March 7, 2025

Lewin's Change Management Model

by Melanie Bell
reviewed by Cat MacLeod
YouraPechkin / © iStockphoto
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Change is a common thread that runs through all businesses regardless of size, industry and age. The world changes fast and organizations must change quickly, too. Organizations that handle change well thrive, whilst those that do not may struggle to survive.

The concept of "change management" is a familiar one in most businesses today. But how businesses manage change (and how successful they are at it) varies enormously depending on the nature of the business, the change and the people involved. And a key part of this depends on how well people within it understand the change process.

One of the cornerstone models for understanding organizational change was developed by Kurt Lewin back in the 1940s, and still holds true today. His model is known as Unfreeze – Change – Refreeze, which refers to the three-stage process of change that he describes. Lewin, a physicist as well as a social scientist, explained organizational change using the analogy of changing the shape of a block of ice. [1]

Understanding Lewin's Change Management Model

If you have a large cube of ice but realize that what you want is a cone of ice, what do you do? First you must melt the ice to make it amenable to change (unfreeze). Then you must mold the iced water into the shape you want (change). Finally, you must solidify the new shape (refreeze).

Lewin's Change Management Model - Understanding the Three Stages of Change

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