Your Help Desk Knows Something Your CIO Doesn't

By Ellie Newby on June 10, 2026

Frontline energy worker on site

Your Help Desk Knows Something Your CIO Doesn't
7:44

Key takeaways

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    Trust breaks first: When frontline workers are left out of the rollout, lost trust is the first domino, and it cascades into workarounds, call-outs, turnover, and lost legacy knowledge.
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    The help desk sees it before leadership does: Rising trouble-ticket volume and escalations in a system like ServiceNow signal a failing rollout long before it reaches a CIO's dashboard.
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    Recognition does not need a budget: Callouts, a gift card, or extra time off can matter more than a bonus, as long as the recognition is personalized to what each person values.
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    Change does not end at go-live: A 30-60-90 day follow-up rhythm keeps support in place after launch and tells the frontline they are not left on the bleeding edge alone.

Long before a struggling rollout shows up on a leadership dashboard, it shows up at the help desk. The people fielding the tickets can feel trust draining out of a change while executives are still reporting it as on track. The question is whether anyone upstairs is listening.

In the latest episode of Frontline Innovators, Leza Isadora joined Justin Lake to make a case most leaders skip past: frontline rollouts almost never fail because of the technology. They fail because trust breaks, and the first place that break becomes visible is the support layer that leadership tends to treat as overhead. Leza is an Organizational Change Manager at Puget Sound Energy with more than a decade guiding digital transformations across healthcare, entertainment, government, nonprofit, and energy.

The help desk is the early warning system leadership overlooks

Leza shared a true story that gives the title its meaning. An organization she supported decided it could stop worrying about turnover on its internal help desk. That desk was the lifeline for more than 80,000 employees, the place field workers called when their tools stopped working, their GPS went dark, or the scheduling system glitched mid shift. As trust eroded, the seasoned technicians who had been there for decades started leaving, and they took their legacy knowledge with them. Newer staff had to start from zero.

What the help desk knew, and what leadership did not yet see, was written in the ticket queue. Trouble tickets escalated, resolutions stalled, and stakeholders stopped getting answers. Those numbers were sitting in ServiceNow the whole time. The frontline felt the failure first. Leadership only acted once the metric climbed high enough to be impossible to ignore.

Trust is the first thing a bad rollout breaks

When frontline workers are handed new technology they had no hand in shaping, and it turns out to be glitchy in the field, they quietly route around it. They revert to what they know works, because their pride in serving the customer outranks any mandate from above. Leza calls this loss of trust the first domino, and it knocks over the rest in order. People who feel unsupported call in sick more often and decline to cover shifts. Turnover rises. Legacy knowledge walks out the door. Budgets balloon as pilots reopen and timelines that promised a third quarter go-live slip into the next year.

The lesson for leaders is that trust is not a soft concern sitting off to the side of the project plan. It is the variable that decides whether the plan survives contact with the frontline.

Translate the people problem into the numbers leadership responds to

Leza is clear-eyed about the fact that "warm fuzzy people issues" rarely move a numbers-driven leader. Her move is to connect the dots to metrics that already exist. Trouble-ticket volume and escalation rates, time-to-resolution, turnover, and pulse-survey trends all translate broken trust into language a CIO or CFO acts on. In the help desk story, the escalating ticket count was what finally got leadership to say "we can't have this." The remediation followed quickly: bring back seasoned experts as super users, keep them on for at least 60 days, and have them mentor the newer staff until the patterns stabilized.

Recognize the people who actually carry the change

Leza builds super user networks from early adopters across departments, not just the technically adept, so each one speaks the shorthand of the team they support. The closely related change champions, she argues, are chronically underused. Recognition does not have to mean a bonus. A callout in a town hall, an email from someone with influence, a gift card to Starbucks or Panera for a field worker on a nine-hour drive, all of it lands. The most underrated currency of all is time. For frontline workers who rarely get flexible time off, more of it can be worth far more than a gift card, and the recognition has to be personalized because what is valuable to one person means little to another.

