Before the Tech Stack, There's a People Stack

By Megan Valesano on May 13, 2026

Field workers reviewing an iPad screen

Before the Tech Stacks, There's a People Stack
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Key takeaways

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    Organizations often assume adoption will happen automatically once technology is deployed.
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    Frontline resistance is usually a response to pressure, uncertainty, or lack of trust, not unwillingness to change.
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    Leadership teams frequently revert to their own comfort zones during transformation, unintentionally mirroring the same behavior they criticize in frontline workers.
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    Change management efforts often begin too late in the project lifecycle to be truly effective.

Technology initiatives rarely fail because the software is incapable. More often, they fail because organizations underestimate the human side of change.

In a recent conversation on the Frontline Innovators podcast, transformation leader Julie Whitten unpacked why even well-funded digital transformation projects struggle to gain traction in the field, and what leaders can do differently to improve adoption, reduce operational disruption, and accelerate ROI.

Her perspective is grounded in decades of experience leading large-scale organizational change where strategy collides with frontline reality.

The Hidden Assumption Behind Digital Transformation

One of the most revealing insights from the conversation was this:

Many organizations spend enormous time evaluating technology ROI during procurement, but once the project is approved, adoption becomes an assumption rather than an active strategy.

Operational leaders then shift their focus toward business continuity:

  • How do we keep servicing customers?
  • How do we maintain productivity?
  • How do we avoid disruption during rollout?

Those concerns are valid. But they often crowd out the deeper work required to ensure people are actually ready to operate differently.

The result is predictable: companies launch major systems without adequately preparing the workforce that will ultimately determine whether the investment succeeds.

Why Frontline Resistance Happens

Whitten argues that resistance is rarely irrational.

In fact, frontline workers are often behaving exactly like senior leaders do during periods of uncertainty: they retreat to what feels familiar and controllable.

For frontline employees, that usually means returning to the workflows they already know, like the delivery process they can complete quickly, the service workflow they trust, and the habits that help them hit utilization or performance targets.

This becomes especially problematic when organizations introduce new technology without creating enough space for employees to practice, adapt, and build confidence.

Whitten shared examples where organizations implemented updates specifically requested by field teams, only to see adoption collapse because workers were never given enough time to absorb the change before go-live.

The “People Stack”: The Human Operating System Behind Change

A central theme of Whitten’s new book, The People Stack, is that every transformation sits on top of an invisible human operating system.

She identifies five layers that determine whether adoption succeeds:

1. Clarity

People must understand what is changing, why it matters, and what success looks like.

Organizations often skip this foundational step or communicate only the business rationale, without translating the “why” to the individual employee level.

2. Alignment

Leaders may appear aligned in executive meetings while operating differently behind the scenes. Without consistent alignment across leadership layers, mixed signals quickly spread through the organization.

3. Capability

Capability is far more than training.

Employees need:

  • Time to learn
  • Time to practice
  • Access to functioning systems
  • Reinforcement after rollout

Too many organizations either train too early, train too late, or fail to provide enough hands-on repetition.

4. Belief

People must believe the change is worthwhile. This goes beyond compliance. Employees need confidence that leadership understands their reality and that the transformation will genuinely improve outcomes.

5. Sustainment

Many organizations move on too quickly after launch. Without reinforcement, measurement, and leadership visibility, teams gradually revert to old habits. And underpinning every layer is one foundational ingredient:

Trust

Trust determines whether employees are willing to tolerate uncertainty long enough to adopt something new.

Why Readiness Is Usually the Missing Piece

One of the strongest themes throughout the discussion was organizational readiness. Many companies begin change management activities far too late, often after technical implementation is already underway. At that point, budgets are already fixed, timelines are already compressed, and productivity expectations remain unchanged. Teams are then asked to absorb transformation work on top of existing operational demands.

Whitten emphasized that readiness assessments should happen early and repeatedly throughout a project lifecycle, not just immediately before launch.

The Cost of Ignoring Adoption

A recurring point in the conversation was that organizations pay for adoption problems either before rollout or after rollout. The difference is whether the cost is planned, or chaotic.

When organizations fail to proactively invest in adoption support, the consequences often surface later as increased help desk volume, lower productivity, and employee frustration. Whitten noted that many leaders only become true believers in change management after experiencing a failed implementation firsthand.

Leadership During Change Requires “Calmfidence”

Whitten also introduced a concept she calls “calmfidence”, a blend of calm and confidence that leaders must project during uncertainty.

Effective leaders during transformation:

  • Listen actively
  • Acknowledge concerns
  • Stay visible
  • Communicate consistently
  • Avoid pretending to have every answer
  • Create psychological stability during ambiguity

Employees don’t expect perfection during change, but they do expect honesty, clarity, and leadership presence.

Final Thoughts

The conversation ultimately highlighted a simple but often overlooked truth: Technology transformation is never just a technology problem.

Organizations that succeed at adoption recognize that operational continuity and workforce readiness are inseparable. They plan for both from the beginning, not as an afterthought.

Because in the end, frontline employees are not obstacles to transformation. They are the transformation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do digital transformation projects often fail?

Most failures stem from poor adoption rather than poor technology. Organizations frequently underestimate the human, operational, and behavioral changes required for successful implementation.

What is frontline resistance during change?

Frontline resistance is often a natural response to uncertainty, time pressure, and lack of trust, not unwillingness to improve. Employees typically revert to familiar workflows when new systems disrupt established routines.

What is the "People Stack"?

The "People Stack" is Julie Whitten's framework describing the human layers required for successful change adoption: clarity, alignment, capability, belief, and sustainment, all supported by trust.

Why is readiness important before technology rollout?

Readiness assessments help organizations identify operational risks, workforce constraints, leadership gaps, and trust issues before deployment creates disruption.

What role does leadership play in adoption?

Leadership visibility, communication, prioritization, and trust-building are critical to helping employees navigate uncertainty and embrace new ways of working.

How can organizations improve frontline adoption?

Organizations improve adoption by involving change management early, giving employees time to practice, communicating clearly, addressing resistance proactively, and reinforcing changes after launch.

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