IT Strategy & Change Management — Case Study

Turning Organizational Chaos Into a Strategic IT Advantage

How strategic assessment, change leadership, and technology advisory transformed a nonprofit's fragmented operations into a scalable, future-ready infrastructure — on time, under budget, and with full organizational adoption.

OrganizationNonprofit
Scale200–400 Users · 3 Buildings
RoleTechnical Advisor & Change Management Lead
0%
Network Uptime Achieved
Post-implementation, all 3 buildings
100%
Organizational Adoption
Full staff buy-in via structured CM
0
Roles Fulfilled
One advisor. Every function covered.
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CM
Clea McLemore Technical Change Advisor · IT Strategy · Organizational Transformation
Executive Summary

Most IT engagements fail before the first cable is run. They fail because no one asked the harder question: is this organization ready to own what we're about to build? When I engaged this nonprofit, the surface problem was outdated infrastructure. The real problem was the absence of IT governance, change readiness, and the internal capacity to sustain transformation. Applying Lewin's Unfreeze-Change-Refreeze model as the strategic backbone, I assessed the organization's current state, built the case for change with leadership, managed the transition across every department, and ensured full adoption through capability-building that left no external dependency. The result: a scalable infrastructure, a fully operational digital presence, and a self-sustaining team. That last part is what separates a strategist from a technician.

Engagement Details
OrganizationNonprofit
Scope200–400 Users · 3 Buildings
Advisory RoleTechnical Change Advisor
CM FrameworksADKAR · Kotter · Lewin · Bridges
OutcomeUnder Budget · 100% Adoption · Self-Sustaining
01 — The Challenge

A Technology Gap That Was Really a Leadership Gap

The visible problem was outdated infrastructure. The real problem was no IT governance, no change culture, and an organization completely unprepared to sustain any transformation introduced.

Why This Matters — The Data
Research consistently shows that 70% of organizational change initiatives fail — not from poor technology choices, but from insufficient attention to the human side of change.
— McKinsey & Company, "The People Problem in Tech Transformations," cited in Prosci Change Management Research

When leadership requested help, the surface-level diagnosis was clear: aging equipment, disconnected buildings, no digital presence. But a thorough organizational assessment — modeled on the McKinsey 7-S Framework, examining strategy, structure, systems, shared values, skills, style, and staff — revealed something far more significant. There was no technology roadmap, no vendor accountability framework, no change management culture, and no internal capability to sustain any transformation introduced.

Applying the Bridges Transition Model, it became clear that the organization wasn't just dealing with a technology problem — it was stuck in the "Neutral Zone," the disorienting middle ground where the old way no longer works and the new way isn't yet established. Staff had been operating reactively for years, with no shared vision for where technology could take them. Before a single solution could be deployed, the organization needed to believe change was possible.

The strategic insight: Organizations that treat IT problems as purely technical problems generate short-term fixes and long-term dependency. The imperative here was to build organizational capacity alongside infrastructure — ensuring every solution delivered also elevated the people responsible for sustaining it.
The Turning Point
"During the initial assessment, I identified three separate vendor proposals that collectively overcharged the organization by an estimated 40–60%. That discovery shifted the entire engagement. This wasn't just a technology problem — it was a governance problem. The organization had no framework for evaluating vendor recommendations, no internal advocate for their own budget, and no one asking the question: 'Is this the right investment?' That was the moment the engagement became truly strategic."
Zero
IT Governance Structure
No roadmap, no vendor strategy, no accountability framework
None
Internal Change Readiness
No trained staff, no change culture, no continuity planning
High
Organizational Risk Exposure
Vendor exposure, security gaps, zero digital visibility
"The goal was never to fix their IT. It was to build their capability to own it — and to leave an organization that was permanently more capable than before I arrived."
— Clea McLemore, Technical Change Advisor
Organizational State Assessment

