From Alien to Ally: Business Transformation Lessons from Resident Alien

Picture this: You’ve just landed in a new town where no one knows you, few trust you, and most are bracing for the storm you’re meant to guide them through. Sounds like science fiction? Welcome to life as a Transformation Manager.

Managing a business transition—especially one involving rightsizing, vision shifts, and operating model overhauls—mirrors the plot of Resident Alien, the hit Syfy show where an extraterrestrial disguised as Dr. Harry Vanderspeigle ends up living among humans he was initially sent to destroy.

In my current role as transition lead preparing a company for Day 1 operations, I’ve often felt like Harry: an outsider dropped into a community during a time of fear, suspicion, and immense change. Here’s how lessons from Harry’s journey can guide anyone tasked with leading through chaos.


1. You’re Not the Hero… Yet

“Humans are irrational, emotional, and messy. And now I’m becoming one of them.” – Harry

In the early days of transition planning, people saw me not as a leader but as the face of disruption—the person who would oversee job losses, restructure teams, and triple workloads. Their anxiety wasn’t personal; it was systemic. Like Harry arriving in Patience, Colorado, I realized I needed to earn their trust, not demand it.

The lesson: As a transformation leader, you’re not a savior—at least not at first. Show empathy, listen actively, and acknowledge the fear. Don’t dismiss concerns with forced optimism. Validate their reality before asking them to embrace a new one.


2. See Through Their Eyes

One of Resident Alien’s strengths is how it frames humanity through an alien lens—turning our routines into bizarre rituals and our logic into contradictions. When I listened to the frontline team’s concerns about absorbing three roles, losing peers, and still performing at full speed, I stopped seeing them as “resistors” and started seeing them as survivors.

I began walking the floor more frequently, asking better questions, and documenting not just processes but emotional patterns—what made people feel hopeful versus helpless.

The lesson: Change isn’t just operational—it’s psychological. Try seeing the transformation from their perspective. A Gantt chart won’t tell you who’s crying in their car before work or lying awake at night wondering if they’re next.


3. Experiment with Humanity

Harry doesn’t know how to smile, greet neighbors, or interpret sarcasm. He learns by experimenting—awkwardly, but authentically. As a manager, I took inspiration from this approach. I didn’t have all the answers, but I could try new forms of engagement: “transition clinics,” anonymous Q&As, empathy mapping sessions, and even appropriate humor to reduce tension.

When I got it wrong, I admitted it openly.

The lesson: Don’t wait for the “perfect communication strategy.” Try something, test the tone, and own the missteps. Let your team see you learning alongside them. Vulnerability builds trust faster than perfection.


4. The Ones Who Stay Carry a New Kind of Weight

Perhaps the most difficult parallel: those left behind.

In Resident Alien, Harry begins to care about the humans he was sent to eliminate. He sees their pain, their loss, and their capacity to adapt. The people who remain after restructuring face a similar reality. They carry the loss of colleagues, the weight of extra responsibility, and the complex emotions of being “lucky” to stay.

I made it a point to create not just transition plans but recognition rituals. We paused to thank, to let teams grieve and regroup, and to explain why they were chosen to stay—and what leadership realistically expected from them moving forward.

The lesson: Survival isn’t reward enough. Acknowledge the emotional and operational cost of staying. Build in space for recovery before expecting peak performance. Honor the journey, not just the destination.


5. Create a New Story Worth Believing In

By Season 2, Harry isn’t just mimicking humans—he’s forming real bonds and protecting people. In transformation work, our job is similar: evolve from being a messenger of change to a builder of the new story.

I shifted language from “headcount reduction” to “strategic reshaping,” from “loss of jobs” to “building resilience.” Not to mask the truth, but to help people reframe it constructively.

We didn’t just launch a new org chart. We co-created a Day 1 narrative with our people: What do we believe in now? What do we stand for? Why does it matter?

The lesson: In times of upheaval, people cling to stories. Tell one worth believing in—and involve them in writing the next chapter. Make them authors of their own transformation, not just subjects of it.


Final Reflection: From Alien to Ally

Harry came to Earth with a mission to destroy it. But through relationship, humility, and reflection, he changed. So did his purpose.