Change does not end at go-live

The clunky handoff from project to sustained support is where rollouts go off the cliff. Leza's answer is a 30-60-90 day follow-up rhythm, compressed when deadlines demand it, that keeps a change manager checking in well after launch. Thirty days is when people start to make noise, so it is when she surveys hardest and realigns support. The deeper message it sends matters as much as the mechanics: we are not leaving you on the bleeding edge by yourself. Her two pieces of parting advice fit the same philosophy. Always have the conversation, and never be afraid to take a pause.

About Leza Isadora

Leza Isadora is an Organizational Change Manager at Puget Sound Energy, where she supports frontline workers navigating wave after wave of new technology. She has spent more than ten years guiding digital transformations across healthcare, entertainment, government, nonprofit, and energy sectors. Her background in strategic communications and branding shapes a change approach grounded in trust, transparent dialogue, and respect for the people who actually carry the work.

Listen to the Full Episode

PODCAST

Listen to Episode #139 - Your Help Desk Knows Something Your CIO Doesn't

Leza Isadora joins Justin Lake to explain why a struggling rollout shows up at the help desk long before it reaches a leadership dashboard. A practical conversation on trust, the metrics that get leadership's attention, super user networks, and supporting change well past go-live.


Episode Transcript

Justin Lake: Welcome to the Frontline Innovators podcast. I'm your host Justin Lake and we've got another great episode lined up for today. My guest today has spent over a decade helping organizations get change right, especially for the people it affects most. She's led digital transformations across healthcare, entertainment, government, and nonprofit sectors, and most recently supported frontline workers at a major energy company as they faced wave after wave of new technology. What makes her perspective so valuable is that she's seen enough of these rollouts to know where they tend to fall apart, and she'll tell you it's rarely the technology itself. It's what happens when the people doing the work aren't included in the process and the job of figuring it all out falls entirely on them. The missing piece in her view is perspective: leaders who move fast on change but rarely stop to see it through their workforce's eyes. Please welcome the frontline innovators, Leza Isadora. Hello, Leza.

Leza Isadora: Justin, I'm so happy to be here. Thank you.

Justin Lake: I'm glad you're here too. So let's kick it right off as we do. What's the biggest operational consequence of poor frontline technology adoption? How does it affect the business?

Leza Isadora: I love that question. I'm going to start out with something that a lot of organizations never consider, but most change managers do. It's loss of trust. A lot of people don't think about that. Because when the people who are boots on the ground really doing the work, if they don't have trust — which sadly often happens if they're not included in the process — then what happens is they will kind of go around the change. They will revert to what they know works because they don't want to impact their customer-facing responsibilities. Loss of legacy knowledge is huge. If your turnover increases because the frontline workers are not comfortable with the change and they feel like they were left out of the loop, they're gonna leave. And then the budget will have to keep getting bumped up because if the technology just doesn't do what it's supposed to according to the frontline workers, you have to go back to pilot testing. And then the rollout has to be put on hold or rolled back, and what the whole organization thought was going to be completely go-live, sustained in let's say quarter three, it's going to get pushed down into the next year.

Justin Lake: So I want to go back to the first thing that you said — trust. I can see some senior level leaders in the organization saying, they don't have to trust us, they just need to do their job. Where do you think trust comes into that equation? How do we put math around trust in an organization?

Leza Isadora: That is an excellent question. So if field employees, let's say in the energy industry, don't trust leadership — and I'm not always just referring to the highest level leadership like a CEO, but their direct supervisors who they've always felt had their back — if they feel that they can't trust that, they're going to call in sick more often. They're going to take shifts that don't cover other workers. And there's another element of trust: if they're using new technology and they go out in the field and it's glitchy, when they come back, they're not going to trust any other rollouts, anything that leadership says. So the system becomes broken and the gap just widens.

Justin Lake: Let's connect the dots between poor change management and higher turnover. If we were making the case for a leader driven more by the numbers, how do we connect what might seem like warm fuzzy people issues back to the spreadsheet?

Leza Isadora: I can tell you a story. One of the organizations I was supporting decided they were going to not worry about turnover from their help desk. The help desk is the lifeline for 80,000 plus employees — the place field workers called when their GPS wasn't working, the scheduling was glitchy. Technical experts who had been with the company for maybe decades started leaving because of lack of trust. Leadership at different levels had to quickly replace them with other help desk folks who did not have that legacy knowledge. The trouble tickets really escalated — we were able to track the number of trouble tickets that escalated and were not addressed, where stakeholders were not gotten back to with responses. Those were metrics that we really could track and get leadership's attention. And leadership said, we can't have this.

