I'm sorry, but "unless you change your cliché you will be in trouble" does not make any sense to me (U.S. native speaker).
Here are some examples of correct use of the word cliché:
"Every politician says they will eliminate 'waste, fraud, and abuse.' The phrase has become a cliché. Nobody ever says they will eliminate 'fraud, abuse, and waste' or 'waste, fraud, and petty corruption.'"
"'Think outside the box' has become such a cliché that people use it without even thinking about what it means."
"When I was in college in the sixties, I lived up to the cliché of the 'nerd.' I actually used a pocket protector."
Side note: the original literal meanings of the words "cliché" and "stereotype" is the same! They both refer to a printing process in which a solid printing plate is made by casting type metal into a paper-mache mold of a whole page of type.