As transformation leaders, we arrive with a mandate. But how we fulfill it—how human we remain while executing it—defines our legacy and determines our success.

To lead through change, we must first become one of them.

“Sometimes, the more you try to be human, the more you discover what truly matters.” – A Transformation Lead (or maybe just Harry)


What’s your experience with leading through major organizational change? Have you found yourself feeling like an outsider trying to guide others through transformation?

Navigating the Energy Transition: A Career Journey from Oil & Gas to What’s Next

How one professional is adapting to the changing energy landscape and what it means for others in the industry


The energy industry is undergoing its most significant transformation in decades. For those of us who’ve built careers in oil and gas, this shift presents both challenges and unprecedented opportunities. After spending years in traditional energy, I’m sharing my perspective on navigating this transition and what I’ve learned along the way.

The Foundation: What Traditional Energy Taught Me

My journey in oil and gas provided far more than financial stability. It was a masterclass in resilience, systems thinking, and operating under pressure. Working alongside brilliant engineers, operators, and analysts taught me how complex global infrastructure really functions. There’s an undeniable pride in contributing to the systems that power our world.

The industry’s demanding nature, whether coordinating logistics across time zones or managing operations on drilling platforms, builds a unique skill set that’s more transferable than many realize. This foundation has proven invaluable as I’ve begun exploring the broader energy landscape.

The Reality Check: A World in Transition

By 2025, the signs of change are undeniable. Market volatility has become the norm rather than the exception. Regulatory pressure is intensifying. Investment patterns are shifting dramatically toward clean energy solutions. What once felt like distant possibilities now feel like immediate realities.

This isn’t about doom and gloom, it’s about recognizing that the energy sector is evolving, and professionals who adapt will thrive. The question isn’t whether change is coming; it’s how we position ourselves within it.

The Path Forward: Building Bridge Skills

Rather than viewing this as an either-or scenario, I’ve found success in building bridges between traditional energy expertise and emerging technologies. Here’s what that looks like in practice:

Expanding Technical Literacy
I’ve made it a priority to understand renewable energy systems: solar, wind, hydrogen, and battery storage. Not to become an expert overnight, but to build working knowledge that reveals how existing skills translate. Project management experience from offshore platforms? Directly applicable to offshore wind development. Pipeline logistics expertise? Highly relevant for hydrogen transport infrastructure.

Mastering the New Language
Terms like carbon intensity, carbon capture utilization and storage (CCUS), grid flexibility, and green hydrogen have moved from buzzwords to essential vocabulary. Understanding the mechanics behind these concepts has been crucial for meaningful conversations about the industry’s future.

Finding the Middle Ground
The transition isn’t binary. There’s enormous opportunity in transitional technologies—cleaner extraction methods, digital optimization, emissions reduction systems. These areas desperately need professionals who understand both the technical challenges and operational realities of energy infrastructure.

Following Capital and Talent Flows
I track where investment dollars and skilled professionals are moving. Government funding, private equity, and corporate R&D budgets tell a story about where the industry is heading. Often, the most innovative work happens at smaller, more agile companies rather than traditional energy giants.

Cultivating Strategic Relationships
Some of my most valuable insights have come from conversations with people working in clean energy, policy development, and research. There’s a growing community of energy professionals navigating this transition, and these connections prove invaluable for understanding emerging opportunities.

The Bigger Picture: Energy Evolution, Not Revolution

Rather than framing this as traditional energy versus renewables, I see it as the natural evolution of the energy sector. The future belongs to professionals who can navigate both established systems and emerging innovations.

This perspective shift has been liberating. Instead of feeling threatened by change, I’m energized by the complexity and possibility it presents. The transition requires exactly the kind of systems thinking, problem-solving, and operational excellence that traditional energy professionals have spent years developing.

What This Means for Your Career

If you’re working in oil and gas today, you’re not facing obsolescence; you’re facing transformation. The skills you’ve developed are more relevant than ever; they just need to be applied in new contexts.

The energy sector still needs experienced professionals who understand infrastructure, operations, and the realities of delivering energy at scale. The difference is that “energy” now encompasses a much broader spectrum of technologies and approaches.

