I've seen it happen more times than I'd like.
A team spends months preparing for a big go-live. There's energy, countdown clocks, training sessions. The day arrives, emails go out, and then... everyone moves on to the next priority. Three months later, half the team has drifted back to the old way of doing things.
Here's the truth: a launch date is a milestone, not a destination. Rolling out is the easy part. Embedding change, making it genuinely part of how people actually work, every day, that's where the real challenge lies.
I've worked with organisations that celebrated go-live like it was the finish line, only to find themselves back at square one six months later. And I understand why, there's real pressure to hit deployment targets. But those targets measure activity, not adoption.
Real embedding looks different. It means:
When we introduce Verto into an organisation, we don't just hand over a platform and wave goodbye. We build an adoption roadmap together, identifying champions, mapping real-world use cases, and designing workflows that reflect how people actually do their jobs, not how we imagine they should.
That's how you move from 'rolled out' to 'bought in'.
Change is tiring. I've worked with brilliant public sector teams who are genuinely doing their best under enormous pressure. The last thing they need is a transformation programme that feels like one more thing to manage.
That's why recognising progress, even small wins, is so important. When people can see that the new way is saving time, reducing duplication, or making reporting less painful, it gives them a reason to keep going. Visible progress is fuel. Don't underestimate it.
People don't adopt change because they're told to. They adopt it because they experience value.
That's the simple truth I come back to again and again. Make the new way easier, faster, and more rewarding than the old way and you won't have to push people towards it. They'll get there themselves.
In the next post, we'll get into the human side of change in more depth and why engagement beats enforcement every single time.