By March, the “New Year, New Tech” energy has faded. In January, organisations invested heavily in enterprise intelligence across SAP, Oracle, Microsoft and all the No Code, low code platforms. Licenses were activated. Dashboards went live. The rollout was declared a success. Yet by the end of Q1, many leadership teams sense something unsettling: adoption has plateaued, and real business impact feels slower than expected.
The “March Wall” and the Post-Purchase Slump
This is the Post-Purchase Slump – the gap between technical deployment and behavioural transformation. Intelligence is not a standalone feature; it is a capability woven into your entire enterprise stack. When organisations treat it as a tool rather than a cultural shift, ROI stalls. Technology may be operational, but human readiness often is not.
The thesis is simple: Technical deployment is a transaction, but true transformation is an Internal Change Readiness capability. ROI lives in the human literacy of the system, not the software itself.
The Paradox: Relational vs. Positional Leadership
The paradox lies in the leadership approach. When intelligence is imposed through positional authority alone, it triggers a biological threat response. Teams comply, but they do not fully engage – a state known as “Malicious Compliance.” Without the core values of Trust and Respect, surface-level usage replaces deep integration.
Bridging this gap requires a shift to Relational Leadership. Leaders must move from being “Task Managers” to “Coaches of Change,” normalising the learning curve and prioritising behavioural shifts over compliance metrics. Where fear exists, intelligence stalls. Where trust exists, intelligence compounds.
Expansion Spotlight: The Cape Town Blueprint
With the launch of Up Time’s Western Cape Hub, we have seen this dynamic play out across even the most digitally advanced environments. Hybrid fragmentation and growing Digital Debt continue to undermine adoption. The issue is not ambition – it is absorption.
Our Leadership and Change Blueprint begins with Diagnostic Excellence. Before adjusting a single system, we measure Change Literacy and Cultural Absorption to ensure the organisation is ready to integrate intelligence meaningfully. Michele de Kreek’s two decades of navigating the “People and Politics” of transformation ensure that strategy aligns with organisational reality.
The ROI of Empathy: Coaching as a Strategic Lever
Our Intelligence Power Hours reflect this shift. These are not technical tutorials; they are high-level strategic coaching engagements. We help leaders identify where intelligence adds value—and where it simply creates “Decision Latency.”
Coaching is the engine that transforms a digital cost centre into a strategic asset. It is the only way to effectively pay down Digital Debt. Empathy, in this context, is not softness; it is a lever for measurable ROI.
Strategic Insight: Success in the intelligence era is governed by a simple truth: Tech creates possibilities. People create results. Organisations that thrive don’t just implement intelligence; they embed it into their culture. This requires communicating why the shift matters to the individual, not just how the software works.
Conclusion: Bridging the Gap into Q2
As Q2 approaches, the organisations that succeed will not be those with the most advanced systems, but those with the most adaptable people. Sustainable growth lives at the intersection of technology and leader capability.
If your current transformation feels underutilised, it may not be a tech problem – it’s a leadership opportunity. Change is no longer an 18-month journey; it is a daily occurrence that requires leaders to be equipped with the internal tools to lead their teams through it.
Join our Strategic Webinar: “Leading Through Change”
- Host: Michele de Kreek
- Focus: A strategic deep-dive into the capability of change management, focusing on how your leadership style influences your team’s ability to adapt and thrive.
- The Incentive: Two attendees stand a chance to each win a FREE, private coaching session with Caroline to address their organisation’s unique challenges.







