- PODCAST
Lead With That: From Crisis Reaction to Collective Adaptability
In this episode of Lead With That, Ren and Allison discuss how organizations can shift from crisis reaction to collective sustainable adaptability in today’s turbulent climate. The biggest challenge many leaders face is leading organizations through complex crisis and chaotic disruption. Whether faced with adapting to ever-changing circumstances, or the fallout from economic instability, leaders are juggling challenges that reactive behaviors and process pivots are unable to simply resolve. To ensure long-term success, organizations must rethink adaptability itself and adjust their leadership to address the needs of the future.
Read how organizations can shift their organization’s culture, individual capacities, and collective capabilities to thrive with leadership in disruption.
Listen to the Podcast
In this episode, Ren and Allison explore how organizations can shift from crisis reaction to collective sustainable adaptability. While many leaders find themselves in a cycle of tackling crisis after crisis, organizations are forced into reactive mode, making it harder to enact change and end the cycle. Ren and Allison discuss the 3 key shifts today’s organizations must make to find long-term success amidst disruption, and lead with that.
Interview Transcript
Intro:
And welcome back to CCL’s podcast, Lead With That, where we talk current events and pop culture to look at where leadership’s happening and what’s happening with leadership.
What if the biggest disruptions of the year weren’t interruptions, but instructions? What if every crisis, every shift, every trend we scrambled to respond to was actually telling us something? Now, 2025 was loud. AI moved faster than our policies. Markets shook without warning. Workforces hit walls of burnout and change fatigue. We reacted, we pivoted, we got through it, but the noise never stopped. And maybe that’s the point because inside the noise, sometimes there is a signal, a pattern, a truth about how we’re leading or not leading through complexity.
As we head into 2026, leaders are being pushed to rethink adaptability itself. CCL calls for a shift from crisis reaction to collective sustainable adaptability where learning is continuous, leadership is interdependent, and complexity is something we meet with broadened perspective rather than narrowed focus. From vertical development to boundary spanning, the big idea is clear: disruption isn’t just something to respond to, it’s something we can use to expand capacity, deepen alignment, and strengthen our shared ability to navigate the unknown.
Today, as we step toward 2026, we’re asking a different question. What if disruption isn’t something to survive, but something to learn from? And what if it’s the raw material for reinvention?
Ren:
Again, welcome back everyone. I’m Ren Washington, and as usual, I’m joined with Allison Barr. Allison, what was the biggest disruption for you in 2025 or the biggest disruption you anticipate coming up in ’26?
Allison:
How will I ever choose? There’s just so many, so many possibilities.
Ren:
So many.
Allison:
Well, clarifying, do you mean personal, career? Do you mean all of the above, anything at all?
Ren:
Anything that you’re … Like word association, the biggest disruption that came up for you when you heard that. So you choose.
Allison:
I think probably some unexpected family health obstacles. And also, we had, I don’t know if you’ll remember this, Ren, but we had a hailstorm over the summer that produced golf ball-sized hail, which is sort of common in Colorado now, and that created a whole bunch of other situations with the house, with the car, with all of the things. So probably those 2 things.
And from a work perspective, as you were speaking and doing the intro, I was thinking to myself, “Gosh, I think I’m just so used to disruption at work that it doesn’t faze me as much anymore in terms of it coming to a surprise,” coming as a surprise, that is.
Ren:
Were you able to leverage any of that kind of skill or thick skin or muscle in your professional disruption management into the personal disruption management?
Allison:
I’d like to think so. Although, you ask my family, they might say something different. What about you? What have been some of the biggest disruptions in your world or foreseeable?
Ren:
There have been some things happening in the world and government in 2025, and I would say the biggest disruption for me, probably personally and professionally, is navigating an entirely new lexicon, new language, new verbiage, new ways to approach conversations that I think persist. And so it was really interesting to navigate through a lens of … It drew me back to our canceled conversation that we had so many episodes ago where I was like, “Oh, wow, certain words are totally off-limits right now.” And it’s just an interesting exploration of, I think, that kind of continued balance.
And so I’d say a disruption that I’m really interested in exploring in ’26 is something … The world looks so fractured and I just wonder, is it as fractured as it seems? And I’m really wondering some of the disruptions, are they actually, like we claim at CCL, a chance to look at the world differently? And so I think I’m excited maybe less about the disruptions on the horizon, though we’ll talk about them, but more about an opportunity to test some of what I think CCL or what I’m interested in doing is withstanding disruption or letting disruption catalyze change.
