A Review of Change Management Models
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Abstract
Change management has become a critical organizational capability in response to globalization, technological disruption, competitive pressures, and evolving workforce expectations. Organizations across sectors face continuous change related to strategy, structure, processes, culture, and technology. Despite the inevitability of change, failure rates of change initiatives remain high, often due to inadequate planning, leadership resistance, and poor stakeholder engagement. This review paper critically examines major change management models, including Lewin’s Three-Step Model, Kotter’s Eight-Step Model, ADKAR, McKinsey 7-S Framework, and emergent change approaches. Drawing on classical and contemporary literature, the paper synthesizes theoretical foundations, practical applications, strengths, and limitations of each model. A comparative analysis highlights contextual suitability and effectiveness. The review concludes that no single change management model is universally applicable; instead, successful change depends on contextual adaptation, leadership capability, and organizational culture. The paper contributes by offering an integrated understanding of change management models and identifying future research directions.
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