A troubling pattern is emerging in today’s workplace: change fatigue. It shows up as frustration, apathy, and resistance when employees are asked to absorb constant, overlapping changes. At its core, change fatigue happens when the pace or volume of transformation exceeds people’s capacity to adapt. As McKinsey & Company describes it, we are now living in “the age of perpetual organizational upheaval.”
The impact is significant. According to advisors at McLean & Company, unaddressed change fatigue erodes business performance, weakens technology adoption, and lowers employee engagement. Yet nearly 90% of HR leaders report that managers are not adequately supporting employees who struggle with ongoing change.
As organizations operate in increasingly unstable environments, change fatigue has emerged as one of the top five barriers to success. In a recent report, 44% of respondents ranked it as the most impactful obstacle – second only to low capacity. Notably, this was the first time change fatigue appeared on the list, and its sudden rise may be linked to another critical challenge: a lack of clear direction from senior leadership.
How to spot change fatigue
Change fatigue affects everyone – from front-line employees to executives – and it rarely goes unnoticed. Common warning signs include disengagement, exhaustion, absenteeism, confusion, conflict, and cynicism. Stress and anxiety increase, while performance declines, even among typically high-performing employees.
Research published in the Journal of Organizational Change Management found that change fatigue predicts higher levels of strain, burnout, and intent to leave. It also negatively affects teamwork, job satisfaction, performance, and organizational commitment.
Simply put, the human mind and body are not designed to handle nonstop transformation. Early on, employees may approach change with optimism and energy. Over time, as new initiatives continue to stack up, that effort becomes unsustainable. To cope, people emotionally disengage. Caring less becomes a survival mechanism, but it also means passion, motivation, and discretionary effort disappear.
When change fatigue turns into burnout
Change fatigue exists on a continuum, ranging from engagement at one end to burnout at the other. When organizations fail to recognize or respond to the warning signs, employees are pushed further down that spectrum.
Recent data shows that 66% of American workers will experience some form of burnout in 2025. Burnout costs businesses an estimated $322 billion annually in lost productivity, with an additional $190 billion tied to healthcare expenses. Beyond the financial toll, burnout fuels turnover, disrupts teams, damages morale, and signals deeper employee-experience problems.
Addressing burnout isn’t just compassionate, it’s strategic. Organizations that actively reduce burnout see higher productivity, lower healthcare costs, and stronger retention.
The brain’s response to change
Ironically, many change initiatives unintentionally work against human biology. The brain is wired to treat change as a potential threat until proven otherwise. When information is incomplete or unclear, employees fill in the gaps—often with worst-case scenarios. This is why rumors of layoffs or budget cuts spread so quickly. From a survival standpoint, preparing for the worst feels safer than hoping for the best.
The way forward
One effective approach is anchoring change in purpose. Rather than focusing solely on what is changing, leaders must consistently communicate why it matters. Employees need a clear line of sight between their daily work and the organization’s broader purpose.
When people react emotionally to change, they aren’t being difficult; they’re being human. Perspective shifts when information comes from trusted leaders who provide clarity, consistency, and reassurance. By reinforcing the why, explaining the how, and outlining the benefits, leaders can reduce anxiety, restore trust, and help employees move forward together.
By Dana Weidinger, courtesy of SBAM-approved partner, ASE. Source: hrexecutive.com
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