance into the fold, you shift the tone from "we're change despite the rules" to "we're changing responsibly within them."
Connect the change to purpose and policy
In regulated industries, clarity and context are more important that a winning smile and a smooth story. Tie the change to:
People need to see the reason behind the risk.
Precise communications
When the stakes are high, the messaging must be:
Don't just announce change; explain it, demystify it and normalise it.
Rumours fill the gaps left by vague communication. In highly regulated environments, that's a ris you can't afford. Communicate often and to targeted audiences over trusted channels.
Safe experimentation
Regulated industries still need to innovate, but they need controlled environments for testing. Try:
Some final thoughts
In highly regulated industries, change doesn’t mean abandoning safety — it means evolving it.
Resistance isn’t a wall to break down — it’s a door to unlock, with the right key. And often, that key is clarity, collaboration, and compassion.
Make sure your compliance, risk and legal teams are fully embedded in your change team. A change champion from that cohort is a big plus.
