KEY TAKEAWAYS:
When a major organizational change is underway — a merger, a technology transformation, a leadership transition — employees are paying close attention. They are watching how leadership communicates, how decisions get made, and whether the organization values the people doing the work. The ones who do not like what they see start looking.
This is the moment recurring leadership training matters most. Not as a program. Not as a line item on the HR calendar. As a signal.
Compensation and role clarity are essential parts of any retention strategy during change, and they often receive the earliest attention. They should. At the same time, employees look to their leaders for confidence, context, and a sense of connection to the path ahead. When leaders are not prepared, communication becomes inconsistent, or the organization’s direction is not clearly explained, even strong compensation and job architecture efforts may not be enough to keep people engaged.
During these times of organizational change, that disconnection happens fast. People who were engaged under the previous structure suddenly feel unattached. The investment they once felt from their organization is no longer visible. In that vacuum, other options look more attractive.
The organizations that retain talent through change are not always the ones with the richest packages. They are the ones where employees can see that their growth still matters — where leadership development continues even when everything else is in flux.
One of our clients navigated this challenge after a large organization in one state acquired another in a different state. Teams were working in silos. Leaders in the same departments had never met. And the tension was mounting.
Our Change Management team was brought in to lead an employee engagement initiative focused on team building, communication skills, and understanding personality differences. The goal was to create a connection across two organizations that, on paper, were now one.
The shift was immediate. At the first team meetings following the training, the energy was different. People were smiling. They were eager to meet their counterparts from the other organization. The discomfort that had been building gave way to curiosity.
From there, the client moved quickly. Internal changes were made. Efforts were streamlined. And in identifying what the merged organization needed to grow together, new positions were created and filled from within — by employees who were knowledgeable, motivated, and ready to take on more.
Organizations are not getting a break from change. Several forces are converging that make recurring leadership training more urgent than it has been in years:
Competition adds another reason to invest. Organizations that develop their people through change adapt faster and position themselves better when conditions stabilize.
Recurring leadership training during transformation is not a series of workshops. It is a system. Based on our work with organizations through large-scale change initiatives, the components that matter most are:
If you are an HR professional trying to build internal support for this kind of investment, the argument is straightforward: The cost of not doing it shows up in turnover, and turnover during transformation is expensive in ways that go beyond the replacement cost of a single employee.
When a senior individual contributor or a mid-level leader walks out during a major change initiative, they take institutional knowledge, client relationships, and team stability with them. The ripple effects last longer than the departure.
Leadership training during change is not an add-on. It is one of the most direct ways an organization can signal to its people that they matter. That signal, delivered consistently over the course of a transformation, is what retention looks like in practice.
Our Change Management team works with HR professionals and organizational leaders to design and facilitate recurring leadership development programs that support large-scale transformations.
If your organization is navigating a transformation, such as a merger, a technology shift, or a leadership transition, and you want to evaluate whether your current training approach is doing enough, we can help you assess where the gaps are and build a program that holds up through the change. Reach out to start the conversation.