Uncertainty has become a defining feature of modern leadership, writes Brian Andrew, MD of RS South Africa.
From global supply chain disruption to economic volatility and rapid technological change, leaders are increasingly required to make decisions without perfect information.
Research from McKinsey shows that more than 83% of executives believe their organisations are not fully prepared for future disruption. This reality places resilience at the centre of effective leadership.
Resilience is often misunderstood as simple endurance or the ability to push through pressure. Over time I have come to see it differently. Resilient leadership is about clarity, discipline and the ability to adapt while remaining anchored to a long-term strategy.
Interestingly, many of the lessons that shaped my perspective did not come from the boardroom but from endurance sport.
Lessons from Endurance Sport
Endurance sports provide a powerful parallel to leadership in uncertain markets.
Preparation is essential but control is limited. You can train carefully and plan your strategy yet once the race begins conditions inevitably change. Weather shifts. Mechanical issues arise. Your body responds differently on different days.
Business operates in much the same way. Markets shift, competitors respond and external pressures emerge.
What separates strong competitors from the rest is not the absence of problems but how quickly they regain composure and move forward.
Earlier in my career I associated resilience with toughness. The belief was simple. Push harder and keep going. Over time my understanding evolved. True resilience is less about force and more about perspective, adaptability and disciplined execution.
Leaders who remain calm and focused when circumstances change create stability for the people around them.
Leading Through Uncertainty
Periods of uncertainty often tempt leaders into reactive decision-making. When pressure increases, it becomes easy to focus on short-term fixes rather than long-term direction. One of the most important disciplines in leadership is the ability to pause before reacting.
When the environment shifts rapidly, I often return to three guiding principles: clarity of purpose, ownership, and simplicity in execution. Clarity ensures leaders remain anchored to long-term strategy. Ownership guarantees accountability for decisions and outcomes. Simplicity reduces stress and ensures teams focus on the most critical priorities.
Clarity emerges when complexity is reduced and decisions are guided by purpose rather than panic.
Building Resilient Teams
Resilience is not only an individual capability. It must also exist across the organisation. Resilient teams are built on trust, clarity, and shared responsibility. Trust allows people to speak openly about challenges and mistakes. Clarity ensures the team understands its mission. Leaders must also model resilience. Teams watch closely at how leaders respond to pressure. Calm, transparent, accountable behaviour spreads throughout the organisation.
Discipline Creates Stability
Endurance sport also reinforces the value of discipline. Performance comes not from motivation alone, but from routines, preparation, and showing up consistently. Structured habits such as planning, reflection, and communication reduce uncertainty and allow teams to focus their energy effectively. Over time, disciplined leadership builds confidence and trust.
A Perspective for South African Leaders
South African business leaders operate in a uniquely dynamic environment. Economic pressures, infrastructure constraints, and global shifts require organisations to remain adaptable while maintaining long-term focus. Yet uncertainty also creates opportunity. Organisations that invest in strong leadership, healthy cultures, and disciplined execution are better positioned to navigate disruption.
For leaders, this means focusing on three priorities: build cultures grounded in trust and accountability, develop leaders who take ownership of challenges, and maintain a long-term perspective even when short-term conditions are difficult.
Leadership Is About How You Show Up
Resilience is not about having all the answers. It is about showing up consistently, taking responsibility and helping teams move forward when the path ahead is unclear.
Leadership, much like endurance sport, is rarely defined by perfect conditions. It is defined by preparation mindset and the ability to keep moving forward.
In uncertain markets the organisations that succeed will not necessarily be those that predict the future perfectly. They will be the ones that remain disciplined, adaptable and focused on long term value creation.