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The Three-Exposure Model for Change Management

In the world of information systems implementation, one of the greatest challenges is creating genuine user readiness for the new system. Based on our experience supporting over 1,000 IT projects, we developed a unique model built around three critical touchpoints with end users — the Three-Exposure Model.

Why three exposures?

The model is based on the insight that user adaptation to a new system requires several “touches” at different stages of the project. Each exposure serves a distinct purpose in building readiness, trust, and engagement.

First exposure: Building understanding and motivation

The first exposure focuses on three main goals:

  • Understanding the business rationale behind the change
  • Creating initial motivation to engage in the process
  • Building a positive reputation for the project

At this stage, we present users with the big picture — the business drivers for the change and the expected benefits, both at the individual and organizational levels.

Second exposure: Encountering the new reality

The second exposure includes:

  • In-depth familiarity with the new processes
  • Identifying opportunities and gaps from the users’ perspective
  • Initial hands-on experience with the system

This is the stage where users begin to truly “touch” the change — understanding how it will affect their day-to-day work, and raising practical concerns and questions.

Third exposure: Preparing for go-live

The third exposure focuses on:

  • Preparing for potential scenarios and failure cases
  • Familiarity with the support and guidance framework
  • Aligning expectations ahead of go-live

The goal at this stage is to build user confidence — ensuring they know how to operate in different situations and feel fully supported during the transition period.

The key to success: mitigation, timing, and continuity

The success of the model depends on two core factors:

  1. Precise timing of each exposure in alignment with the project phases
  2. Maintaining continuity and coherence between exposures

It is important to note that between exposures, complementary activities take place, such as management workshops, change agent training, and internal communication initiatives.

Proven results in the field

Implementing the model across dozens of organizations has led to impressive results:

  • Faster return to full productivity
  • High system adoption rates within the first month
  • High user satisfaction with both the change and the implementation process

In conclusion

The Three-Exposure Model provides a structured framework for implementing complex change while addressing both the psychological and practical needs of users. It enables a gradual build-up of readiness and commitment and serves as a core tool in the toolkit of successful change management.

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