So I don’t know, is that a sufficiently murky and ambiguous enough answer?
Allison:
Oh, yeah, it’s great. It’s great. And I want to know, perhaps it’s another podcast, but what words and language are off-limits? Can you even answer that question if they are off-limits?
Ren:
No.
Allison:
Okay. Can’t even go there.
Ren:
We might not even be able to let this episode post, our last one of the year, if I talk about that.
Allison:
Okay, fair.
Ren:
But we can, yeah. I think it’s just like the opportunities that, when the prevailing winds shift, how can we adjust our sails, as the old resilience phrase goes? And so how can we continue to do work that matters and work that honors where we are inside of environments that maybe don’t invite that?
Allison:
Yeah, that’s so interesting. And I’m interested in 2026 to explore the tension between being, quote, unquote, “resilient” and adaptive, and also investigating what are the things that we shouldn’t necessarily adapt to, that we should actually, I suppose that’s still change in itself, but that won’t necessarily be helpful or healthy to become adapted to, if that makes sense. There’s certain things, I think, from a very big picture, let me be vague and ambiguous too, that we know human beings are very resilient and adaptable. We know that. And perhaps there are certain things that maybe we should push back against. I don’t know.
Ren:
Yeah, I hear you. It reminds me of a T-shirt I saw the other day. It was like, “Get uncomfortable with discomfort.” And it’s funny because I think in classrooms, I tell leaders all the time, “Your job is to get comfortable with discomfort,” which is the idea of get used to stretching yourself. Discomfort is a sign of change. But I think the T-shirt in the associated area that I was in, in this art installation, was speaking larger to the idea of maybe your discomfort isn’t something you just put up with or accept, but maybe it’s a sign that you should shift things.
And so I think I’m hearing you. It’s like the caution of being perpetually adaptive or resilient is that sometimes we can adapt to circumstances or environments that maybe we shouldn’t, that we perpetuate, that we shouldn’t, that we should shift or change. And so I think I’m hearing you there. It’s like, let’s not help the … The biological resilience that lets us be the predominant creature on earth can also maybe get us stuck in the rut.
Allison:
Yes.
Ren:
And I think … Yeah, okay.
Allison:
Yes, yeah. Yeah, and I think too I spoke, when you asked me that question, I spoke from a very personal perspective and it’s all relative to … the things that impact a human being on a personal scale often impact at the organization scale as well, especially if you are a leader. But I think maybe, at least for the sake of this podcast recording, from an organizational perspective, again, we’ve always been asked to be adaptable. That’s always been in leadership development language, and I think now most organizations are in a state of perpetual disruption. So some might say crisis, depends on who you ask. And you might say, “Well, yes, there’s always been change at work. That’s true.” However, I think in a healthy, functioning workplace, change is expected, but it’s paced and managed very thoughtfully rather than what a lot of people feel is constant and chaotic.
Ren:
And something too, probably in that constant chaos, is the reactivity that causes that. And I think sometimes disruption, you can think golf ball-sized hail or family emergencies or rifts or market shifts, all these things happen and then we go, “Oh, no, environment shifted.”
And that’s why I think it’s going to be interesting for us to talk about today CCL’s point of view or one of its newest papers, this idea of reinventing disruption or turning disruption into a powerful force for change. I think it really boils down to these 3 larger ideas that how do you withstand disruption or create an environment where disruption can help you change or be a powerful force for change? It’s like, what does our organizational culture look like? What is the individual capacity inside of that culture, like your ability to do certain things, and then what does collective agility look like inside of that?
And so I think probably today we’ll talk about those 3 things and some ideas that likely undergird it, and even looking at some disruptions that we’re experiencing in our culture now, some disruptions that are heading our way, but before we get any further than that, those 3 big ideas: org culture, individual capacity, collective agility.
And so I’m wondering, when you think about an organizational culture, any time you work with clients or you’ve seen in the environment around you, like, “Wow, disruption faced them and because of their culture, they were able to face it,” or maybe, “disruption came and because of their culture, they didn’t,” and what’s your reflection on the role of org culture inside of disruption or especially turning disruption into a powerful force for change?
