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The Velocity of Lasting Change, Part 1 – The Funeral of Innovation

Explore the emotional and strategic layers of lasting change in regulated industries. This post unpacks why innovation often stalls, not from resistance, but from inherited beliefs—and how grieving old paradigms is essential to transformation.

Why transformation takes time and what gets in the way of new ideas taking hold.

We often talk about transformation like it’s a spark, quick, bright, and disruptive. But real change, especially in regulated industries and human systems, happens differently. It progresses slowly, intentionally, and sometimes invisibly slowed by legacy infrastructure, cultural inertia, and the emotional cost of letting go.

The Velocity of Lasting Change is a reflection on what it truly takes to evolve. Not just tools or frameworks, but the mindset, relationships, and resilience required to move forward with integrity. This series explores familiar tensions: innovation versus safety, ambition versus burnout, readiness versus resistance. It invites readers into the emotional and strategic undercurrents behind every systems conversation.

We start where progress often stalls: with the beliefs we’ve forgotten we inherited.

Innovation Doesn’t Die, It Ages Out

Max Planck famously said:

“Science progresses one funeral at a time.”

The same could be said for business and technology innovation.  Despite new tools and smarter systems, many organizations remain tied to decisions made long ago by predecessors who were doing their best, but whose logic reflected a different world.

Progress isn’t slowed because people resist change; it’s held back by what we still believe to be true.

We’ve seen it firsthand:

  • A company implementing modern software, only to mirror outdated workflows inside it.
  • Leadership that speaks the language of transformation but measures success with legacy KPIs.
  • Teams that seek innovation only after confirming it won’t change their roles too much.

Sometimes, change is less about adoption and more about emotional permission to outgrow the past.

Why Old Paradigms Persist

In regulated industries, fear is often disguised as caution. Risk management is vital—but all too often, it becomes a driver or justification for staying still. A few familiar reasons keep legacy thinking alive:

  • Validation inertia: “We already validated this, so let’s just leave it alone.”
  • Generational turnover: New thinkers with fewer decision-making rights.
  • Cultural memory: “This worked before. Why reinvent it?”
  • Institutional politeness: Change is put off to avoid discomfort.

None of this is failure, it’s evolution. But when that evolution turns sluggish, momentum fades.

 What Dies Before Change Can Live

Through the experience of Sakara Digital’s co-founders, leaders who’ve spent years navigating change in complex regulated industries, we’ve seen organizations get stuck on the edge of transformation, technically capable but emotionally tethered. Sometimes, our job isn’t just to introduce new workflows or design new systems, it’s to identify what’s no longer supporting the intentions.

Old paradigms don’t go out with a memo. They fade when:

  • People stop defending them.
  • A new vocabulary begins to take hold.
  • Someone says, “What if we didn’t do it that way anymore?”

This isn’t disruption. It’s grieving—funeral by funeral, belief by belief.

And it’s necessary.

What’s Ahead

Over the next few weeks, we’ll explore other forces shaping slow lasting change:

  • The dual nature of regulation (The Cost of Compliance)
  • The illusion of strategic readiness (The Myth of Readiness)
  • The emotional toll transformation takes (The Human Side)
  • And the courage it takes to try anyway (Seeds of Hope)

The velocity of lasting change isn’t about urgency. It’s about depth. And it starts with letting go.

This post is part of a series. View the full series The Velocity of Lasting Change.

This article was created in collaboration with GenAI and shaped by intentional human insight.

Further Reading

  • 9 Change Management Models to Compare. Prosci
  • Rewired Pharma Companies Will Win in the Digital Age. McKinsey

#FractionalConsulting #LifeSciences #DigitalTransformation #ChangeManagement

author avatar
Amie Harpe Founder and Principal Consultant
Amie Harpe is a strategic consultant, IT leader, and founder of Sakara Digital, with 20+ years of experience delivering global quality, compliance, and digital transformation initiatives across pharma, biotech, medical device, and consumer health. She specializes in GxP compliance, AI governance and adoption, document management systems (including Veeva QMS), program management, and operational optimization — with a proven track record of leading complex, high-impact initiatives (often with budgets exceeding $40M) and managing cross-functional, multicultural teams. Through Sakara Digital, Amie helps organizations navigate digital transformation with clarity, flexibility, and purpose, delivering senior-level fractional consulting directly to clients and through strategic partnerships with consulting firms and software providers. She currently serves as Strategic Partner to IntuitionLabs on GxP compliance and AI-enabled transformation for pharmaceutical and life sciences clients. Amie is also the founder of Peacefully Proven (peacefullyproven.com), a wellness brand focused on intentional, peaceful living.


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