Uncertainty doesn’t test leadership strategies first.
It tests the leader.
Volatility has become the permanent backdrop of leadership—shifting markets, changing priorities, and incomplete answers.
During a coaching session with a senior executive, I noticed he wasn’t his usual self. He looked distracted, unsettled. After a long pause, he shared what many leaders are quietly carrying today: massive layoffs, his manager and skip-level manager gone, and constant pressure to innovate, cut costs, and “hold the line”—without openly discussing what’s really happening.
I chose silence before solutions.
That moment reinforced a truth I’ve seen repeatedly over three decades in leadership and coaching: when uncertainty rises, leaders themselves become the signal. Teams read tone, pace, and presence long before they listen to strategy and absorb the plan.
I shared two paths I’ve witnessed in downturns:
- One path masks fear—pushing messages from the top, tighter control, urging innovation.
- The other slows down—asking “How are you?” before “What’s next?”
The learning has been consistent.
Presence isn’t about stopping the storm.It’s about standing with people in it.
Even as budget pressure threatened the end of my coaching engagement, I had two options…
– To end the contract prorated,
– To continue pro-bono.
I continued for a few months pro bono—not to fix everything, but to reduce isolation and remind someone they weren’t alone.
In uncertain times, leadership isn’t about perfection.
It’s about presence—because empathy builds trust, and panic never does.
♻ Repost to help leaders Cultivate Presence, Not Panic while leading in Uncertainty
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