Your Change Management Office just sent their monthly report. The organization currently has:
- 14 "strategic transformation initiatives" in flight
- 23 "significant change programs" underway
- 47 "major projects" impacting how people work
- Countless smaller changes nobody's even tracking
The Change Management Office was designed to govern change—ensure alignment, prevent overload, sequence initiatives logically, manage stakeholder fatigue.
But when you have 84+ tracked changes happening simultaneously—plus uncounted technology updates, process modifications, and organizational adjustments—"governance" becomes a fiction. You're not governing change. You're documenting chaos.
This is the reality CHROs are confronting in 2026: the volume, velocity, and interconnection of organizational change has exceeded the capacity of traditional change management to govern it.
Change isn't something you manage anymore. It's the permanent operating condition. And the frameworks built for discrete, manageable change initiatives are collapsing under the weight of continuous, overlapping, accelerating transformation.
The question isn't whether change has become ungovernable. It has. The question is: what are HR leaders actually doing about it when the old playbooks no longer work?
Why Change Management Governance Failed
First, let's acknowledge how we got here and why traditional approaches broke down.
The Old Model: Change as Event
Traditional change management assumed change was episodic:
- Changes had clear beginnings and endings
- You could implement one major change, stabilize, then tackle the next
- Change management meant shepherding the organization from Current State A to Future State B
- The Kotter 8-step model, ADKAR, and similar frameworks all assumed discrete, bounded change events
This model worked when:
- Changes happened sequentially or with minimal overlap
- Pace was manageable (maybe 2-3 major changes per year)
- Organization could absorb, stabilize, return to equilibrium
- Change leadership could maintain oversight of everything happening
The New Reality: Change as Condition
That world no longer exists. Change is now continuous and overlapping:
- Multiple transformations happening simultaneously across the organization
- No stability between changes—new changes begin before previous ones complete
- Changes interact and compound in unpredictable ways
- External environment shifts faster than internal transformation can match
What this means:
- You can't sequence changes because they're all happening at once
- You can't stabilize because new changes are always beginning
- You can't maintain centralized governance because there's too much to govern
- Traditional change management creates bottlenecks rather than value
The Governance Collapse
Change Management Offices were created to provide oversight and coordination. But when change volume and velocity exploded, they couldn't keep up.
The pattern:
Phase 1: CMO tries to govern everything
- Reviews every change initiative
- Attempts to sequence and coordinate
- Becomes massive bottleneck
- Business units start bypassing CMO to move faster
Phase 2: CMO becomes documentation engine
- Can't actually govern, so focuses on tracking and reporting
- Produces dashboards showing overwhelming change volume
- Provides no actual coordination or risk mitigation
- Business units ignore CMO entirely
Phase 3: CMO is disbanded or marginalized
- Seen as bureaucratic overhead without value
- Change happens anyway, without any governance
- Organization has even less visibility and coordination than before
This cycle played out in organizations across industries. By 2026, most traditional Change Management Offices have either evolved radically or ceased to exist.
How Leading CHROs Are Actually Responding
When centralized change governance became impossible, the best CHROs didn't give up on managing change—they fundamentally reconceived what "managing change" means.
Here's what they're actually doing:
Response 1: From Governing Change to Building Change Capacity
The shift:
Instead of trying to control which changes happen and how, focus on building organizational capacity to absorb continuous change.
What this looks like:
Traditional approach: Change Management Office reviews proposed initiatives, approves/delays/sequences them, ensures each follows change management methodology.
New approach: Build organizational capability to handle continuous change effectively:
- Change literacy: Train all employees (not just change champions) in navigating ambiguity, adapting to new processes, and managing change stress
- Manager capability: Develop all managers as change leaders (not dependent on change management specialists)
- Resilience infrastructure: Build psychological safety, transparent communication, and rapid feedback loops that help organizations absorb change
- Adaptation as core skill: Make continuous learning and adaptation an explicit organizational competency
Real example:
A healthcare organization facing relentless regulatory, technology, and operational changes abandoned their Change Management Office and instead:
- Trained 100% of managers in "leading through continuous change" (not traditional change management)
- Built quarterly "change resilience" assessments tracking team capacity to handle ongoing shifts
- Created rapid feedback mechanisms so teams could surface when change volume was overwhelming
- Established team-level authority to pause non-critical changes when necessary
Result: Instead of trying (and failing) to govern 50+ changes, they built capacity for teams to navigate them effectively.
