Chief Change Officer - #399 Nellie Wartoft: Global Fix—Change Management Without the Migraine — Part Two
Episode Date: May 29, 2025Nellie Wartoft is the founder and CEO of Tiger Hall, a change enablement platform built for teams tired of stale workshops and change theater. In Part One, she takes us from her tiny hometown in Swede...n to the boardrooms of Asia, where flipping burgers at McDonald’s, carrying an ice hockey trunk to Singapore, and watching companies struggle with real transformation all shaped her mission. This is change management with edge—equal parts adventure, insight, and rebellion.Key Highlights of Our InterviewChange Theater vs. Real Impact“Most companies don’t fail at change because of bad tools. They fail because they bring people in too late and communicate like robots. Change has to feel human to work.”Same Emotions, Different Timelines“Fear, chaos, resistance—these show up everywhere, regardless of geography. The real difference is how cultures structure leadership and how fast they move. The U.S. wants speed. Asia wants legacy. Both come with tradeoffs.”Ego: The Silent Killer of Transformation“The higher the ego of a leader, the lower the success rate of their transformation. Fear of feedback, obsession with control—it turns a team into a compliance machine instead of a change engine.”Tech Isn’t the Problem—Leadership Is“People love apps—just not the ones that feel forced. If your tools aren’t solving real problems or making life easier, the issue isn’t the platform. It’s the person who bought it.”Walking the Talk at Tiger Hall“We use our own platform to manage internal change. No Zoom fatigue, no death-by-Slack. One short recording can replace hours of town halls and still hit harder—because it’s fast, direct, and straight from the source.”_________________________Connect with us:Host: Vince Chan | Guest: Nellie Wartoft --Chief Change Officer--Change Ambitiously. Outgrow Yourself.Open a World of Expansive Human Intelligencefor Transformation Gurus, Black Sheep,Unsung Visionaries & Bold Hearts.EdTech Leadership Awards 2025 Finalist.18 Million+ All-Time Downloads.80+ Countries Reached Daily.Global Top 1.5% Podcast.Top 10 US Business.Top 1 US Careers.>>>170,000+ are outgrowing. Act Today.<<<
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Hi, everyone.
Welcome to our show, Chief Change Officer.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host.
Our show is a modernist humility for change progressives
in organizational and human transformation from around the world.
Today, I'm joined by Nellie Wotoff, someone I'd like to call the Chief Change Officer
behind Change Leaders. Originally from Europe, she spent years in Asia, especially in Singapore, working across cultures.
Now based in U.S., Nellie is the founder and CEO of Tiger Hall, a tech-driven platform
helping organizations navigate change more effectively.
This is part one of a two-part series.
In these episodes, we'll dive into navigating cultural differences across three regions,
why most change initiatives fail, and how to set up for success. If you've ever struggled with change,
whether in your career, company, or life,
this series is for you.
Let's get started.
What triggered you to start this company in the very first place? I hate SharePoint.
I think it's the most awful way of communicating.
It was more like I was seeing how hard it was for employees on the ground to grasp what
HQ wanted out of them and what they should be doing.
And I saw this disconnect and how it was
like both parties have really good intentions. People are trying to drive change and transformation
and make their companies become better. But all it does is that it increases this change fatigue
and resistance and fear in employees. And I was like this is not necessary. And then employees
also have good intentions.
They really want to help, they want to support, they want to do a good job, right?
No one shows up to work and thinks I'm gonna do a really shit job today, let me see how
bad I can do this job.
People generally have good intentions.
So it's good intentions on both sides, but it's the in between that makes it get lost,
right?
And that's the complexity of the size of these companies, the communications and the lack of the availability
of these tools.
Like you can't target very well with email or SharePoint
and it's hard to create high quality engaging content
with these tools.
Like it's mostly just written documents.
So I was looking around and I saw
what are people engaged with?
They're really engaged with their TikToks and Instagrams and
Spotify's and all of the consumer grade technology and things that are social, things that are have
engaging content. I was like why isn't change communications more like this? Why can't we
communicate change and transformation to employees the way an influencer communicates about the
latest fashion trend or whatever to their followers, right?
So that was a big inspiration for it as well and just how do we bring that content consumption,
engagement and social aspects into change and transformation?
When it comes to change, a lot of it goes beyond technology. It's ultimately rooted in human behavior and cultural nuances.
You've had the unique experience of living and working across Europe, Asia, and now the US,
which brings with it an incredible range of perspectives.