Before & After the Advisory Engagement

Before — Risk State
  • No IT governance or roadmapTechnology decisions made reactively — no strategic framework, no leadership accountability
  • Unmanaged vendor riskNo procurement strategy — organization exposed to overcharging with no internal advocate
  • Security posture: criticalNo network architecture, no access controls, no documented protocols across 3 buildings
  • Zero digital strategyNo website, no social presence — invisible to the community they served
  • No internal capabilityNo trained staff, no knowledge transfer plan, total dependency on external support
  • Change resistance unaddressedStaff operating reactively — organizational adoption failure risk was critically high
After — Strategic Position
  • IT governance framework establishedPhased roadmap, vendor accountability, and procurement standards guiding all decisions
  • Vendor risk neutralizedOvercharging blocked, fair pricing negotiated — thousands saved before implementation began
  • Security architecture deployedSecure LAN, private IP, 99% uptime across all 3 buildings with 1-day resolution SLA
  • Full digital transformationWebsite, SEO, Google Business, social media — thousands of followers built from zero
  • Internal capability built6-person team trained, documented, and running fully independently — zero dependency
  • 100% adoption achievedStructured ADKAR-based change management drove organization-wide buy-in
02 — Advisory Framework

Three-Pillar Change Strategy

Sustainable transformation requires strategy at every layer — technical, digital, and human. Click each pillar to explore the approach.

Prosci ADKAR Kotter 8-Step Lewin 3-Stage Bridges Transition McKinsey 7-S
Pillar 01
IT Strategy & Governance
Assessment, Roadmap & Vendor Advisory
Pillar 02
Digital Transformation
Web Strategy, Media & Community Reach
Pillar 03
Change Management & Enablement
Adoption, Capacity Building & Handoff
Conducted full IT maturity assessment using McKinsey 7-S across all 3 buildings
Developed phased technology roadmap aligned to organizational growth objectives
Advised leadership on hardware investment strategy and long-term total cost of ownership
Identified and neutralized vendor overcharging — saving thousands before implementation
Established vendor management framework and procurement accountability standards
Architected secure LAN with private IP, access controls, and 1-day issue resolution SLA
Served as primary technical advisor to leadership on all technology decisions
Selected hardware built for scalability, future compatibility, and long-term ROI
Developed digital presence strategy aligned to the organization's mission and audience
Oversaw full website development — domain, hosting, architecture, content, and launch
Established Google Business presence for local search authority and review strategy
Analyzed traffic data and drove SEO optimization to grow measurable organic visibility
Designed multi-channel social media strategy — YouTube, Facebook, Instagram from zero
Architected live streaming infrastructure and broadcast governance framework
Grew combined digital community to thousands of followers and subscribers from zero
Established content governance and editorial standards for sustainable ongoing operations
Assessed organizational change readiness using Prosci ADKAR — Awareness through Reinforcement
Applied Kotter's 8-Step model: built urgency, coalition, vision, and early wins before scaling
Managed stakeholder communication and leadership alignment throughout all five phases
Designed and delivered role-based training curriculum for media and operational departments
Recruited and developed 6-person media team — built organizational capacity, not dependency
Developed SOPs, knowledge transfer documentation, and Lewin-stage "refreeze" anchoring plan
Achieved 100% adoption — clean handoff with zero ongoing external dependency required
Guided staff through Bridges Transition Model — from Endings through New Beginnings
03 — Engagement Timeline

A Phased Approach to Lasting Change

Each phase was designed to build on the last — diagnosis before architecture, architecture before adoption, adoption before handoff. Kotter's principle of creating early wins was built into every phase gate.

Phase 1 — Organizational Assessment
Diagnosis Before Prescription
Applied McKinsey 7-S Framework to assess the full organizational picture — strategy, systems, staff readiness, and shared values. Identified vendor risk, infrastructure gaps, and change resistance before any solution was proposed. Delivered findings and recommendations to leadership prior to authorization of any spend.
IT AssessmentMcKinsey 7-SGap AnalysisStakeholder Discovery
Phase 2 — Strategic Roadmap & Vendor Advisory
Protecting the Investment Before Making It
Used Kotter's Step 1 (establish urgency) and Step 2 (build the guiding coalition) to align leadership before presenting the phased roadmap. Identified and neutralized overcharging vendors — establishing procurement accountability standards that saved thousands before a single purchase was authorized.
Kotter Step 1–3RoadmapVendor AdvisoryProcurement Strategy
Phase 3 — Infrastructure & Security Architecture
Building the Foundation for Scale
Lewin's "Change" phase — the active transformation. Designed and deployed a unified, secure LAN across 3 buildings. Established private IP architecture, security protocols, and a 1-day issue resolution SLA. Delivered early wins to reinforce momentum and build stakeholder confidence in the broader transformation.
Lewin — ChangeNetwork ArchitectureSecurityEarly Wins
Phase 4 — Digital Transformation Strategy
From Invisible to Present
Led the organization's full digital transformation — web presence, SEO strategy, Google Business integration, social media channels, and live streaming infrastructure. Addressed the ADKAR "Desire" gap by demonstrating visible, tangible wins early — growing community reach from zero to thousands of followers across platforms.
ADKAR — DesireDigital StrategySEOCommunity Growth
Phase 5 — Capability Building & Transition
The Only Successful Exit Is an Independent One
Applied Lewin's "Refreeze" stage and Bridges' "New Beginnings" framework — anchoring new behaviors, processes, and team identity into the organization's culture. Designed and delivered role-based training, built SOPs, developed a 6-person media team, and achieved a clean, dependency-free handoff. Kotter's Step 8: anchoring changes in culture.
Lewin — RefreezeBridges New BeginningsKotter Step 8Knowledge Transfer
04 — Results & Impact