Allison:
Well, I think it involves taking a step back and looking at historical context. And if we were to have had this conversation in 2019, I think I might have had a different answer, and we could probably reference certain companies that have gone through all kinds of, quote, unquote, “disruption” and were able to navigate it because of a lot of different things. But the one thing that keeps coming up for me is perhaps they were able to look back into history, whether it was with their own organization or a different one and say, “Okay, this Company X had a similar obstacle and here’s what they did, and it didn’t work,” or, “Here’s what it did, and it did work,” and draw from that.
And now, leaders are being asked to respond in much different ways because now we have challenges that we’re not necessarily able to look at history or prior obstacles to find the solution. Now, you might be able to draw from some experiences, but now we have challenges like AI and technology, geopolitical tensions that are, yes, of course there’s always been geopolitical tension, but they’re impacting workplaces at a different rate, economic instability, all of this making change or change fatigue, if you will, more of a norm.
So quick fixes now just aren’t going to work and it’s going to involve looking at your workplace more systemically, which I think, again, you might argue as a listener, we’ve always done that. Sure. However, it’s going to demand equally complex and systemic solutions that likely you won’t be able to draw on history to figure that out.
Ren:
Yeah. There’s a couple of things that you’re conjuring up for me. One, maybe the history angle I’ll talk about as we shift into the individual capacity because there’s something there, but something around the systemic complexity is that you’re talking about is really when we talk about org culture and we think, “How do you turn disruption into powerful change or force for change?” It’s the idea of that interdependent culture. And some of what you’re talking about around org culture is perspective-taking. They have a view of the past. They’re able to put that into the future. They’re able to take in different views.
And I actually think you maybe just said too, it’s like some people might say we’ve been doing it or looking at our complexity or integration of our cultures for a long time, or it’s like maybe, or our work environment’s like that. I don’t know. Sometimes I think people are still really independent in their cultures or dependent where a leader calls the shot, and that’s where I think a lot of disruption turns into lurching from reaction to reaction is when we’re not interdependent.
And I think CCL’s point of view or our point of view in the classroom often, the root of our leadership outcome framework is the social process. And so sometimes that systemic, complex environment, it’s like, what are we doing inside of systems, leaders, listeners, whoever, personal or professional, what are we doing to let interdependent collaboration happen where we’re tapping into the perspective into the system, where we’re letting wisdom come to the top, where whether I’m the leader in my home or the leader at work, I’m not the one who’s always calling the shots and instead I’m creating environment for the social process of leadership to happen?
Now, then I think disruption isn’t like, “Oh, crap, it’s coming,” but, “hey, well, we’re tapped into the system, we know disruption was heading our way, and this kind of disruption requires this part of the system to act.” And so maybe that kind of visibility, that perspective, that interdependence helps us navigate through that complexity, lets disruption be a force for change.
Allison:
Yeah. And I think too, for our listeners who maybe are not familiar with the language of interdependent and independent culture or dependent culture, what are some of the behaviors that might highlight or signal interdependent culture at a workplace?
Ren:
Yeah. Well, maybe I’ll retroactively do it and then we’ll talk about what it could look like, because a dependent culture is what we would say a typical top-down kind of organization, or a command-and-control. You can think of a triangle where on the top is one person, they call the shots, or a group of people, and then everyone else listens. And so the org is really dependent on a group of leaders or a leader making the decisions. And you saw a lot of dependent structures that were investigated and lamented post-9/11 in 2001 where all of these US defense groups had visibility on threat to America, but none of them were communicating because the structure was like, “No, only one person calls the shot. We weren’t ever asked to communicate. And also, inside of our hierarchy, there’s no real structure for it.” So it was all these people waiting for 1 or 2 people to call the shots.
And then what you can see from dependency is then you can move to an independent culture, which is instead of just one person calling the shot, you see different subject matter experts calling the shots where it’s not necessarily the person leading the organization, but the person leading the project or leading that product.
And what we see then, if dependence is one person or top-down, if independence is depending on where you are in the system you get to call the shots, the interdependence is the best of all of those worlds where sometimes in an interdependent group, because of an emergency or because of certain wisdom, dependence is required. One person needs to call it. Sometimes in an interdependent system, independent thought is necessary. Sometimes subject matter expertise really matters and we have to rely on them. But the idea of interdependence is that we’re letting all of these things happen at once, where we’re not just relying on one person or one subject matter expert, but we’re relying on the group. And maybe sometimes it is one person or one subject matter expert. But really, the interdependence is that collaborative environment where we are working together to create an outcome, not relying on any one source.
Is that fair? What would you add to that?