Given your background and your exposure to diverse clients, I'm curious, how do you
see cultural differences play out when it comes to people's reactions to change?
Even the concept of change itself, whether it is a mindset shift or a full-scale transformation can vary dramatically across regions.
Have you noticed any significant differences or similarities in how these cultures approach and perceive change? And how do you adapt your solutions to help clients tackle those cultural
nuances more effectively? I think there are a lot more similarities than differences actually. At
the end of the day we're all pretty similar as humans and the human psyche and human emotions
they don't differ that much across geographies from my
experience and things like the fear, the chaos, the uncertainty, politics, emotions, all of
these are in all of these cultures, right?
So the human experience of change and including change resistance and fatigue and all of those
are very natural and very human regardless of where you're from.
I think the differences
that more than the cultural differences shows up in organizations more from a couple of ways right.
So one is the role of talent and how it's viewed and the kind of like how you view talent as a
resource versus an investment for example. And that also influences the leadership culture. So if we take Asia
where it's more generally more top-down work cultures, you don't really question your boss,
you don't really speak up to authority, there are other cultural nuances that drive other kinds of
behaviors. Whereas in the US it's very common to challenge authority and speak up against your
manager and say what you think and voice your concerns.
So that's leading to differences in communication.
And we also see that because we have clients across 32 countries work with around half
a million employees worldwide that are using the platform.
So across those differences in geography you can see that leadership style and the hierarchical
nature of organizations
different than in the two-way feedback loops for example and the kind of feedback that people share
and how they share that. And you also see it in things like trusting leaders. So in Asia people
are much more prone to trusting their leaders. I would say maybe not blind, oh but he's the boss
so he knows best. Because of someone's level of seniority that
person automatically has power and authority and knowledge. Whereas that's not the case in the US
where people are more like yeah just because he's the chief whatever or she's the senior something,
it doesn't matter that they always know best. I also have my opinion and they matter as much
as theirs. So that's a big difference in how communication is handled and how people trust and follow and view their leaders. And then
I think the other difference is the long-term versus short-term thinking. So leaders in Asia are much
more long-term thinking and the US is much more short-term. So the US is much more around quarterly
results for Wall Street and showing earnings and all
of the numbers every three months.
So they don't really have long-term visions when it comes to thinking about change.
It's more like trend hopping, like AI for example.
Everyone is on AI and everyone needs to implement it now and everyone wants to show it to Wall
Street next quarter.
Whereas in Asia, it's a little bit more, let's see what we're going to do in the next 10
years and especially the Asia headquartered companies are very much more long term vision
and like how does this play into our heritage and the longer term view of who we are as
a company and our identity.
So that's also another approach to change which I've noticed where changes happen slower
in Asia but perhaps more intentional, I would
say. Like it's a bit more visionary and like thinking through more instead of just like
jumping into execution right away. And all of those sides have both pros and cons that
depends on how you want to do it, right. Like I think for example Asia could be much more
faster in execution given the top downdown hierarchical culture it has.
But then this long-term vision, which is great in my view, that kind of makes it not as fast.
But if you had for example the short-term vision of the US with the top-down hierarchy of Asia,
that could potentially be extremely intense and fast execution, right. But I think both of them
balance themselves out in interesting ways. But I think both of them balance themselves out
in interesting ways.
But those are some of the differences that I've noticed
in just the work that we've done.
When we first met, you told me some intriguing insights
from your experiences, specifically why certain change
initiatives fail while others succeed.
You pointed out that there are common pitfalls that lead to failure,
and that understanding can uncover valuable opportunities to set the stage for success.
Could you share with us some of those common reasons for failure?
Maybe you've seen recurring patterns?
Or perhaps you can recall specific examples, without naming names, of how these failures
played out?
And on the flip side, what approaches have you found to be specially effective in laying
the groundwork for a successful change initiative?
Yeah, I don't think some fail.
I think most fail.
Depending on how you define failure.
There's a very well-known statistic that 70 or even 80% of transformations fail, right? And the definition of failure
in most of those studies is not achieving the intended outcome. So not delivering the
value that it was supposed to deliver. Not reaching the milestones on time. So getting
dragged and dragged for time and budget. Or just like being abandoned. Like it didn't
work and we have to stop and go another way. Which I also like wouldn't necessarily call failure. We live and we learn. And I think that's completely fine. And
to just say this didn't work, we're going to try something else. So I don't think there should be
any fear around failing. But if you want a transformation initiative to really succeed,
there are a couple of things that I notice between the customers that we work with and just like,
what makes them successful versus
the ones who are less successful, what do they do instead?
