In many organizations, something happens that at first seems positive.
After months – and sometimes years – of strategic discussions, diagnoses, presentations, and hard decisions, something finally starts to work. A team delivers faster. An initiative shows visible results. A new way of working appears to unlock long-standing problems.
People talk about early wins. Progress is celebrated. There is a sense of relief.
But behind that celebration lies a silent assumption: that if the first results show up, the transformation must be heading in the right direction.
In many cases, that assumption is wrong.
Early wins are often interpreted as a signal of progress. Far to often, they are simply a signal that the system does not yet exist.
That is why, a few months later, the impact fades. Results stall. The initial energy disappears. And what once looked like the beginning of real change turns out to be just another episode in a long history of transformation attempts.
No because the idea was bad. Not because people didn’t put in the effort. And, in most cases, not because commitment was lacking.
The problem usually lies elsewhere.
When visible progress is mistaken for real impact
Early successes attract attention for a simple reason: they are visible.
Something changes in the way work is done. A process speeds up. A team adopts new practices. An obvious bottleneck is removed.
That is valuable. It marks an important starting point.
But it is not the same as creating sustainable impact.
In many organizations, early wins are mainly associated with:
- Activities rather tan results
- Local improvements rather than systemic ones
- Extraordinary efforts rather than new capabilities
What gets celebrated is what can be seen – not necessarily what actually moves the business needle.
There is where a common confusion emerges:
- Assuming that if something worked once, it will keep working
- Believing that it worked in one team, it will scale smoothly across the organization
That assumption rarely holds.
An early win is an event. Sustainable impact is a capability.
Confusing the two is one of the most expensive mistakes in any transformation effort.
The recurring pattern: lots of movement, very Little system
When you look more closely, the pattern is usually consistent.
Early successes tend to depend on:
- Highly committed key individuals
- Close and hands-on leadership
- Fast, often exceptional, decisions
- Intense but temporary docus
None if this is negative. In fact, is often essential to unlock momentum and overcome resistance.
The problem arises when this way of operating never turns into a system.
When impact depends on:
- Who is involved
- How much extra energy is invested
- How much attention the initiative receives
… the result is fragile by definition. And sooner or later, it disappears.
As soon as the context changes – new priorities, people rotating out, pressure for short-term results – progress slows down, reverses, or simply fades away.
The silent gap between decisions and execution
In almost every transformation, strategic decisions are well-intentioned:
- Priorities are defined
- Budgets are allocated
- Objectives are communicated
But between those decisions and everyday work, there is often and invisible gap.
That gap shows up when:
- Teams don’t know how to translate strategic priorities into daily decisions
- Expected results are not clearly defined
- Success is measured through output rather than outcome
- There are no clear mechanisms for leading and adjustment
Early wins often happen despite this gap, not because it has been closed.
And that is the trap.
When no system exists, strategic decisions do not produce observable consequences in daily work. And when there are no consequences, there is no real learning – only activity.
Working hard is not the same as creating value
A common symptom is hearing statements like:
- “Teams are working harder than ever.”
- “There’s never been so much movement.”
- “There’s a lot of energy in the organization.”
All of that can be true – and still not translate into sustainable impact.
Because value does not emerge from isolated effort, but from coherence:
- Coherence between what is decided and what is done
- Coherence between what is measured and what actually matters
- Coherence between learning and course correction
Without that coherence, the system produces activity and outputs, not outcomes.
Why scaling early wins often makes things worse
When an early win becomes visible, the natural reaction is to scale it:
- Replicate practices
- Copy structures
- Roll the model out to other teams
But scaling without understanding why it worked usually amplifies the underlying problems.
What worked with:
- A very present leader
- A limited context
- A high level of attention
starts to fail once it becomes standard.
Not because the practice is wrong – but because it was never designed to last.
In many organizations, scaling an early win doesn’t amplify impact.
It amplifies the fragility that made the win possible in the first place.
The real challenge is not the “what”, but the “how”
When impact stalls, many organizations look for the cause in:
- The practice that was chosen
- The framework that was adopted
- The tool that was implemented
But the problem is rarely there.
The real challenge is usually the absence of a system that can:
- Translate strategic decisions into clear operational criteria
- Make visible whether work is producing the expected outcomes
- Enable learning before impact fades
- Adjust without relying on individual heroes
Without such a system, early wins are just initial signals – not solid foundations.
From isolated successes to sustainable impact
Sustaining impact requires a shift in focus.
Not just asking:
- What worked?
But also:
- Why did it work?
- Which decisions enabled it?
- What conditions made it possible?
- What would need to exist for it not to depend in specific individuals?
When these questions are not asked, success remains anecdotal.
When they are asked systematically, success begins to turn into organizational capability.
The rol of a system: making what is exceptional today repeatable tomorrow
Early wins are not the problem. They are an opportunity.
But only if they are used to design a system that:
- Connects decisions to results
- Makes real impact visible
- Embeds structured learning
- Sustains value over time
Without such a system, early successes will continue to be what they have always been:
moments of hope… followed by frustration.
Looking beyond the next early win
Perhaps the real question is not whether the next early win will arrive.
It is whether, when it does, the organization will be prepared not to lose it again.
Because early successes do not mean the work is finished.
The mean – at best – that the real work is just beginning.
If this pattern feels familiar, it may be worth exploring which mechanisms are missing today for impact to stop being episodic and start becoming sustainable.
