
Off the Record: Green Talk, Gritty Truth Series Part #4:
โOur Staff Resist Change (and Honestly? We Donโt Blame Them)โ
โSave the Planet, Work Twice as Hardโ: The Break Room Reality
Itโs Tuesday at 2PM. You’re standing in your staff kitchen, eyeing a sustainability posterโฆ….now creatively โeditedโ with a Sharpie.
“More work, same pay.โ
โNext up: Solar-powered mops?โ
Sound familiar? If your green initiatives are getting side-eyed by your own team, you’re in good (and global) company.
“Fear or resistance often sets in, particularly when it comes to changing staff behavior and prioritizing sustainability amid day-to-day business pressures. Owners frequently deprioritized staff training or emissions monitoring, despite knowing these are essential to long-term, continuous success.” – Sarah Habsburg-Lothringen, Responsible Hospitality Expert.
This kind of resistance isnโt a red flag, but rather a human response to change. Nobody wants to change what’s always worked, and someone’s definitely going to complain about the new way of doing things.
What Theyโre Really Saying: โPlease Donโt Make My Job Harderโ
Staff resistance to sustainability isn’t because they are being anti-environment or difficult.
They are overwhelmed and on the brink of burnout. What’s to blame? The ghost of 7 other initiatives that fizzled out last year.
Your teamโs juggling:
- Grumpy guests.
- Demanding schedules.
- Tight check-out windows.
- Ever-shifting SOPs.
Now weโre asking them to sort trash like a recycling ninja and memorize the compost code system?
Yeah. Weโd grumble too.
From their viewpoint, sustainability initiatives often feel like additional work without additional compensation. Theyโre expected to learn something new, shift their rhythm, and not mess up the flowโall in real time. Thatโs a lot of pressure, especially if no oneโs given them a heads-up or enough guidance.
The Truth: Staff Resistance is a Feedback in Disguise

Those eye-rolls? That grumbling? It’s intel.
What your staff are actually asking:
- โWill this make my job harder?โ
- โWhat happens if I mess it up?โ
- โIs this just another trend weโll drop in 3 months?โ
According to a study of a small hotel, staff-related barriers including “negative attitudes, negligence, wasteful practices, frequent turnover and unreliability” are among the top internal obstacles preventing hotels from successfully implementing sustainable practices.
But here’s the thing, these aren’t character flaws, they’re symptoms of poor change management.
Treat resistance not as a wall, but as a signal. Itโs telling you what isnโt working in your roll-out.
The Three-Strategy Solution: From Resistance to Champions
The good news? You can transform sustainability skeptics into your biggest advocates. It just requires a different approach than most hotels use.
1. Embed Sustainability in the Work, Not as Extra Work
Donโt make them sit through another 60-minute meeting titled โSaving the Planet: Part 4.โ
For your staff this feels like extra homework.
Instead, weave green practices into the tasks theyโre already doing:
- Training room cleaning? Add: โHereโs how to save 10 mins AND water.โ
- Front desk onboarding? Add: โHereโs how to talk about our refill station without sounding like a robot.โ
This approach works because it doesn’t feel like additional burden. It feels like better ways to do the work they’re already doing.
Frame sustainability practices as efficiency improvements rather than environmental requirements.
“This cleaning product is better for the environment.”
vs.
“This new cleaning product works faster and requires less scrubbing.”
Both can be true, but leading with personal benefits creates buy-in.
Make it practical. Make it painless. Bonus points if it saves them time or effort.
2. Appoint โEco-Championsโ (But Make It Worth It)
Find the team members who light up at โDid you know this detergent is biodegradable?โ
They donโt need to be sustainability PhD holders. They just need to be:
- Well-liked by peers.
- Respectfully curious.
- Willing to model the behavior.
They won’t be imposing rules, they just need to be willing to try new approaches and share what works.
But don’t be stingy. Reward them with perks that actually matter: flexible shifts, bonus points, shout-outs. The goal is to make being a sustainability champion feel rewarding rather than a chore.
Peer modeling beats top-down nagging every time.

In order for this to work, you need to train your champions to focus on practical benefits rather than environmental theory. They should be able to explain how new procedures save time, reduce effort, or improve working conditions, not just how they help the planet.
3. Green Suggestion Box (That Doesnโt Go to the Landfill)
If staff feel the initiative is done to them, they resist.
If they feel it’s being built with them? Game-changer.
Set up a โgreen winsโ board or suggestion box.
Respond to every suggestion within a week, implement good ideas quickly and reward the best ones publicly. Think of cash, perks, and shout-outs in front of management. Be creative.
As a bonus youโll get insights youโd never hear in your office.
Example: โGuests keep leaving lights on in Room 308. Can we try a motion sensor?โ Yes. Yes, we can.
Pro Tip: Share success stories regularly. When someone’s suggestion saves money or improves operations, tell everyone about it. This encourages more suggestions and shows that you’re serious about listening to your team’s input.
Change Is Hard, But Possible. Youโre Not Failing. Youโre Learning.
The most successful sustainable hotels don’t have staff who naturally love change. They have management teams who understand how to make change feel positive rather than punitive.
Hospitality teams are tired. They’ve heard it all and can see through “just for show” initiatives.
But theyโre also eager to adopt sustainability programs that make their jobs better.
Theyโll show up for changeโwhen itโs:
- Useful.
- Shared with respect.
- Followed through with action.
You’re aiming for momentum, not perfection.
Your Next Step: One Champion, One Change
Pick one staff member this week who โgets it.โ Don’t make it a big formal program, just ask for their input on making something work better.
HEre is an example: โHey Maria, the towel reuse systemโs not landing. Any ideas to make it smoother for guests and the team?โ
Implement what she says. Credit her publicly.
This creates a positive cycle where other staff members see that their feedback is valued and that sustainability initiatives can actually make their jobs better.
You didnโt just reduce laundry loads.
You gained an engaged human who just might bring others on board.
Remember, every successful sustainable hotel started with staff who were skeptical about change. The difference between success and failure isn’t the absence of resistance, it’s how you handle that resistance and transform it into engagement.
Happy Implementing!
Does your staff resist change? How do you tackle it? Share your tips, you never know who it might help.
P.S. Don’t be shy to share your thoughts or feedback . Good or bad, don’t hold back ๐.

Hey๐๐๐, Iโm Darina!
Professional word nerd by day, globe-trotter by heart. With 20+ years of getting lost (sometimes on purpose). Iโve mastered the art of finding unpolished wonders โ both in cities and conversations. When Iโm not helping brands craft words that actually work, youโll find me chasing sunsets, tasting the worldโs weirdest snacks, or convincing locals Iโm totally one of them.
Hop on board โ letโs explore the world and its stories, one adventure (and awkward mispronunciation) at a time.
Behind The Scenes: The Making of This Post (And Why You Should Share It)
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