Response 2: From Centralized Control to Distributed Ownership
The shift:
Push change ownership out to the edges where change actually happens, with lightweight coordination instead of heavy governance.
What this looks like:
Traditional approach: Central team owns "change management" for the organization. Business units execute but CMO "manages" the change.
New approach: Business units own their changes end-to-end, with central team providing:
- Frameworks and tools: Reusable methodologies, templates, playbooks
- Capability building: Training managers to lead change
- Coordination mechanisms: Visibility into what's happening across the org, forums for resolving conflicts
- Exception escalation: Intervention only when changes conflict or teams are overwhelmed
Real example:
A technology company dissolved their central Change Management Office and created:
- Change enablement team: Provides toolkits, training, and consulting to business units managing their own changes
- Monthly change coordination forum: Leaders share what's changing, identify conflicts, coordinate timing when necessary
- Escalation protocol: Teams can flag when they're at capacity; leadership arbitrates which changes pause or slow
Result: Changes happen faster (no central bottleneck), ownership is clear (business units, not change office), coordination happens where it adds value (conflicts and overload), not everywhere.
Response 3: From Change Projects to Change Capacity Budgets
The shift:
Instead of approving individual change initiatives, manage organizational "change capacity" as a finite resource and allocate it strategically.
What this looks like:
Traditional approach: Each change initiative evaluated individually. If business case is sound, it's approved. No overall view of total change load.
New approach: Treat organizational change capacity like a budget:
- Assess capacity: How much change can the organization absorb simultaneously without breaking?
- Allocate strategically: Which changes get the limited change capacity we have?
- Track utilization: Monitor whether we're at, below, or exceeding capacity
- Pause or sequence: When at capacity, new changes must wait or existing changes must pause
The metrics:
Instead of tracking "number of change initiatives," track:
- Change capacity utilization: % of organizational capacity consumed by current changes
- Change fatigue indicators: Employee sentiment, stress levels, turnover in high-change areas
- Change effectiveness: Are changes actually delivering value or just creating activity?
Real example:
A financial services company established:
- Change capacity assessment: Each division assessed for how much change they could handle simultaneously
- Quarterly change budgeting: Leadership allocated change capacity across strategic priorities
- Real-time tracking: Dashboard showing capacity utilization by division
- Hard stops: When division reached 85% capacity, new changes required executive approval and usually paused existing initiatives
Result: Reduced total active changes by 40%, but increased completion rate by 60% (fewer changes, better executed).
Response 4: From Linear Change to Experimentation Systems
The shift:
Stop treating every change as a major transformation. Build infrastructure for continuous, small-scale experimentation instead.
What this looks like:
Traditional approach: Changes are big, planned initiatives with formal approval, comprehensive rollout, and change management apparatus.
New approach: Most changes start as small experiments:
- Hypothesis-driven: What are we trying to improve? What do we think will work?
- Small scale first: Test with one team, one location, one process before scaling
- Rapid learning cycles: 30-60-90 day experiments, evaluate, expand or kill
- Scale only what works: Major change programs only for validated experiments
The discipline:
- Permission to experiment: Teams can test changes within defined parameters without approval
- Obligation to measure: All experiments tracked with clear success metrics
- Requirement to decide: After experiment period, explicit decision to scale, modify, or kill
- Rapid scaling: Successful experiments scale quickly with light change management (it's already proven)
Real example:
A retail company facing constant operational changes created:
- Experiment framework: Any store could test process changes affecting their location only
- Monthly experiment reviews: Share learnings, identify patterns, decide what to scale
- Rapid scaling process: Validated experiments rolled out to all stores in 60 days
- Kill rate: 40% of experiments killed after testing (saving org from rolling out bad ideas)
Result: Continuous improvement happening at store level, only successful changes scaled, dramatically reduced failed enterprise-wide changes.
