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The next disruption is coming — will you be ready?

August 28, 2025

Organisational Resilience: The New Bottom Line

In a world that’s increasingly uncertain, organisational resilience is no longer a “nice to have” — it’s a defining characteristic of the companies that will thrive.

Supply chain disruption. Leadership churn. Quiet quitting. Skill shortages. Burnout.  They’re not trends. They’re pressure points — and they’re forcing businesses to answer one critical question:  Can we keep delivering — when things don’t go to plan?

Resilience Isn’t About Being Bulletproof

Resilience doesn’t mean nothing goes wrong. It means when something does go wrong – a key person leaves, demand shifts, priorities pivot – you don’t stall, and you don’t lose value. You adapt, realign, and keep going.

And it’s not just operational resilience. The most overlooked, and arguably most fragile aspect of resilience today is people resilience.

It’s harder to measure and it’s harder to fix, but it’s what determines whether your strategy gets executed, your customers stay loyal, and your investors stay confident.

What We’re Seeing Across the Market

Whether working with high-growth SMEs or established PLCs, we’re seeing the same cracks appear again and again – and they all point to a shared risk: people resilience is dangerously underdeveloped.

There are three recurring patterns we see inside executive teams, often hidden until the pressure hits.

1. Leadership Succession Is Too Thin

The problem isn’t just a lack of talent – it’s a lack of readiness.

Many companies still rely on a handful of seasoned leaders who carry years of institutional knowledge, strategic context, and decision-making influence, but when those leaders leave or even pause, the impact is immediate. Project delays, confidence dips, operational bottlenecks appear and you end up with strategic drift.

According to the DDI Global Leadership Forecast, 69% of businesses admit they lack a strong bench of future leaders so this is hardly surprising, and from direct conversations with CEOs and MDs, the concern goes deeper: they’re not just struggling to build successors – they’re watching leadership behaviours deteriorate under pressure.

Every company we are working with is looking for productivity gains that will directly lead to bottom line performance, however delegation is faltering, decisions slow and people continue to get promoted into roles they’re not ready for, just to fill the gap.

That’s not succession — that’s survival!

2. Critical Roles Are Single Points of Failure

In too many businesses, knowledge is locked inside a person, not the process.

If your technical lead, senior sales manager, or key account owner leaves — what gets left behind?

And how quickly can someone step in and pick up the baton?

The honest answer: often, they can’t.

That’s not a talent issue — that’s a risk management failure.

According to CIPD’s Labour Market Outlook, 48% of employers have roles unfilled for over 8 weeks, and technical roles are among the hardest to replace.

The longer a role stays vacant, the higher the strain on those left behind – and the more performance, delivery, and morale suffer.

You don’t need 10 people for every post, but you do need to know what happens when one leaves.

3. Wellbeing Risks Are Quietly Eroding Performance

Productivity doesn’t always crash loudly. Sometimes, it fades in silence.

High stress, low energy, and poor psychological safety don’t always show up in your dashboards – but they show up in turnover, disengagement, and errors.

Many business leaders assume performance issues are tactical: skills, systems, or accountability, but often, the root is emotional exhaustion.

McKinsey reports that 1 in 3 employees say they’re burnt out.

Gallup found that 50% of workers don’t feel safe admitting mistakes.

Fellow CEO’s, this matters. When your people are stressed and unsupported, innovation halts, risk-taking disappears and trust breaks down.

You might still hit short-term targets, but your long-term resilience? It’s leaking out through attrition and silence.

Resilience Now Sits at the Heart of Value

“Sustainable growth doesn’t happen by chance. Investors, customers and employees now look for proof that your people strategy is as resilient as your balance sheet.”

Boards and investors aren’t just interested in short-term delivery — they want confidence in long-term capability.

  • Can this business retain its best people?
  • Does it have depth in leadership and skills?
  • Will it still perform if tested?

In many cases, the answer isn’t clear and that’s where strategic workforce resilience becomes a competitive advantage.

How to Stress-Test Your People Resilience

Most organisations only look at people risk in silos — attrition here, engagement there…

But true resilience is about interconnected strength across:

  • Leadership succession
  • Skills and capability mapping
  • Knowledge transfer
  • Agility and adaptability
  • Wellbeing and retention
  • Values alignment and culture

We’ve built a powerful tool to help you assess it and it’s designed for business leaders who want to see where their people strategy might be vulnerable. (If you are interested in learning more about our approach, please feel free to contact me.)

Resilience Requires Systems Thinking, Not Linear Reaction

For years, many businesses have relied on a cause-and-effect mindset.

A problem emerges — we respond.

A gap appears — we plug it.

A person leaves — we replace them.

This kind of linear thinking worked in more stable, predictable environments. But those days are over.

Today’s challenges don’t arrive one at a time. They’re interconnected, compounding, and often invisible until the damage is done.

We’re leading in a new reality, where market shifts, workforce attrition, regulatory change, and employee wellbeing are no longer isolated issues. They’re part of the same system.

Linear thinking says:

“If X happens, we’ll do Y.”

Resilient thinking asks:

“What are the underlying patterns, signals, and risks that could combine to destabilise us, and how do we design for strength before the shock?”

The Era of Cause & Effect Is Over

The organisations that will thrive in this climate aren’t the fastest reactors.

They’re the best preparers.

They build resilience by design — not in response to pressure, but as a strategic foundation.

  • They don’t wait to be short-staffed to think about succession.
  • They don’t wait for disengagement before investing in culture.
  • They don’t wait for burnout before embedding psychological safety.
  • They know the best protection against disruption isn’t a contingency plan.

It’s a resilient system, one that absorbs shock, adapts quickly, and retains capability under pressure.

What This Means for Leaders

If you’re still leading with a mindset that assumes problems arrive one at a time, you’re missing the bigger picture.

Resilient businesses:

  • Build cross-functional capability, not just functional depth
  • Make succession and knowledge transfer standard, not reactive
  • Create psychological safety so information, risk and solutions flow freely
  • Design culture and systems to flex with change, not resist it

And most importantly, they measure people risk as seriously as financial risk.

Because when leadership churn, skill shortages, or wellbeing failures strike, it’s not just HR’s problem. It’s a business problem. A continuity problem. A value problem.

Final Thought

The next challenge will come. It may be a market shift, a leadership exit or a drop in morale.

Resilient organisations don’t avoid pressure — they absorb it and keep moving. If you want to find out how resilient your business really is, now’s the time to take stock.

“Resilience isn’t built in the good times — it’s revealed in the tough ones. The businesses that win are the ones who invest in their people before they’re forced to.”

Businesses that will thrive in moments of turmoil are building resilience by design…

About the Author

Jonathan Evans is the Founder and CEO of Discovery, an award-winning consultancy specialising in workforce strategy, leadership development, and organisational resilience. With over 25 years of experience helping companies, from scaling SMEs to global PLCs, Jonathan advises business leaders on how to build people strategies that drive performance, reduce risk, and sustain growth. He is a passionate advocate for resilience-by-design and transforming people risk into strategic advantage.

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