Justin Lake: What was the remediation for that?

Leza Isadora: So what we did was we brought back some of the more seasoned help desk folks. I like to call them super users — people that can hit the ground running. We brought enough folks in who had the legacy knowledge and could see the patterns where the gap was, where it was failing very quickly, and kind of do some training and mentoring very quickly of the other help desk folks. I also suggested that we keep those more seasoned experts on for at least 60 days, because there's a lot of change management information that says you have to check back in on a change at 30 days, 60 days, and 90 days, because that's when things really kind of rise to the top.

Justin Lake: Tell me more about your definition of super users — where you fit along that spectrum and how you've implemented that in the past.

Leza Isadora: Because I'm a change manager that comes from building trust, when I work with and mentor super users, I'd like to pull employees from different departments across an organization so there's a sampling. And it's not just the technically adept users — it's the people who are excited about the change. The early adopters. The ones who said, I can't wait to get my hands on that tool and see if it really saves me 45 minutes a day. I like to pull them in from the departments for the other employees who are struggling so they have the shorthand of how that department functions. Super users has often gotten a bad name because a lot of change managers forget that there are three-dimensional mentors. They're not just removed SMEs, subject matter experts. They're people who are invested in their team and their department.

Justin Lake: On the flip side, what about change champions?

Leza Isadora: Change champions or change agents — there's a lot of crossover with super users, they're usually the same person. They actually are advocating the change. They have incredible value inside an organization. I believe they're underused by leadership. A lot of times it's because they're asked to be the go-to person, but they're not formally recognized. And I don't mean a bonus — I mean a callout in a virtual town hall, an email from somebody who carries a lot of influence inside the organization. Hey, so-and-so really went above and beyond last week, jumped into the trenches and supported their team, that kind of thing.

Justin Lake: Are there financial incentives that have made sense? A gift card to Starbucks?

Leza Isadora: 100%. At different companies I've worked for, we've done things as small as a gift card from Starbucks, from Panera. If you think about it, especially for field employees who can be driving around Washington state for a nine-hour shift, right — and they stop and they remember, I've got a gift card to Starbucks. The other thing that I've seen work amazingly is time off. Especially frontline workers only get so much time off and they're human. So they have families, they have doctor's appointments, they have last minute emergencies. In some companies I've worked for, they've actually given them more flexible time off, which has enormous value for them. And what is valuable to one person might have very little value to another, and that has to be taken into account.

Justin Lake: I love that you've reminded me of the importance of personalization. So I'm curious — at scale, we can't necessarily have one-on-one conversations with everyone. Any workarounds?

Leza Isadora: You can track their behavior change or behavior tolerance for change in past initiatives. A lot of companies don't do that. They don't take the time to pull the metrics or the pulse survey information. It could have been an initiative that was six months ago. If they pulled those, they could definitely see a trend that would give them a lot of information for the new rollout. And from that, they can start a conversation with relevant context: hey, we had that rollout six months ago and I noticed there was kind of a low engagement level — how can we do it different with this next one?

Justin Lake: If somebody doesn't have survey data because they weren't very strategic the last time, is there an argument to be made that we should survey the population in the beginning to get a baseline?

Leza Isadora: I am a big fan of surveying as much as can be tolerated. The data is so incredibly valuable. So I think it's critical to survey at the beginning to get a baseline. Even if you get a small percentage, it's incredibly valuable because people tend to be more transparent. But that's not resistance — that's information.

Justin Lake: I saw a quote the other day that said people don't resist change. They resist being changed. You talked about a 30-60-90 day follow-up plan. I'd like to pull on that thread. It's the sustained phase of these initiatives that seems to just be under-resourced. What's your framework around that?