The number one thing, the number one, but like the first thing to think about in the
journey of a transformation is when do you start involving people?
That's a big difference I see.
There are some companies that are really good with involving people early.
You know, instead of having three people in the ivory tower deciding everything and then
starting to roll it out.
And then at the very last minute when it comes to execution, that's when they go,
Hey, like Tom, Dick and Harry, like, why don't you need to do this differently
now? So go ahead and do it differently and change your workflows.
That's usually not received very well.
And on the other side of that, I see companies
involving employees early, like at the formation stage. And even if you can decide the strategy
and what the change is going to be, let's say you're going to have all renewable energy
by 2030. Okay, that's your plan. But then how do you start involving people in the thinking,
in the formation, in the how-to, and shaping the transformation. And I see companies
are really successful, have involved more people earlier. And there's a study from McKinsey on this
as well where most organizations involve and engage on average 2% of their organization.
McKinsey argues that's equivalent to around a 20% success rate of change and transformation initiatives. Whereas if you have just 7% engaged that's already 50% success rate. So really you only really
need 7% of your organization to be fully engaged for you to have a 50-50 chance of success.
And then if you start climbing up to 30%, having 30% of your organization engaged, that's when you get realistic success
rates up to 80-85%.
So it's not about having 100% on board, but it's about how can you have more than just
the ivory tower people involved, and getting people involved very early.
So that's one big difference I see.
Then the other one would be how much effort they put into the with them. So what's
in it for me, the language and the words that they use with different audiences. Do you
go to a factory floor, for example, with very formal headquarter corporate language? That's
usually not flying very well. Or do you actually meet people where they are? So the amount
of effort that they put in to target the different audiences,
understanding their needs, using the words, the language that they use
and like speaking their language, both literally and metaphorically.
That's another big difference.
They'll see like everything from vocabulary and words used.
And then I think almost the biggest one is actually the ego and fear of the leaders.
It's almost a direct correlation between the level of, or inverse correlation I should
say, with the ego of the CEO and the success of transformation.
And the higher the ego of the CEO is, the lower the success of your transformation.
I've seen this in multiple companies and heard about it as well from change leaders that I talk to every day and it's always the high ego,
high fear type of leader that makes transformation very difficult. Because
usually what that means, right, it's not the ego in itself that is a challenge,
but the ego means that usually they are less open to feedback. They take things
more personally and any negative feedback or information they take it very
personally they think it's all about them.
So high ego and high fear in leaders is usually a very bad combination because it stifles
any and all conversation and feedback that you can have around it.
And that is what creates these top down do as I say and if you say anything I'm
gonna punish you or I get very scared or I take it personally and that kind of
approach in leaders is just not beneficial at all for a transformation
type of environment. So that might have worked in the old days where you needed a
leader to just tell people what to do and then they go execute it. But in 2024
and beyond it's not going to be that type of leadership that succeeds.
So that's another reason I see companies fail is when senior leaders have that high ego,
are very sensitive to feedback, or don't even want to hear any feedback at all, or not interested
in what people think on the ground.
That's another big challenge.
So those are some differences that I've seen and both of these hold true both across
Asia and the US. Yeah, like you said, human nature is universal. Fear, ego, emotions, and office
politics exist everywhere. Regardless of culture, gender, or age.
My friend's story about working in a big bank in Asia captures a common sentiment, that
is, frustration about change management tools or processes, that still imposed rather than
embraced.
She mentioned how the software forced employees to fit into its framework,
rather than adapting to their needs.
And the feedback process, she described it as a formality,
where no one feels safe or motivated to speak the truth, just feeling in responses for the sick of it.
That sense of disengagement is palpable.
I'm curious, from your perspective,
have you encountered similar resistance in your work?
How do you ensure that tools or processes have encountered similar resistance in your work?
How do you ensure that tools or processes don't just check the box for change, but
actually engage and empower the people they are meant to serve?
I'm sure that happens in a lot of places, and that's not good.
I think for us it's very different because employees like it.
We actually started B2C, so we actually started as a consumer platform to ensure that
engagement was high, people liked it, it was an experience that suited them,
which I think many platforms don't do. So that's of course one differentiator when it comes to
how we've approached it. But then I think also it's like people tend to,
it's not helpful to have generalizations like a piece of software is bad. It's not about the
software, it's not about the technology, it's not about the platforms, it's about what problem are
you trying to solve and how are you solving it. And that's actually on the leaders in the organization
to decide that. So in your friend's case, I would challenge the CHRO
and say, what problems are you trying to solve
by bringing in all of these different software platforms?
