Why Quick Wins Matter: Driving Change in Higher Education

agile change management faculty innovation higher education leadership Oct 17, 2025

If you’ve ever tried to introduce change in higher education, you know the frustration: progress feels slow, resistance is everywhere, and momentum fades before results appear.

Dr. Michelle Loyet faced this challenge head-on at Webster University. When her team introduced Agile sprints to improve student success, they knew that demonstrating results quickly would be the difference between failure and momentum.

In higher education, “quick wins” aren’t shortcuts. They are proof of concept. A single successful sprint not only validated the process—it inspired trust, encouraged skeptics, and sparked a culture shift. Within weeks, the team expanded from a few small projects to running multiple sprints simultaneously.

Here’s what leaders can take away from Michelle’s experience:

  • Quick wins build credibility. When others see tangible results, they’re more likely to join in.
  • Visible accountability matters. Agile sprints required team members to share daily updates on progress and barriers, reducing the chance for work to stall.
  • Naysayers can fuel innovation. Including skeptics early in the process gave them a chance to test the system—and often turned them into unexpected champions.
  • Adaptation beats perfection. Michelle’s team didn’t follow Agile “by the book.” Instead, they stitched together the methods that worked for their context and culture.

The lesson is clear: change doesn’t happen through theory alone. It happens when teams can see, touch, and celebrate results. For leaders in higher education—or any sector—quick wins are the spark that keeps innovation alive.

Listen to the full conversation with Dr. Michelle Loyet on the Engaged by Design Podcast, where she shares how anthropology, Agile practices, and cultural insight helped transform leadership at Webster University.

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