Strategic Outcomes, Not Just Operational Ones

The measures that matter most aren't purely technical — they reflect organizational health, long-term sustainability, and the quality of change management that made full adoption possible.

What Success Actually Looks Like in Change Management
Prosci research identifies three outcomes that define successful change: achieving the project objectives, meeting the timeline, and staying within budget — with all three being dependent on effective adoption by the people involved.
— Prosci Best Practices in Change Management, 12th Edition
0%
Network Uptime
Infrastructure built to sustain organizational scale — all 3 buildings
100%
Organizational Adoption
Full buy-in driven by structured ADKAR-based change management
0
Staff Independently Capable
Internal capacity built — no continued external dependency whatsoever
The Prosci benchmark for successful change: projects with excellent change management are six times more likely to meet objectives than those with poor change management. This engagement was designed around that principle — with change management built into every phase from the outset, not added at the end.
05 — Why This Combination Is Rare

One Advisor. Four Disciplines. Zero Gaps.

Change management directors face a recurring problem: technical advisors who can't manage people change, and change managers who can't evaluate technology decisions. Finding one person fluent in both — and who also brings digital strategy, instructional design, and vendor negotiation — is genuinely unusual. This is that combination.

IT
Technical Depth
Infrastructure & Security Architecture
Network design, hardware procurement, vendor management, and security protocols. The technical credibility to evaluate proposals, protect budgets, and make infrastructure decisions that serve the organization's long-term goals — not just the immediate problem.
CM
Change Management
ADKAR · Kotter · Lewin · Bridges
Fluency in the leading change management frameworks — applied to real engagements, not just described in certifications. The ability to assess readiness, build coalitions, manage resistance, and anchor change in organizational culture. Prosci-informed. Results-measured.
L&D
Instructional Design
Training, Curriculum & Capability Building
MS in Instructional Technology. ADDIE-based curriculum design. The ability to build training programs that develop genuine capability — not just compliance. When change requires new behaviors, I design the learning experience that makes those behaviors stick.
DX
Digital Transformation
Web, SEO & Digital Strategy
Website development, SEO architecture, social media strategy, and live media operations. The ability to build an organization's digital presence from zero — not just advise on it. Digital transformation that's visible to the community, measurable in traffic, and sustainable long-term.
Risk
Advisory
Vendor Risk & Procurement Strategy
The ability to evaluate vendor proposals through a strategic lens — identifying overcharging, protecting budgets, negotiating fair contracts, and selecting solutions for total cost of ownership rather than sticker price. Saved thousands in this engagement before the implementation began.
10+
Years of Experience
IT Leadership & Workforce Development
Over a decade of enterprise IT leadership, including managing 125 field technicians across 500 polling stations, security audits for 140+ utility partners, and adjunct lecturing in IT and workforce development. The depth to advise at any level of the organization.

Most organizations hire a technical person and a change manager separately — and they never fully integrate. This engagement demonstrated what's possible when one advisor holds both. The result was not just a transformed infrastructure, but a transformed organization — one that understands its technology, trusts its systems, and owns its future.

06 — Leadership Competencies

The Strategic Capabilities This Work Demanded

Technical advisory work succeeds when it's grounded in leadership — the ability to assess, influence, align, and build lasting organizational capacity at every level.

