Change is no longer an event organizations move through and recover from. It is the operating environment. New technologies, shifting markets, restructures, mergers – the disruption does not pause between initiatives, and neither do the expectations on the people responsible for navigating them. The result is a workforce running on empty while leadership keeps pushing forward.
Nazma M. Rosado, principal consultant at Avion Consulting with nearly 30 years of experience leading organizational development, executive coaching, and change management across healthcare, pharma, and biotech, working with organizations including Pfizer, Genentech, and EMD Serono, has a precise read on where this breaks down. “Change doesn’t burn people out,” Rosado states. “Poor leadership through change does.”
Clarity Is Not a Luxury. It Is the Work
When change is constant, leaders default to speed. The instinct is understandable: pressure is high, timelines are compressed, and pausing to explain feels like slowing down. But speed without clarity does not accelerate execution. It produces anxiety, and anxiety produces the resistance, rework, and attrition that slow everything down far more than a clear conversation would have.
People navigating change do not need every answer. They need to understand the why behind what is happening and what is expected of them specifically. Vague organizational messaging about transformation creates uncertainty. Clear direction, communicated repeatedly, translated into what it means for each person’s role and priorities, reduces fear, builds trust, and converts uncertainty into momentum. “Over-communicate the vision, the priorities, and the role each person plays in getting there,” Rosado insists. In sustained change environments, leaders who assume their message has landed once are almost always wrong.
Energy Is a Strategic Asset. Treat It Like One
Most organizations track performance metrics with precision. Very few track energy, and energy is what actually fuels execution. The organizations that sustain performance through prolonged transformation are not the ones that push hardest. They are the ones who pace deliberately, protect capacity, and treat recovery as a legitimate operational priority rather than a personal indulgence.
In practice, this means making hard decisions about what actually matters versus what generates activity without generating value. Removing low-value work is not a soft management concept; it is a strategic lever that preserves the capacity needed for the work that counts. When leaders model healthy boundaries and demonstrate focused prioritization, teams follow. “Burnout isn’t a badge of commitment,” Rosado reflects. “It’s a signal that something in the system needs to shift.” The signal deserves to be read that way rather than managed around.
Build the Capability, Not Just the Compliance
Most organizations approach change as a project, something to manage through, complete, and move on from. The organizations that consistently perform through sustained disruption treat change as a capability to be built and strengthened over time. People who are equipped with the mindset, tools, and frameworks to navigate change repeatedly stop experiencing it as something that happens to them and start approaching it as something they can lead.
Change, Rosado emphasizes, is always personal. Each individual processes disruption differently and at their own pace. A change management approach that ignores that reality will encounter resistance not because people are unwilling, but because they feel blindsided rather than prepared. When leaders invest in building change capability, they create the conditions for people to own the transformation rather than endure it.
Leading through constant change is not about doing more. It is about doing the right things with more intention, bringing clarity to uncertainty, protecting the energy that makes execution possible, and building a team capable of meeting the next wave of change with confidence rather than exhaustion.
Follow Nazma M. Rosado on LinkedIn for more insights on change leadership, organizational resilience, and building the human capacity that sustains performance through transformation.