When I first stepped in as Interim Director at Visiting Angels West Springfield, I was met with an extraordinary team — passionate, driven, and deeply invested in their work. Yet like many high-energy teams, they were also navigating fatigue, overlapping responsibilities, and a constant stream of urgent needs. Processes were largely held in people’s heads, and performance was measured by intuition more than data.
In these first four weeks, we made significant progress toward formalizing standard operating procedures (SOPs)and developing key performance indicators (KPIs) to measure what matters most. The key wasn’t rushing into documentation, rather it included guiding staff through a structured change management process that reduced stress while building ownership.
This article outlines the step-by-step framework I used — grounded in Prosci’s ADKAR model (Awareness, Desire, Knowledge, Ability, and Reinforcement) — and how it can help leaders manage organizational change with empathy, structure, and clarity without losing your human side.
Step 1: Building Awareness — “Why are we doing this?”
Change begins not with tools or templates, but with a purpose. The first two weeks were dedicated to getting to know the staff and to build awareness about the NEED for change. We immediately began a weekly meeting to kick off our week, and also individual 1×1 meetings where I had the opportunity to explore topics in greater detail with each team member. These meetings were about asking questions and sharing information.
- What are your biggest daily frustrations?
- What would make your job easier?
- How can I best support you?
These conversations shifted the perception of SOPs from bureaucracy to empowerment. By connecting the “why” to their personal experience — fewer mistakes, less confusion, better outcomes — I began aligning individual motivation with organizational goals.
I also shared the broader vision: that SOPs and KPIs are not about surveillance or micromanagement. They are about consistency, accountability, and scalability — the foundation for a thriving, less reactive workplace.
Tip #1: Start with empathy. Most (99%) of employees want to do a good job, and in high-stress environments, explaining why change matters is the first step to reducing resistance. You will hear, “In the past we would….” or “This is how I do …” Practice active listening to ensure you are fully understanding what your team is sharing.
Step 2: Creating Desire — Turning Skeptics into Partners
Awareness alone doesn’t guarantee participation. Many staff are initially wary — “We’re already stretched thin, now you want us to write manuals? Or now you want us to go to meetings?”
To address this, I implemented a peer-driven approach. Each team member was asked to write down what they already do — not to invent new procedures, but to capture their current experience in their respective area of expertise. This reframed the work as recognition of their skill, not critique of it. A critical difference in building trust and partners for change.
We began to celebrate small wins. When the first few SOPs were drafted, I celebrated the staff for submitting them, recognized them for their efforts and began to talk about the drafts during our weekly 1×1 meetings. I made sure to communicate, these will take time and we will work through them together.
As they begin to see their work, and how it is transformed into a framework, they often recall a time when they made one change in their process and then abandoned it. Or they will see what their daily process looks like in terms of time and energy and how this impacts others on the team. Once you are openly communicating with your staff on SOP’s and process, you will build buy-in and they will start working with each other organically.
Tip #2 : Involve people early. Introduce the topic in a NON-Judgmental way and ask open ended questions, seeking to understand and empathize with your team. Buy-in is built through mutual trust. This is a key to building lasting change.
Step 3: Building Knowledge — Teaching the “How”
Once the team understood why and they wanted to participate, the next step was building on their knowledge — the skills and methods to actually write usable SOPs and define KPIs.
I began to roll out informational snap shots during the Monday Kickoff meetings. The slides were focused on demystifying the process of SOP’s to KPI’s.
Key topics:
- Defining KPIs: The difference between activity metrics (what we do) and outcome metrics (what we achieve).
- Documenting for Continuity: How SOPs prevent burnout by reducing dependency on a single person’s memory.
- Creating Team Cohesion: Building team collaboration and cohesion by increasing transparencies across teams.
I then took their initial draft SOP’s and each iteration, and incorporated it into a single organizational wide document. I created templates for staff to use as they made iterative changes to their work. This made the process tangible and repeatable.
For KPIs, we started small — one measurable goal per role — such as client visit completion rate, response time, or satisfaction score. Over time, these will evolve into team-level dashboards that support coaching, never punishment.
Tip # 3: Training should feel empowering, not overwhelming. Coach your team to improve through iterations, rather than a one and done mentality. Support the team, through the creation of educational materials, templates and individual KPI’s.
Step 4: Developing Ability — Practicing Change Under Pressure
Knowledge must be turned into action. But in a high-energy, high-stress team, there’s rarely “extra time” to practice new habits. Even if you have done all of the previous steps well, during the high-stress times, humans will revert back to systems and processes that they have used in past. They will also reduce the amount of communication, and can often be heard saying we are “building the plane while we fly it…”
To make change sustainable, we need to think through the full Change Management process and be sure to begin embedding SOPs into daily operations. In the place of extra meetings, or more time on the phone, asking questions and interrupting daily workflow, spend 5-10 minutes at each staff meeting doing a “Round Robin” exercise. This will allow everyone to share what they are doing, where they are stuck and what is getting in the way. It also provides an opportunity for newly implemented SOP’s to be revisited and discussed. Keeping communication open, you can decrease the fear and increase collaboration.
- What worked today?
- What step caused confusion?
- How would we describe this process to a new hire?
These micro-conversations became the heartbeat of continuous improvement. As each SOP was tested in real time, staff refined and owned it.
At this stage, I also introduced change champions — staff members who naturally modeled adaptability and positivity. They supported peers, shared progress, and helped normalize documentation as part of the culture.
Tip # 4: Embed learning into workflow. Consistency beats intensity. Keep communication flowing by creating spaces for responsive conversations to happen, and less reactive conversations.
Step 5: Reinforcement and Unification— Sustaining the Change
Change management fails when momentum fades, and when staff are left holding individual KPI’s that are disaggregated from the Strategic Goals of the organization. You need reinforcement and unification to keep momentum going.
We unified under our Strategic Goal of increasing weekly service hours and measuring this KPI weekly into our team rhythm:
- Weekly check-ins to review individual SOPs or KPIs.
- Recognition for improving their process or data tracking.
- Visible unified dashboards showing KPI’s.
- Process tracking and testing
Most importantly, I tied feedback to core values rather than compliance.
For example:
“Because we documented this process, we were able to onboarded a new staff member in half the usual time. Sure that decreases time, but most importantly this shows our organizations professionalism and teamwork. ”
By connecting metrics to meaning, the team began to see KPIs as evidence of excellence, and how these fit into our unified goal as an organization.
Tip #5 : Reinforcement requires celebration, unification and not policing. Acknowledge progress loudly and often, and discuss challenges as often! Create an opportunity to show the team how the KPI’s unify your team toward a goal of excellence.
From Chaos to Clarity
In just four weeks, we transformed scattered routines into documented systems. Staff who once said, “I don’t have time for this,” now ask, “Can we add this to the SOP?”
Our KPIs are simple but powerful: they tell the story of reliability, responsiveness, and compassion — values that define our care model. And because they were built collaboratively, they feel like our KPIs, not my KPIs.
Change management isn’t about imposing order; it’s about unlocking potential through structure. When people understand the “why,” learn the “how,” and experience the “success,” change stops feeling like pressure and starts feeling like progress.
If you’re stepping into an organization with high stress, high turnover, or unclear processes, start small. Listen first. Connect people’s passion to purpose. Build trust before building templates.
The Prosci ADKAR model provides a simple, human-centered roadmap to guide any team through transformation. It reminds us that change doesn’t happen to people — it happens through them.
*Author Cites, https://www.prosci.com/methodology-overview and the ADKAR framework as reference for this article. ChatGPT used in formatting and research.
By Melissa Paciulli, Interim Director, Visiting Angels West Springfield