Leza Isadora: I have always used it as a change manager. A lot of times I've had to tailor it very aggressively because a lot of deployments are really pushed through. The 30-60-90 could become 10-20-30, but it doesn't matter. There's been a lot of research that if things are really going to go wrong with a deployment, it's going to start to show its face in 30 days. I love that because it communicates a few things. Think about being an employee. You've been told that you have to use this new technology. It was pushed out to you. You've gone live. And now there's nobody supporting you. Things are coming up. There's glitches. And you can't get hold of anybody. What's the message in that? We don't really care about you. We just needed to get you across the line so we could check a box. It doesn't stop after 90 days in my mind. I make sure when I'm in those huddles with stakeholders that I say, we're not leaving you. You're not by yourself on this bleeding edge. 30 days is when I do a lot of surveying because that's when people really start to make noise, and I'm able to realign the support and the training aggressively in those 30 days.

Justin Lake: Let me shift gears and talk about communication. We run into roadblocks where it's like, we can't send the guy's email because they never checked their email. We can't send them a text message because it's not a company-issued cell phone. Their break room is at Dunkin' Donuts in the drive-through on their way to the next site. What have you found as ways to close that gap?

Leza Isadora: I started out in the communications industry — PR agency with strategic communications and branding. So a lot of my change management goes back to the basis of what is good communication. What I've noticed with the field employees is they do attend their all-hands Teams meetings because they're mandatory. They also listen to their direct supervisors because of the trust element. So I learned as a change manager to attend their all-hands teams meetings and beg for five minutes. They weren't as resistant to me doing that because I was introduced by their direct supervisor who communicated that trust. The last thing I did, which is kind of outside the box, is I would find out who their field closest employee was that communicated with them during the day on a regular basis. And that became my go-to person. So I would call, you know, John and I would say, hey, I can't get hold of Ben — can you please call him? Because he'll pick up the phone for you. So you go outside the box.

Justin Lake: Any advice you'd want to share with other change leaders who are dealing with large-scale technology deployments and other change on the front lines?

Leza Isadora: I would call out two things that are pretty critical. Always have the conversation. And I don't just call that out to change leaders — I call it out to leadership themselves, CEOs, CIOs, managers, directors, direct supervisors. Take the time to have those conversations, because you will get gems from that as to what to get ahead of. The other is never be afraid to take a pause. Change managers are usually the ones that see the storm on the horizon. So I always say, don't be afraid to take a pause. Don't be afraid to suggest to management, to the tech team, to IT, hey, let's just take a short time out and reassess this.

Justin Lake: I think that's great. Leza, thank you so much for joining today. It's been good getting a chance to know you before this episode and looking forward to staying in touch for a long time ahead.

Leza Isadora: Me too. It's been really great. Thanks for the invitation, Justin. Appreciate you.

Justin Lake: Absolutely.


Frequently Asked Questions

What does the help desk know that leadership often misses?

The help desk sees a rollout failing before it reaches an executive dashboard. Rising trouble-ticket volume, stalled resolutions, and unanswered stakeholders are early signals that trust is breaking and experienced staff are leaving. Those numbers usually already sit in a system like ServiceNow, waiting for someone to read them.

Why does trust matter so much in a frontline rollout?

When frontline workers are not included in the design and the technology disappoints in the field, they lose trust and quietly route around the change. That loss of trust cascades into call-outs, declined shifts, turnover, lost legacy knowledge, and ballooning budgets, which makes it the first domino in a failed rollout.

How do you make leadership care about a people problem?

Translate it into metrics leadership already tracks. Trouble-ticket escalations, time-to-resolution, turnover rates, and pulse-survey trends turn broken trust into numbers a CIO or CFO will act on. In Leza's help desk story, the escalating ticket count was what finally moved leadership to fund a fix.

What is the best way to recognize change champions and super users?

Recognition rarely needs a bonus. A callout in a town hall, an email from an influential leader, a gift card, or extra time off all work. Time off is often the most valuable for frontline workers who rarely get flexible hours, and the recognition should be personalized to what each individual actually values.

Why does change not end at go-live?

The handoff from project to sustained support is where rollouts often fail. A 30-60-90 day follow-up rhythm keeps a change manager checking in after launch, surveying at 30 days when problems surface, and signaling to the frontline that they will not be left on the bleeding edge alone.

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