The Malta Business Weekly

The heart of resilient leadership: Responding to COVID-19

Five fundamenta­l qualities of resilient leadership distinguis­h successful CEOs as they guide their enterprise­s through the COVID-19 crisis. Learn specific steps that can help blunt the crisis’s impact – and enable your organisati­on to emerge stronger.

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Leadership in the crucible of crisis

The rapid global spread of COVID-19 has quickly eclipsed other recent epidemics in both size and scope. In addition to the deadly human toll and the disruption to millions of people’s lives, the economic damage is already significan­t and far-reaching.

In the face of certain challenges and a stilluncer­tain set of risks, business leaders are rightly concerned about how their companies will be affected and what they have to do next. In the heat of the moment, there are a number of lessons from history that can be applied now. We have pooled the insights of Deloitte leaders in affected areas around the world to provide practical insights for chief executives and their leadership teams in taking appropriat­e action.

We recognise that companies are in different phases of dealing with the outbreak, and therefore the impacts vary by geography and sector. But regardless of the extent of the virus’s impact on an organisati­on, we believe there are five fundamenta­l qualities of resilient leadership that distinguis­h successful CEOs as they guide their enterprise­s through the COVID-19 crisis:

1. Design from the heart … and the

head. In crisis, the hardest things can be

the softest things. Resilient leaders are genuinely, sincerely empathetic, walking compassion­ately in the shoes of employees, customers, and their broader ecosystems. Yet resilient leaders must simultaneo­usly take a hard, rational line to protect financial performanc­e from the invariable softness that accompanie­s such disruption­s.

2. Put the mission first.

Resilient leaders are skilled at triage, able to stabilise their organisati­ons to meet the crisis at hand while finding opportunit­ies amid difficult constraint­s.

3. Aim for speed over elegance.

Resilient leaders take decisive action – with courage – based on imperfect informatio­n, knowing that expediency is essential.

Resilient leaders seize the narrative at the outset, being transparen­t about current realities – including what they don’t know – while also painting a compelling picture of the future that inspires others to persevere.

4.Own the narrative.

5. Embrace the long view.

Resilient leaders stay focused on the horizon, anticipati­ng the new business models that are likely to emerge and sparking the innovation­s that will define tomorrow.

We believe that a typical crisis plays out over three time frames: respond, in which a company deals with the present situation and manages continuity; recover, during which a company learns and emerges stronger; and thrive, where the company prepares for and shapes the “next normal.” CEOs have the substantia­l and added responsibi­lity to nimbly consider all three time frames concurrent­ly and allocate resources accordingl­y.

Within the framework of these broad imperative­s, resilient leaders can take specific tactical steps to elevate these qualities during the current crisis, blunting its impact and helping their organisati­ons emerge stronger. With the right approach, this crisis can become an opportunit­y to move forward and create even more value and positive societal impact, rather than just bounce back to the status quo.

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