Change Management Plans That Include Feedback Loops

Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.

Summary

Change management plans that include feedback loops focus on adapting processes through continuous input from all stakeholders, ensuring smoother transitions and better outcomes by addressing real-world challenges in real-time.

  • Encourage open communication: Create regular opportunities for employees and stakeholders to share their insights and experiences about changes, ensuring they feel heard and valued.
  • Test changes incrementally: Roll out new processes in smaller stages, gathering feedback at each step to refine and adjust before full implementation.
  • Show measurable progress: Use transparent metrics and dashboards to track outcomes, celebrate wins, and demonstrate the impact of everyone’s contributions.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Dr. Kedar Mate
    Dr. Kedar Mate Dr. Kedar Mate is an Influencer

    Founder & CMO of Qualified Health-genAI for healthcare company | Faculty Weill Cornell Medicine | Former Prez/CEO at IHI | Co-Host "Turn On The Lights" Podcast | Snr Scholar Stanford | Continuous, never-ending learner!

    21,054 followers

    My AI lesson of the week: The tech isn't the hard part…it's the people! During my prior work at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI), we talked a lot about how any technology, whether a new drug or a new vaccine or a new information tool, would face challenges with how to integrate into the complex human systems that alway at play in healthcare. As I get deeper and deeper into AI, I am not surprised to see that those same challenges exist with this cadre of technology as well. It’s not the tech that limits us; the real complexity lies in driving adoption across diverse teams, workflows, and mindsets. And it’s not just implementation alone that will get to real ROI from AI—it’s the changes that will occur to our workflows that will generate the value. That’s why we are thinking differently about how to approach change management. We’re approaching the workflow integration with the same discipline and structure as any core system build. Our framework is designed to reduce friction, build momentum, and align people with outcomes from day one. Here’s the 5-point plan for how we're making that happen with health systems today: 🔹 AI Champion Program: We designate and train department-level champions who lead adoption efforts within their teams. These individuals become trusted internal experts, reducing dependency on central support and accelerating change. 🔹 An AI Academy: We produce concise, role-specific, training modules to deliver just-in-time knowledge to help all users get the most out of the gen AI tools that their systems are provisioning. 5-10 min modules ensures relevance and reduces training fatigue.  🔹 Staged Rollout: We don’t go live everywhere at once. Instead, we're beginning with an initial few locations/teams, refine based on feedback, and expand with proof points in hand. This staged approach minimizes risk and maximizes learning. 🔹 Feedback Loops: Change is not a one-way push. Host regular forums to capture insights from frontline users, close gaps, and refine processes continuously. Listening and modifying is part of the deployment strategy. 🔹 Visible Metrics: Transparent team or dept-based dashboards track progress and highlight wins. When staff can see measurable improvement—and their role in driving it—engagement improves dramatically. This isn’t workflow mapping. This is operational transformation—designed for scale, grounded in human behavior, and built to last. Technology will continue to evolve. But real leverage comes from aligning your people behind the change. We think that’s where competitive advantage is created—and sustained. #ExecutiveLeadership #ChangeManagement #DigitalTransformation #StrategyExecution #HealthTech #OperationalExcellence #ScalableChange

  • View profile for Kim Breiland (A.npn)

    Founder l Neuroplastician l Helping teams improve focus, decision-making, and teamwork using the C.L.E.A.R. OS™️

    8,643 followers

    Communication gaps and weak feedback loops hurt business success. [Client Case Study] A large hospital network noticed declining patient satisfaction scores. Even with state-of-the-art facilities and technology, patients reported feeling unheard, frustrated, and confused about their care plans. The executive team assumed the problem was with staff training or outdated workflows. ‼️ Mistake: Relying on high-level reports and not direct frontline feedback. Nurses, doctors, and administrative staff communicate differently based on their backgrounds, generations, and roles. - Senior physicians prefer face-to-face or email communication - Younger nurses and tech staff rely on instant messaging and digital dashboards - Patients (especially elderly ones) need clear verbal explanations, but many received rushed instructions or digital paperwork ‼️ Mistake: Differences weren't acknowledged and crucial patient information was lost, leading to errors, frustration, and decreased trust. Frontline staff experienced communication challenges daily but lacked a way to share them with leadership in a meaningful way. ❌️ Reporting structures were too slow or ineffective. Feedback was either ignored, filtered through multiple levels of management, or only addressed after major complaints. ❌️ Executives made decisions based on outdated assumptions. They focused on training programs instead of fixing communication systems. ❌️ Systemic decline Employee burnout increased as staff struggled with inefficient systems. Patient satisfaction declined, leading to lower hospital ratings and reimbursement penalties. Staff turnover rose, increasing costs for recruitment and training. 💡 The Solution: A Multi-Channel Communication Strategy & Real-Time Feedback Loop ✅ Physicians, nurses, and patients receive information in ways that align with their preferences (e.g., verbal updates for elderly patients, digital dashboards for younger staff). ✅ Digital tool that allows staff to flag communication issues immediately rather than waiting for annual surveys. ✅ Executives hold regular listening sessions with frontline employees to better understand challenges before making changes. The Result - Patient satisfaction scores improved - Employee engagement increased - Operational efficiency improved Failing to adapt communication strategies and strengthen feedback loops affects reputation, retention, and revenue. (The 3Rs of a successful organization.) Frontline operations directly impact customer and employee experiences. This hospital’s struggle isn’t unique. Every industry faces the risk of misalignment between leadership decisions and frontline realities. Weak feedback loops and outdated communication strategies create costly inefficiencies. If your employees don’t feel heard, your customers won’t feel valued. Business suffers. Are you listening to the voices that matter most in your business? If not, it’s time to start.

  • View profile for Staci Fischer

    Fractional Leader | Organizational Design & Evolution | Change Acceleration | Enterprise Transformation | Culture Transformation

    1,693 followers

    5 Design Thinking Questions That Transform Change Management Change management often focuses on processes and timelines, but design thinking brings human experience to the forefront. Here's how five essential questions can revolutionize your approach: 1. What's the lived experience of this change? Beyond the organizational chart lies daily reality. Consider: -How does this change affect daily routines and workflows? -What invisible pain points might emerge? -Which comfort zones are we disrupting? 📋 Quick Assessment: Shadow team members to document workflows and identify disruption points. 2. Where are the emotional touchpoints? Change triggers emotional responses that can make or break implementation: -Which moments might trigger anxiety or resistance? -What current sources of pride need preservation? -How can we create positive emotional anchors? 📋 Quick Assessment: Create an emotion map tracking key transition moments. 3. What solutions would users design? The best insights come from those closest to the work: -How would employees modify the change if they were in charge? -What workarounds have people already created? -Which aspects do people most want to preserve? 📋 Quick Assessment: Host solution-storming sessions where teams sketch their ideal future. 4. How can we prototype this change? Small-scale experiments reduce risk and build confidence: -Which aspects can we test in a limited environment? -How might we create safe spaces to practice new behaviors? -What quick wins could demonstrate early value? 📋 Quick Assessment: Identify three elements to pilot within 30 days. 5. What feedback loops will drive iteration? Continuous improvement requires structured listening: -How will we gather real-time feedback? -What metrics will tell us if the change is working? -How can we make adjustments transparent? 📋 Quick Assessment: Design a feedback system combining metrics and insights. 🔑 Key Takeaway: Effective change management isn't about perfect plans—it's about creating human-centered processes that evolve through continuous learning. #ChangeManagement #DesignThinking #Leadership #Innovation

Explore categories