

The Four Change Friction Traps: Loran Nordgren
33 snips Oct 1, 2025
Loran Nordgren, a behavioral theory professor at Northwestern's Kellogg School, dives into why people resist new ideas and how to dissolve psychological friction in organizations. He reveals that framing change as 'evolution' rather than 'revolution' reduces resistance. Loran discusses four friction types that cause inertia and shares practical tactics like using email templates to boost engagement. He emphasizes addressing emotional anxieties directly to unlock potential and restore agency, challenging conventional wisdom on change management without the usual push.
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Fuel Alone Amplifies Resistance
- Leaders often try to solve resistance by making ideas louder, brighter, and more urgent.
- Loran Nordgren argues that increasing appeal without addressing hidden friction often amplifies resistance.
Make Breakthroughs Feel Familiar
- Big, unfamiliar changes trigger inertia because people favor what they know.
- Framing breakthrough change as evolution reduces unfamiliarity and eases adoption.
Tell An Evolution Story
- Tell an evolution story instead of a revolution story to lower unfamiliarity.
- Explain the lineage and previous steps so the new idea feels like the next chapter.