Response 5: From Communication Plans to Transparent Operating Systems
The shift:
Stop creating elaborate communication plans for each change. Build organizational transparency where change is visible as it happens.
What this looks like:
Traditional approach: Each change has communication plan—announcement, town halls, FAQs, leader talking points, cascading messages.
New approach: Create transparent visibility into all organizational changes:
- Change dashboards: Real-time view of what's changing across organization
- Open roadmaps: Teams publish what they're changing and when
- Change repositories: Centralized place to find information about any change
- Pull vs. push: Instead of pushing communications, make information easily findable
The principle:
Instead of manufacturing "change readiness" through communication campaigns, create transparency so people can see what's coming and prepare themselves.
Real example:
A software company built:
- Internal change portal: Every team maintains page showing current and planned changes
- Aggregated view: Dashboard showing all changes across company by timeline and impact
- Notification system: Subscribe to updates on changes affecting your area
- Two-way dialogue: Comment and ask questions on any change
Result: Eliminated 70% of formal change communications (information was already accessible), increased change awareness (people could see full landscape), reduced surprise and resistance.
Response 6: From Change Fatigue to Sustainable Pace
The shift:
Explicitly manage the pace and intensity of change to maintain sustainable organizational capacity.
What this looks like:
Traditional approach: Changes happen at whatever pace business needs demand. If people are fatigued, that's unfortunate but unavoidable.
New approach: Actively manage change pace:
- Intensity cycles: Periods of high change followed by mandatory stabilization periods
- Change-free zones: Protected times when no new changes launch
- Recovery protocols: After major changes, explicit recovery time before next wave
- Sustainable pace standards: Maximum change intensity levels beyond which organization doesn't go
Real example:
A manufacturing company instituted:
- Quarterly change cycles: Changes launched in Q1 and Q3, with Q2 and Q4 as stabilization quarters
- Change-free December: No changes in final month of year (recovery before year-end and planning)
- Post-transformation recovery: After major transformations, 3-month moratorium on new enterprise changes
Result: Reduced change fatigue by 45%, improved change success rates, increased employee engagement through predictable rhythms.
The Meta-Shift: From Managing Change to Designing for Continuous Adaptation
The underlying pattern across all these responses: leading CHROs aren't trying to control change—they're building organizations that can adapt continuously without breaking.
This requires fundamentally different mindset:
Old mindset: Change is disruption to be managed, controlled, and minimized
New mindset: Change is constant condition; our job is building capacity to navigate it effectively
Old goal: Successful change initiatives
New goal: Organizational resilience and adaptive capacity
Old measures: Change initiative completion rates
New measures: Organizational health under continuous change, sustained performance despite ongoing transformation, employee capacity to adapt
What This Means Practically for CHROs
If you're still running a traditional Change Management Office with centralized governance over discrete initiatives, you're managing a model that no longer matches reality.
The practical path forward:
Month 1-2: Acknowledge the reality
- Audit current change landscape (you'll likely find 50-100+ active changes)
- Assess current governance effectiveness honestly (it's probably failing)
- Recognize traditional change management can't scale to this volume
Month 3-4: Choose your response
- Which of the six approaches above best fits your organization?
- Most organizations need combination: capacity building + distributed ownership + capacity budgets
Month 5-12: Pilot new approach
- Test new model with one division or function
- Measure organizational capacity, change effectiveness, employee resilience
- Learn what works, adjust, expand
Year 2: Scale transformation
- Move full organization to new model
- Retire traditional Change Management Office (or radically transform it)
- Build ongoing capability for continuous adaptation
The Bottom Line: Governing the Ungovernable
Change hasn't just become harder to manage. It's become fundamentally ungovernable using frameworks built for a different era.
You can keep pretending centralized change governance is possible—tracking initiatives, creating coordination plans, running change management playbooks.
Or you can acknowledge that change volume and velocity exceeded governance capacity, and shift to building organizations that can navigate continuous change without centralized control.
The CHROs figuring this out aren't the ones with the best Change Management Offices. They're the ones who've moved beyond change management to change capacity building, distributed ownership, experimentation systems, and sustainable adaptation.
Change is ungovernable. Organizational resilience isn't.
Build for the reality that exists, not the one you wish existed.