The Invitation to Act

This transition isn’t happening to us, it’s happening with us. We have the choice to actively shape our roles in the energy future rather than simply react to change.

For those considering their next move, start small. Attend a renewable energy conference. Take an online course in clean technology. Have conversations with people working in areas that interest you. The path forward becomes clearer with each step.

The energy transition is one of the defining challenges and opportunities of our time. For those of us with deep industry experience, it’s not just a career shift, it’s a chance to apply our expertise to building the energy systems of tomorrow.

What’s your experience with the energy transition? Are you seeing similar opportunities in your area of expertise?

When Good Isn’t Enough: The Quiet Anxiety of Leaving a Comfortable Job

Picture this: You’re crushing it at work. Your boss loves you, your projects are successful, and you’re genuinely good at what you do. Maybe you even landed your “dream job” a few years back.

So why do you feel so… restless?

If you’ve ever found yourself staring at your computer screen, wondering “Is this really it?” — you’re not alone. There’s something uniquely unsettling about questioning your path when everything looks perfect on paper.

The Questions That Keep You Up at Night

You know the ones I’m talking about:

Is this all there is?
Am I wasting my potential?
What if I leave all this security behind and completely regret it?

For most people, these might be fleeting thoughts. But if you’re someone who’s dealt with anxiety or depression before, these questions can feel a lot heavier. They’re not just about career ambition — they’re tangled up with your sense of self, your mental health, and the very real fear of trading stability for… what, exactly?

The Problem with “You Should Be Grateful”

Here’s what makes this whole situation so tricky: leaving a job when you’re miserable makes total sense. But leaving when you’re succeeding? That’s much harder to explain.

The voice in your head (and sometimes the voices around you) start chiming in:

“You’re being ungrateful.”
“Do you know how many people would kill for your job?”
“Why rock the boat when you’ve got it so good?”

But here’s the thing — doing well and feeling fulfilled aren’t the same thing. You can be excellent at something that’s slowly draining your soul. You can outgrow a role that once fit you perfectly.

When Job Searching Feels Like Emotional Warfare

Let’s be real about what happens next. You start looking around, and the job market hits you like a cold shower. Radio silence after applications. Interviews that go nowhere. Rejection emails that feel personal.

If you’ve been through depression or burnout before, this process can feel brutal. Every “no” becomes evidence that you’re making a terrible mistake. Every week that passes makes you question whether you’re delusional for wanting something different.

And yet — staying somewhere that feels wrong, even if it looks right to everyone else, can be just as damaging to your mental health.

A Gentler Way Forward

If you’re in this messy middle space, here’s what I wish someone had told me:

Your feelings are valid. You don’t need a dramatic crisis to justify wanting change. Feeling unfulfilled in a “good” job is reason enough to explore other options.

Prepare for the emotional rollercoaster. Career transitions are tough on your mental health, even good ones. Build your support system now — whether that’s therapy, trusted friends, or both. And please, don’t ignore the financial safety net either.

You don’t have to quit to explore. Sometimes you just need to remember who you are outside of your current role. Take that course you’ve been eyeing. Start a side project. Network in a field that interests you. You might discover something that changes everything — or realize you’re already in the right place.

You are not your job title. This one’s hard to internalize, but it’s crucial. You’re allowed to evolve, to outgrow old dreams, to want different things. Your worth isn’t tied to your LinkedIn profile.

If you do leave, leave with intention. Don’t run away from discomfort — move toward something that aligns with who you’re becoming.

The Bottom Line

Leaving a stable job when you’re doing well isn’t reckless or ungrateful. It’s actually pretty brave. It means you’re choosing growth over comfort, alignment over security. That takes guts.

There are no guarantees, of course. But there’s something powerful about honoring that quiet voice inside you — the one that knows you’re meant for something different, even when you can’t quite see what that is yet.

If you’re standing at this crossroads right now, just know: the questions you’re asking are important ones. It’s okay to sit with the uncertainty for a while. It’s okay to prioritize your well-being over other people’s expectations.

Most importantly, it’s okay to choose yourself — even when it’s scary.