Skip to main content

A Roadmap For Next Generation Of Leaders Driving Culture-First Change

 
The transformative success of everything today’s leaders are driving – including AI (Artificial Intelligence) – will be determined not by whether they are “good” or “bad,” but by whether their organization’s culture embraces them. 

Decades of failed efforts prove that successful change can’t be mandated. That’s what Phil Gilbert believes and professes.
 
“Change is a product, not a mandate,” says Gilbert. “Transform your initiative into a desirable offering that teams choose to adopt rather than an edict they’re forced to follow. Your organization is the market, and every project team is a potential customer who must be convinced that your approach will solve their problems better than the status quo. This product-centered mindset creates voluntary adoption that spreads organically.” 

This proven approach to making transformations is something people run toward, not away from. You’ll learn how this happens in Gilbert’s new book, Irresistible Change: A Blueprint for Earning Buy-In and Breakout Success. 

Gilbert isn’t just theorizing. As General Manager of Design at IBM, he boldly led one of the largest and most formidable transformations in corporate history – fundamentally changing how nearly 400,000 employees worked, without ever mandating a thing, according to Gilbert. 

In the book, Gilbert reveals how to make change as desirable as any premium brand, scale it globally across tens of thousands, and make it stick, embedded so deeply it becomes the new normal.  

Plus, you’ll learn cultural exercises like how to:  
  • Navigate today’s empowered and increasingly skeptical workforce, who resist top-down mandates and crave autonomy, clarity, and meaning. 
  • Get buy-in for change – the biggest challenge that holds back even the most ambitious initiatives – by proving its value, not evangelizing its benefits. 
  • Treat change like a high-stakes product, deserving of the same resources and rigor as your most successful business lines. 
“Most change efforts fail because they treat transformation as a quick fix – a new tool, a new process – rather than what it truly is: a cultural shift,” adds Gilbert. 

Therefore, Gilbert recommends that you create a distinct brand identity for your change program to distinguish it from other corporate initiatives. And, that you infuse it with values that make it desirable, even coveted. 

In addition, he explains that success depends not simply on how well people understand the new change, but also on how thoroughly the organization’s systems and processes reinforce it. 

Finally, Gilbert suggests that leaders focus communications on authentic firsthand accounts from team members rather than visionary proclamations from program leaders. That is because team members’ genuine enthusiasm carries more credibility than any management messaging, especially when they describe real improvements to their work and careers. 

Part-memoir, part-field guide, Irresistible Change replaces outdated “change management” thinking with a startup-inspired culture-first approach that has already reshaped global companies, military institutions, and creative teams alike. 

Irresistible Change is an essential roadmap for the next generation of change leaders in organizations of any size. 

Phil Gilbert 

Gilbert shares these additional insights with us: 

Question: Why do most change efforts fail, and what’s the one shift that makes all the difference? 

Gilbert:

They treat change as a mandate, not a choice. Compliance isn’t adoption – rarely leads to the outcomes the mandate is meant to address. Behavior change that matters only happens when people have agency.

They focus on tools, not culture. Whether it’s AI, agile, or design thinking, the tool becomes the headline instead of the outcomes, values and behaviors that make it stick.

The shift that matters: Treat change like a premium product. Design it so people want to adopt it – because it makes their work better – not because they’ve been told to. This means giving teams the option to participate and having them pay for the privilege of joining the program.
 
Question: What are the biggest mistakes companies make when launching a change initiative? 

Gilbert:

Starting with the wrong teams. Too often leaders choose “tiger teams” or innovation groups stacked with stars. They may produce flashy pilots, but they don’t represent the real culture – so nothing spreads. Start with mainstream teams working on some of the highest profile problems.

Enablement vs. adoption. Traditional training programs focused on individuals, and using generic exercises don’t move the needle. So “butts in seats” is a useless metric to evaluate how the program is spreading. Instead, focus on getting a few teams to adopt the behaviors, then let them tell their stories in their own words.

Worrying about scale before you know barriers. Work with just a few teams to begin with. Learn about external barriers to continued adoption: legacy tooling and HR systems, for example. It’s the old “go slow to move fast” dynamic. 

Question: What’s the very first step someone should take to make change feel irresistible? 

Gilbert:

Find a product person, not a SME, to lead the effort. You need an accountable business team, not just an expert in the new tool or method.

Name it. Give the change a brand that feels bigger than the tool or method. At IBM, we called our program “Hallmark,” not “design thinking.” Then we filled the Hallmark brand with all the intentions and values we wanted to convey. It also gives you permission to change the things around the headline tool, which doesn’t happen when you’re laser focused on the new tool.

