Why Most Digital Transformation Efforts Stall After Go-Live (And What to Do About It)
Digital transformation has become the default strategy in industrial sectors looking to modernize operations, boost efficiency, and future-proof their infrastructure. From advanced analytics platforms to centralized control rooms and integrated work management systems, companies are investing heavily in technology.
And yet, too many of these efforts stall shortly after go-live.
The system is delivered. The project is “complete.” But the expected shift in performance or culture never materializes. Teams fall back into old habits. New tools are underused. Project momentum fades. And leadership is left wondering: what happened?
If this sounds familiar, you’re not alone. But the real reasons why digital transformation efforts stall after go-live are more human than technical, and that’s where the solution lies.
The Go-Live Illusion
In many organizations, go-live is celebrated as the finish line. Milestones are marked. Dashboards turn green. Project teams disband and move on.
But what often gets missed is this: the moment of technical deployment is not the moment of organizational transformation. It’s just the beginning.
“Victory is not at go-live. It’s at the realization of the benefits,” said Betsy Bond, Senior Director of Program Delivery at Prosci, during Dexcent’s recent webinar. “That happens six, twelve, eighteen months later. That’s when you know if it worked.”
The biggest disconnect happens when leadership assumes that if the system is running, the change has landed. But real transformation lives in how people use the system, not whether it technically functions.
Adoption Isn’t a Checkbox. It’s a Behaviour.
Even the best tools can’t succeed without buy-in. But buy-in doesn’t happen by decree. It’s earned through trust, clarity, and sustained leadership visibility.
“Success is when the system becomes part of how people do their job without thinking about it,” said Peter Enns, Digitalization Director of Suncor’s Value Chain Transformation Program. “You’re not just implementing a tool. You’re asking people to think differently, make decisions differently, and collaborate differently.”
This kind of shift doesn’t happen automatically after go-live. It requires leadership to stay engaged beyond delivery. Not just to champion the system, but to champion the people expected to use it.
Where Most Rollouts Break Down
If we strip away the technical complexities, most failed adoptions come down to a few consistent issues:
1. Misaligned Success Metrics
When go-live is the primary success indicator, sustainment becomes an afterthought. But transformation success should be measured by behavioural adoption, not delivery timelines.
2. Lack of Visible Leadership
After project teams step back, many executives disappear too. This sends the message that the change is over, not just starting.
“When leaders stay engaged, it builds credibility,” said Peter Enns. “It signals that the change is real and that it matters.”
3. Underestimated Cultural Friction
Resistance is often mistaken for stubbornness. In reality, it’s usually a symptom of fear, fatigue, or past failed initiatives.
“If we’re not walking the floor, if we’re not hearing what people are dealing with, we’re going to miss the signs of resistance,” said Sandy Nolette, Change Management Practitioner and Technical Business Analyst.
Case in Point: A Costly Signal
During the same Dexcent webinar, Peter Enns shared a story about a control room operator who actively resisted a new system by allowing a situation the technology was designed to prevent. It wasn’t an act of sabotage. It was a signal.
The operator didn’t trust the new system. And more importantly, they didn’t feel heard during the rollout. This gap in trust and engagement led to downtime, lost confidence, and rework.
This story illustrates a larger truth: resistance isn’t the problem. Ignoring it is.
So What Can You Do About It?
Here are five actionable ways to ensure your transformation doesn’t stall at the moment it matters most.
1. Redefine Success Beyond Go-Live
Build KPIs that track behavioural adoption, sustained usage, and team confidence, not just project closure. Measure how well the change is living in daily operations.
2. Stay Present as a Leader
Don’t vanish after approval. Show up. Walk the floor. Ask what’s working and what’s not. Make reinforcement part of your operating rhythm.
3. Address Change Fatigue Openly
If your team has seen too many rollouts fail, name it. Acknowledge the past and show what’s different this time. This builds trust faster than any email ever could.
4. Invest in Sustainment Planning Early
Make reinforcement part of your initial strategy, not an afterthought. Who will own adoption once the project team steps back? What does long-term support look like?
“You need a long runway for reinforcement,” said Sandy Nolette. “That’s where true adoption is built…after the project ends.”
5. Invite Feedback, Then Act on It
Create regular feedback loops and respond visibly. When people see their input lead to change, engagement skyrockets.
Don’t Just Finish Strong…Sustain Strong
Digital transformation isn’t about the technology you launch. It’s about the habits you shift. The trust you build. And the behaviours your teams choose to keep long after the celebration ends.
At Dexcent, we work with operations leaders to close the gap between implementation and adoption because we believe transformation only counts if it lasts.
Want to learn how leaders at Suncor, Enbridge, and Prosci tackled these challenges?
Download the full eBook, Beyond the Checkbox – Why Digital Transformations Fail Without Real Change Management.