Advisory
IT Strategy & Governance
Technology Advisory
Translated complex technical realities into clear, defensible business decisions. Advised on vendor risk, procurement strategy, and infrastructure investments using a McKinsey 7-S lens — ensuring every technology decision aligned to organizational structure and strategy.
IT StrategyMcKinsey 7-SGovernance
Change
Management Lead
Organizational Change Management
Applied Prosci ADKAR to move each stakeholder from Awareness through Reinforcement. Used Kotter's 8-Step model to build the guiding coalition, generate urgency, and anchor new behaviors in culture. Achieved 100% organizational adoption across all departments.
ADKARKotter 8-StepAdoption
Capacity
Building
Organizational Capability Development
Applied Bridges Transition Model to guide staff through Endings and the Neutral Zone into New Beginnings. Designed ADDIE-based training curricula, built documentation systems, and developed a 6-person team with a clear handoff framework that left zero ongoing dependency.
Bridges ModelADDIEKnowledge Transfer
Digital
Transformation Lead
Digital Strategy & Transformation
Developed and executed the full digital transformation strategy — web architecture, SEO, social media channels, and live streaming operations. Grew community reach from zero, establishing measurable visibility that serves the organization's mission long after the engagement ended.
Digital StrategySEOCommunity Growth
Risk
Identification & Mitigation
Risk Advisory
Proactively identified vendor overcharging, security vulnerabilities, and procurement risks before they became organizational liabilities. Protecting budget and data integrity isn't just technical work — it's a strategic function that directly enables transformation success.
Risk MgmtSecurityProcurement
Systems
Thinking
Cross-Functional Integration
Connected infrastructure to operations, digital strategy to mission delivery, and team capability to organizational sustainability. Systems thinking is what allows a single advisor to hold the full picture — and make each decision in the context of the whole.
Systems DesignIntegrationStrategic Planning
MS · Instructional Technology
Distance Education Concentration
BS · Information Technology
Business Administration Minor
10+ Years IT Leadership
Enterprise Systems & Change Management
Adjunct Lecturer
IT & Workforce Development
07 — Technology & Tools

Recommended, Implemented & Governed

Every tool was evaluated through a strategic advisory lens — assessed for total cost of ownership, organizational fit, and long-term scalability before a single recommendation was made.

LAN Architecture
Network Infrastructure
Security Protocols
Access Controls & Compliance
Lenovo
Hardware Advisory & Procurement
Ricoh
Vendor Negotiation & Management
WordPress
Web Strategy & CMS
Google Business
SEO & Local Authority
YouTube
Video & Community Strategy
Facebook & Instagram
Social Media Strategy
SEO & Web Analytics
Growth Strategy & Optimization
Live Streaming
Broadcast Infrastructure
ISP & IP Strategy
Connectivity Advisory
Training & Change Curriculum
ADDIE Instructional Design
08 — Key Takeaways

What Every Change Management Leader Should Demand from a Technical Advisor

1
Diagnosis Before Prescription — Always
The most expensive IT decisions are made before the full organizational picture is understood. Entering with an assessment mindset — examining strategy, systems, structure, and staff readiness before recommending anything — is what separates an advisor from a vendor. This is what I bring to every engagement from day one.
2
Change Management Is the Work, Not a Deliverable
Prosci research shows that projects with excellent change management are six times more likely to meet their objectives. In this engagement, ADKAR, Kotter, and Lewin weren't frameworks cited in a deck — they were applied at each phase gate to ensure adoption preceded deployment. This is what I mean by change management as a discipline, not an afterthought.
3
Strategic Advisors Protect Budgets, Not Just Spend Them
Identifying vendor overcharging and making procurement recommendations grounded in total cost of ownership is a strategic function — not an IT task. This engagement delivered under budget because every investment was evaluated against long-term organizational value before authorization. Budget protection is a skill I bring to every technology decision.
4
The Right Exit Creates Permanent Capability
Lewin's Refreeze stage and Bridges' New Beginnings framework both point to the same truth: change isn't complete until the new state is anchored in culture. This engagement ended with zero ongoing external dependency — a trained team, documented systems, and an organization that owns its technology. That is the standard I hold every engagement to.
Frameworks Applied in This Engagement
Prosci ADKAR · Kotter's 8-Step Change Model · Lewin's Unfreeze-Change-Refreeze · Bridges Transition Model · McKinsey 7-S Framework · ADDIE Instructional Design
Applied across all five engagement phases — not as theoretical references, but as active decision-making tools

Looking for a Technical Change Advisor Who Can Do Both?

If you lead change management initiatives and need a technical advisor who bridges strategy and execution — someone who speaks ADKAR and TCP/IP in the same conversation — I'd welcome a discussion about what your next engagement needs.