Key Information
- Organisation Size
- Enterprise
- Responsibility
- Comms Lead
- Budget
- Low
- Complexity
- Complex
“You were able to break it down and give us all those pieces step by step with the workshops we did. We found that really useful and I don’t feel we could have done that between just the two of us and the rest of the team.”
Jo Moon, Indoor Self Storage
Framing the Frustration
If you’ve ever tried to introduce a digital change into an organisation where senior leaders aren’t digital natives, you’ll know how frustrating it can be.
You put together the deck. You outline the opportunity. You explain (three times) how this change will improve efficiency or service or team morale -and yet, nothing shifts.
We’ve been there too. The truth is, it’s not always resistance for the sake of it. More often, it’s uncertainty dressed as hesitation.
The Reason We Get Stuck
For many leaders (especially those who’ve spent most of their careers in pre-digital environments) the language of digital can feel opaque. It’s intimidating. If they don’t understand the tech, they don’t feel in control. And when people don’t feel in control, they stall.
There’s also a deeper emotional layer to this. Admitting that your current way of working is holding others back takes humility. Supporting a digital change means stepping into the unknown – and not everyone feels safe doing that in public.
Looking for shortcuts does not help clarify the following:
- Why this change really matters to your organisation now
- How digital will make everyday life better for real people
- What will be different in six months, and how we’ll know it’s working
The Solution
Frame the change around real-world impact
Start with what matters to them. If you’re speaking to your leadership team, speak in their language. That means impact, risk, reputation, performance – not platforms or processes.
Don’t say “API integration” when you could say “we’ll finally stop entering the same information in three systems.”
Lead with empathy, not urgency
I’ve found that people are much more open to change when they feel understood. Share stories from your team – real situations where digital blockers are slowing things down or frustrating service users. Don’t just show data. Make it human.
Start small, prove the point
You don’t need to win the whole war in one pitch. Choose one small but meaningful area to improve (perhaps something that’s been a low-level pain for a while) and pilot your solution there. When they see the impact, you’ll gain credibility for the next step.
Share the ownership
Digital isn’t the IT team’s responsibility alone. It touches every part of the organisation. Make sure there’s a structure that brings in operational leads, comms, service managers – whoever’s affected. If everyone feels invested, they’re much more likely to back the change.
Use outcomes they already care about
Link your project to goals already on their radar. If retention is an issue, show how digital tools support staff wellbeing. If public trust is under pressure, highlight how a clearer digital experience improves confidence. Anchor it to what’s already on their agenda.
The Roadmap to success
Outcomes
When you shift the conversation from “digital transformation” to “how we make things better for people,” everything softens. The resistance lowers. The energy changes.
I’ve seen leadership teams move from passive blockers to active champions once they feel seen, supported, and safe.
It’s not about dazzling them with trends or AI-powered slides. It’s about building trust. Start with empathy, speak clearly, and show the wins.
You’ll be amazed how fast digital can move when people stop fearing it and start owning it.
Application Development
University of Loughborough
See how we transformed an offline reflective goal setting toolkit into a digital application
Read The Story“The process was inspiring. The Vu team brought energy, insight and creativity that genuinely lit a spark in us.”
Gina Benjamin, Venture People
Let’s Make a Start
