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When companies talk about transformation, they usually focus on strategy first: restructuring, technology, scaling, expansion.

But what if that’s exactly where most change efforts go wrong?

In my latest conversation with Libby Saylor Wright—COO of Microsoft US Retail & Consumer Goods—one truth became crystal clear:

If you don’t put people and culture first, your transformation will fail—no matter how good your strategy looks on paper.

The Trap of Complexity—and How Libby Broke It

Before Libby stepped in, her team had a vision.

But it was too complex, too disconnected from the day-to-day work of frontline teams.

Employees couldn’t see themselves in the strategy.
Worse, they couldn’t see why it mattered.

Libby changed that.

She led with simplicity, inclusion, and shared ownership.

She built a vision that wasn’t just understood at the executive level—it resonated with every person in the organization, from top to bottom.

“If your individual contributors can’t see themselves in your vision, you’re going nowhere.”

Simple doesn’t mean easy.

It means doing the hard work of listening, synthesizing, and crafting a North Star that guides real behavior—not just slogans.

Insights Over Assumptions: Leading With Data and Heart

Another game-changer from Libby’s approach:

She didn’t build change based on opinions or politics.

She built it on facts, insights, and real feedback from employees.

Too often, leaders chase emotional narratives—or the latest trend—without grounding decisions in what their people actually need.

By weaving employee engagement data directly into the transformation framework, Libby anchored change in reality, not aspiration.

And just as important: she never let data replace human connection.

She balanced hard numbers with soft leadership—listening sessions, real conversations, and open dialogue across the organization.

The Hard Truth About Change Fatigue

Libby didn’t sugarcoat the challenges either.

Change fatigue is real—especially inside large, matrixed organizations.

But instead of pushing harder, she made change relatable.

She connected every new initiative back to the North Star.

She prioritized transparency.

And critically, she kept the customer—not internal politics—at the center of every decision.

In short:
👉 Less noise
👉 More alignment
👉 Clear accountability

That’s how you lead change that actually sticks.

Final Reflection: Why Leadership Still Comes Down to Courage

At the end of the day, what stood out most about Libby’s leadership wasn’t the frameworks or the processes.

It was the courage to challenge the status quo.

As Libby shared, leading true transformation requires more than a good plan.

It requires:

  • Courage to simplify when complexity is the norm
  • Courage to prioritize people when pressure says otherwise
  • Courage to stay the course when distraction creeps in

Culture before strategy.
People before process.
Courage before comfort.

👉 Watch the full episode here

Andrea Petrone

CEO Whisperer | Top 1% Executive Coach and Speaker in the UK | Founder of WCL.

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