Allison:
Yeah, I think that’s a great descriptor. And I would add to that, it’s collaborative upgraded. It’s upgraded. And I think a leader or just really anybody at the workplace, in order to foster that type of culture or climate, needs to let go of any attachment to ego or position or “I know best” type of attitude, which can be really hard, especially in a crisis because we want to solve and we want to solve now and we want to get the expert, and sometimes that’s the right decision.
However, what I’m hearing from you, Ren, and what I know some of our research has posited is that in this type of environment that we are in where it truly is unpredictable from day to day, hour to hour, you need to be able to harness the collective mindset of the organization. And so if you are listening and noodling on this, it’s something to think about. How can you as a leader empower others to have a voice in spaces and on topics where it might not be their day-to-day, but you can harness the wisdom of others?
Ren:
Well, and what a cool segue because I think it leads to the next part, is this idea of individual capacity, because something you said was really interesting. You got to be able to check your ego, but also, the ask for someone to engage in interdependence is to start to shift their mindset around what leadership, what effectiveness, what collaboration looks like, and really being able to start to think differently.
And so some of what we talk about inside of the individual capacity or when you’re faced with disruption, how could that be a good thing, is the vertical development mindset at that shift where we’re in work with each other, and we’re starting to think about, “How can I look at this thing differently,” versus, “Oh, no, here’s a disruption. Let me use this framework or this tool,” versus, “Oh, no, here’s a disruption. How can I change the way I perceive it and then change therefore my behaviors?”
So I know you do a lot in the vertical development space, and what’s your read on that idea of, okay, part of the idea of disruption and then using it as a lever is the individual’s capacity to shift their mindset, look at the world differently?
Allison:
Yes. I think in concept when you say it or when I read it or when anybody talks about it, it sounds lovely. It sounds like this wonderful concept. Well, we’ll just think differently. We’ll just approach that problem with a different mindset. And then I’m sure you’ve experienced this too, Ren. We get into the classroom with our clients and understandably, they go, “Okay, well, how? What’s step A? What step B? How do I get there?” And then the answer becomes a little bit more complex because what we’re asking people to do is expand their range of ways of approaching obstacles or not even an obstacle, just the workplace.
And that is so much harder for people because a lot of times we were hired, you were probably hired because you have a skillset for whatever your role is, you have that skillset. And so for some people, you can go to the workplace and to some extent be on autopilot because these skills are naturally ingrained in you. And so we are asking people to slow down and pause and ask for what’s needed now and take a moment and think about, “Do I need an expert in the room right now? Is there one solution? Do we need to think about this big picture? Do we need to think about multiple solutions? Do we need to think about the polarity of this?”
So it really, I’m very much simplifying right now, but it is more about how you approach the work and how you approach an obstacle, not with what skillsets. And I think that trips people up. And one analogy that I’m sure you’ve seen, Ren, that I like to share a lot, is thinking about your phone or your device. And if you’re adding apps to your phone or your device, think of it in leadership as adding tools to your tool belt or skills. And when your phone does that thing where it asks you to upgrade the operating system, which we all probably ignore a lot because it takes time, that’s what we’re talking about when we talk about vertical development. So it’s upgrading your, quote, unquote, “operating system” so that your thinking around obstacles is different. It’s expanded.
Ren:
Yeah. And here’s an upgrade too. I love that. If someone’s listening right now, the individual capacity, great vertical development, and they’re asking us how, and I love what you’re saying there and I’ll add to it here. There’s this idea inside of our disruption point of view, turning disruption into a powerful force for change, is VUCA upgraded. It’s like a new OS for VUCA.
So VUCA is a term that I think, as practitioners, we’re like, we hear a lot of and there’s so many people. The new one is BANI, but we’ll start with VUCA. Let’s actually start with BANI. Well, I don’t know. What should we do? VUCA first?
Allison:
Start with BANI.
Ren:
BANI?
Allison:
Start with BANI.
Ren:
Brittle.
Allison:
Yeah, do it.
Ren:
Anxious, right?
Allison:
Non-linear.
Ren:
Non-linear.
Allison:
And my favorite, incomprehensible.
Ren:
Incomprehensible, nearly like the phrase. And VUCA is this idea of an environment that’s volatile, uncertain, complex or chaotic, and ambiguous. Clearly, I know VUCA better than I know BANI, but whatever. We love acronyms, all of us learners in the field, and we’re like, “How can we describe an environment that is not welcoming or warm that’s either fragile or hard to navigate?”