But #1: Pick the right initial teams. Start with intact, mainstream teams not one-off “tiger teams.” Their success proves the change is taking root in the core business. Just as important, they’ll expose the cultural and system-level barriers that special teams–by design – are often shielded from.
___
Gilbert is best known for leading IBM's 21st century transformation as their General Manager of Design. After selling his third startup to IBM in 2010, he was asked by IBM in 2012 to use design thinking, coupled with agile, to update how IBM's teams worked. The transformation became the subject of a Harvard Business School case study, the documentary film The Loop, and feature articles in the New York Times and Fortune Magazine.  

His 45-year career spans startups, large corporations, and board memberships, where he has led organizations ranging from solo ventures to those with 400,000 employees.
  
Thank you to the book’s publisher for sending me an advance copy of the book.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Many Times You Should Thank Customers

In your leadership role, it's vital that your team members know how to deliver excellent customer service. " Knock Your Socks Off " type service as book editor  Ann Thomas  and  Jill Applegate  would say. Part of delivering excellent customer service is saying "Thank You" to your customers and knowing when to say "Thank You". Thomas and Applegate recommend  telling your customers "Thank You" during at least these nine situations : When they do business with you...every time. When they compliment you (or your company) When they offer you comments or suggestions When they try one of your new products or services When they recommend you to a friend When they are patient...and even when they are not so patient When they help you to serve them better When they complain to you When they make you smile You and your team members can say "Thank You" : Verbally In writing  (and don't underestimate the power of  perso...

70 New Year's Resolutions For Leaders

  With 2026 fast approaching, it's a good time to identify your New Year's Resolutions for next year. To get you started, how about selecting one or more of the following 70 New Year's resolutions for leaders? Perhaps write down five to ten and then between now and January 1, think about which couple you want to work on during 2026. Don't micromanage Don't be a bottleneck Focus on outcomes, not minutiae Build trust with your colleagues before a crisis comes Assess your company's strengths and weaknesses at all times Conduct annual risk reviews Be courageous, quick and fair Talk more about values more than rules Reward how a performance is achieved and not only the performance Constantly challenge your team to do better Celebrate your employees' successes, not your own Err on the side of taking action Communicate clearly and often Be visible Eliminate the cause of a mistake View every problem as an opportunity to grow Summarize group consensus after each deci...

Brian Tracy's Unlimited Sales Success Book Is Worth Reading Twice

Read Brain Tracy 's new book, Unlimited Sales Success , twice!  First, to cherry-pick and quickly discover the solutions to your most pressing sales challenges and roadblocks.  Then, from cover to cover to learn a host of new strategies and techniques to propel your sales success and results. On  my first read, I devoured the sections on: The seven new realities of sales today How to truly analyze current prospects and customers so you can make the most sales in the shortest period of time How to most effectively open  your first meeting with a prospect and client The keys to relationship building  in sales The single most powerful question you can ask your customer What to say when your prospect complains about price Making persuasive presentations How to close a sale In my second read, I found particularly beneficial Tracy's seven steps to mental fitness , and what it takes to be an effective salesperson: Ambitious Courageous Committed t...

Paul Smith Teaches You How To Sell With A Story

This is a great week. Because, Thursday, September 8 brings the official release of Paul Smith 's new book, Sell with a Story: How to Capture Attention, Build Trust, and Close the Sale . I'm a big fan of Paul's earlier best-sellers, including Lead with a Story and Parenting with a Story . And, the newest installment in the series is equally good, informative, practical and actionable. Drawing on hundreds of interviews with procurement managers, Paul teaches you how to : Select the right story Craft a compelling and memorable narrative Incorporate challenge, conflict, and resolution Use stories to introduce yourself, build rapport, address objections, add value, bring data to life,  and create a sense of urgency Storytelling definitely works in sales, explains Paul, "because a great story changes everything. It causes buyers to put down their defenses. It helps them relax. It engages their minds and their hearts by appealing to both their intellect and ...