Like it's clearly not delivering the value
or delivering the results that they had intended for it to do.
So it's never about the platform, it's about
what does that platform, software, technology,
whatever you're bringing in, what is that intended to solve?
And that's up to the business leaders to decide.
Because it's not about the amount of technology is never a problem, right?
Think of our phones.
Like, how many apps do we have?
I think the average is like 400 or 450 apps in your phone.
But some number of apps is not a problem with the ones you use, right?
So people who use WhatsApp and Instagram and LinkedIn
and I'm a big user of all of those three. I don't have an issue with having three platforms
because they all fill their own purpose and they all have solve a need or a problem or
they have a purpose, right? So I think that's the approach you have to take as an enterprise
buyer as well. It's not about the software or the number of platforms. It's about are you reaching the goals that you intended to reach? And software is always
a means to an end. It's never the end. So I think for your friends you probably have
to take this conversation to the people who are bringing in the software and better understand
what is the problem they're trying to solve and is it solving that problem? If not, then
throw it out. If yes, then keep it.
That's how I would approach it.
I see you as the chief change officer
behind all the change leaders you work with,
guiding them to maximize the success of the initiatives.
But as the founder and CEO of your own firm, you're also managing change within your own organization,
including hiring, scaling, and evolving as you grow.
So how do you approach change management within your own firm? Do you bring in independent consultants
to guide the process?
Or do you rely on your own expertise
to lead and execute these changes?
What does change look like from your side of the table?
So we have Tiger Hall, right?
So we use Tiger Hall. So that? So we use TigerHall.
So that's the software that we use for it.
Then within change, you have three stages, right?
You have the strategy, you have the planning,
and you have the activation.
And we focus on the activation side of it.
When it comes to the strategy
and the planning side of TigerHall,
that's where I, from time to time,
absolutely use advisors and experts and speak to people in different fields and so on.
But when it comes to activation, then that's what Tiger Hall was built for.
So then we use Tiger Hall.
And we use Tiger Hall for everything from new employee onboarding to change communications, leadership information, customer feedback is on Tiger Hall.
When we do live streams with our own customers.
So we have, what we're seeing is, especially with the customer interviews,
bringing that directly into the business.
That's a very big piece of it.
In our sense, the transformation that I'm driving internally is more,
I would say, like market education, customer education,
having everyone in the business understanding what is Chief Transformation Officer,
what do they do, what are their priorities, what is change management and like having everyone across
engineering and product and all the other departments understanding what that is.
So that's a big piece and all of that is done on Tiger Hall. So all the education around
the space and different industries and customers and their pain points and that's where we have
very high engagement levels, especially on the
live streams with live customers.
And then getting that direct feedback on onboarding, for example, when they do
their onboarding journeys in Tigerall, having that direct feedback and
ultimately it just saves a lot of time.
In my previous startups as well, where obviously we didn't have Tigerall
because it wasn't built, it became a lot of me repeating myself on a lot of zoom calls and doing a lot of cranings and information and
sharing sessions and typing long messages on slack and producing documents and all over.
That's what I don't have to do anymore. So it's a big save of time where I can and there is no
whispering game where like I tell the leadership team then the leadership team tells their direct
reports and then they tell their direct reports and so on. This is just like straight
from the horse's mouth. So I can be coming out of a customer meeting, pick up my phone, record a
short message to the team or whichever department or audience that I want to send it to and it's
just done and there right away. So it's much more faster for me as a leader and all my leadership team and everyone else who communicates internally
and not having these like one hour town halls and long trainings and so on.
And that goes for onboarding and training as well.
Like in my previous company, I used to do all the onboarding with everyone
and that took a very big part of my time.
Whereas now they do that on Tiger Hall and then we have a Q&A session
and then they ask me any questions that they want to ask. So yeah, so anything in change we
definitely use Tiger Hall for it.
I call this walk the walk and top the top leadership.
I would like to bring you back and talk more about change.
Next time it will be on video. We're launching the YouTube channel very soon.
So after the holidays please please come back now.
Thank you very much for your time today.
Yeah, that sounds great.
We'll be happy to.
Thank you so much for joining us today.
If you like what you heard,
don't forget, subscribe to our show,
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I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host.
Until next time, take care.