The Benefits Of When Everyone Leads

It’s only January and the new book, When Everyone Leads , could likely be my pick for the best new leadership book of 2023. It’s that good. There’s still nearly a whole year ahead of us so we’ll see what other books debut. In the meantime, add this book to your must-read list.   You’ll learn that: Leadership is an activity, not a position. Leadership is mobilizing others to make progress on the most important challenges. Leadership is interactive, risky and experimental. Leadership comes in moments. Leadership is always about change.   When Everyone Leads , by Ed O’Malley and Julia Fabris McBride , presents a revolutionary approach to leadership; not based on position or authority, but an activity that anybody can undertake by learning to spot opportunities for improvement and taking the initiative to engage others.   “It can be unfamiliar and uncomfortable, but in a culture where everyone leads, organizations start to make progress on their most difficult proble...

10 Quotes From The 5 Levels Of Leadership -- John C. Maxwell

Soon I'll post my full review of John C. Maxwell's latest book, The 5 Levels of Leadership .  In the meantime, here are some of my favorites quotes from the book that I believe should become a must-read book by any workplace/organizational leader: Good leadership isn't about advancing yourself.  It's about advancing your team. Leaders become great, not because of their power, but because of their ability to empower others. Leadership is action, not position. When people feel liked, cared for, included, valued, and trusted, they begin to work together with their leader and each other. If you have integrity with people, you develop trust.  The more trust you develop, the stronger the relationship becomes.  In times of difficulty, relationships are a shelter.  In times of opportunity, they are a launching pad. Good leaders must embrace both care and candor. People buy into the leader, then the vision. Bringing out the best in a person is often a catal...

Reinventing The Leader

The book,   Reinventing the Leader ,  is an inspiring account of the magic that can happen when a leader realizes they must undergo their own transformation in order to transform their organization.  This candid and practical book by  Guilherme  ( Gui) Loureiro , Regional CEO overseeing Walmex, Walmart Canada, and Walmart Chile (now Chairman of the Board for Walmex and Regional CEO for Canada, Chile, Central America, and Mexico), and his executive leadership coach  Carlos Marin  shows how even the most successful leaders must be open to personal change in order to transform their company. The book details how the pair pioneered a data-driven, customer-centric business transformation at Walmex—Walmart’s biggest division outside of the United States. “This book is a blueprint for transformational success for leaders in any business who find themselves facing the need to retool their own company’s systems and operations and energize and inspire an entire ...

Best New Leadership Book Of 2025

Each year, after reviewing dozens of books about leadership, management, business and life skills, I select my pick for the best new leadership book of the year. During 2025, I reviewed on this blog 48 books, and I choose  Radical Listening: The Art Of True Connection  as the best new leadership book of 2025. To be an excellent leader you need to be an exceptional listener. Sadly, too many business leaders don't listen well or don't listen to a broad enough range of their employees. This great book will help leaders become better listeners  –  radical listeners. “For leaders, radical listening must start at the top of an organization,” state the authors  Prof. Christian Van Nieuwerburgh (PhD)  and  Dr.   Robert Biswas-Diener .    “Unless there is a clear and sustained commitment to radical listening from leaders, others are less likely to be fully engaged with the idea. This is, of course, easier said than done.”  “Most leaders woul...

How To Maximize Your Chances Of Landing The CEO Role

In the new book, CEO Ready , authors Mark Thompson and Byron Loflin reveal what you need to do to maximize your chances of being the one who secures the top spot. Specifically, they detail the seven key stakeholders  who weigh in on whether to choose you as CEO.   “Collectively, we have coached more than 200 executives who have been selected by their board members to become CEOs,” share the authors. “We can help you prepare to be a great CEO either in your current organization or elsewhere. We will share tools you can use to get objective feedback from all stakeholders, so you have complete visibility into what you’re up against.”   As you seek the CEO role, the authors explain that leadership selection isn't the methodical, objective process that one often imagines. They add that decisions aren't made by robotic executives ticking boxes for attributes such as strategic fit, core competencies, or cultural alignment. Instead, the process is deeply personal, emotional, a...

How to Be a Leader – 9 Principles from Dale Carnegie

Today, I welcome thought-leader Nathan Magnuson as guest blogger... Nathan writes : This is it, your first day in a formal leadership role.   You’ve worked hard as an individual contributor at one or possibly several organizations.   Now management has finally seen fit to promote you into a position as one of their own: a supervisor.   You don’t care if your new team is only one person or ten, you’re just excited that now – finally – you will be in charge! Unfortunately the euphoria is short-lived.   Almost immediately, you are not only overwhelmed with the responsibilities of a team, but you quickly find that your team members are not as experienced or adroit as you.   Some aren’t even as committed.   You find yourself having to repeat yourself, send their work back for corrections, and staying late to fill the gap.   If something doesn’t change soon, you might just run yourself into the ground.   How did something that looked so easy ...