And I think the disruption point of view, the new VUCA, VUCA 2.0, we’re not done with VUCA, we’re building on VUCA, is this idea of vision, understanding, clarity and agility. Disruption is the new norm. The way you did work yesterday quite literally won’t necessarily be the way you do work tomorrow. It’s happening that fast. And there’s this idea of future readiness and adaptability as a core strategy.
And so leaders, if you’re thinking about like, “Well, how do I expand my vertical development today?” It’s, well, versus the idea of volatility, what vision? What are you trying to accomplish as an organization as a team? Does everyone understand what’s happening in the environment and how it’s impacting the organization? From that vision and understanding, can you create clarity? Okay, “Through this, quote, unquote, ‘disruption,’ this is how we’re going to embrace change.” And then therefore, the agility is required. Disruption requires a change in behavior.
And so for the leaders, it’s a question of how do you shift your attention from what are we doing today to how do we build the capacity to learn and respond tomorrow? And I always cite these organizations, which I know that more are going to come, but they’re still the best use cases. It’s like Kodak or Blockbuster. They’re like, “This is what we do today and we do it great and this is all we’re ever going to do.” And the question was never posed really effectively, “Well, how do we build the capacity to learn and respond to tomorrow’s demands?” Because the world is innovating leaders, things shift. Even in static businesses that don’t have big seismic shifts, work is never done the way it was 10 years ago.
And so I think right now as a leader, you can ask yourself whether you’re experiencing VUCA or BANI, what vision, understanding, clarity, and agility can you bring, and how can you, say, shift from what we’re doing today to building the capacity to learn and respond to tomorrow?
Allison:
Yes. I love that reframe on VUCA. And it made me chuckle a little because as professionals in the leadership development space, I was having a conversation with somebody at the office a few weeks ago who was referencing VUCA. And I said, “What I wouldn’t give for some VUCA these days. Give me some ambiguity. I can handle that. Now we’re in this incomprehensible, ‘What does that even mean? What does that even mean?’” And we had a good laugh about it, but I love that reframe of VUCA.
And we’ve talked before, Ren, about polycrisis, so I won’t belabor that, but I do want to underscore that now, again, it’s not that you’re having disruption once a quarter. It’s disruption that’s continual and each disruption or problem seems to then feed into the next obstacle, and so it is continual. And I like what you were sharing about capacity and developing not only, and I’m paraphrasing what you said, but not only individual capacity, but collective.
And I think if it’s okay, I’d love to share a more tactical example of how this can play out at work because sometimes I think as leadership development professionals, sometimes, I’m giving myself feedback here, sometimes we speak in these very conceptual terms because you and I talk about this every day. This is our world. And so if you’re a listener who’s not necessarily in this space, let me just give you an example of how this looks a little bit different than it did 2019 and prior to that.
So if you can imagine a global manufacturing company with a few external obstacles that impact and exacerbate one another, think of it this way. So there’s geopolitical tension. And again, you might say there’s always been geopolitical tension, but let’s just make believe that this geopolitical tension is impacting this business with trade restrictions delaying critical components. And with that geopolitical tension, there’s also economic instability, both local and global, and that economic instability creates rising costs. So you have trade restrictions, then you have rising costs, and those rising costs maybe force your organization to have budget cuts.
And then that economic instability and geopolitical tension, it’s like a domino, can lead to a labor shortage because those budget cuts potentially cause your organization to have a reduction. Then with the labor shortage, you can’t find skilled workers as easily as you used to, and that actually slows your production, so what was intended to cut cost and save money now has slowed your production. And then on top of that, perhaps, there are threats of cybersecurity, which is very real for most organizations right now. And let’s, again, just play make-believe that the same company experiences a cybersecurity breach that forces systems to shut down or slow down, halting operations.
So that’s an example of how these things can domino into one another and make a perpetual state of almost crisis where, in this case, you’ll have project timelines that are slipped, your profits might be down, employees start to feel stressed, teams are working overtime, maybe your customer complaints are spiking due to increase in cost or decrease in actual materials. And then what happens in leadership meetings then becomes crisis management if you’re not able to develop these capacities and these skillsets ahead of time.
So again, I just offer that because I think sometimes we’re like, “Yeah, polycrisis, that’s great. That’s super interesting. What does that mean? How does that show up for me?” And so if organizations want to break out of crisis mode, and I’m not invalidating that these things are not crises because they are, but it will be important for organizations to change, again, to your point, Ren, how they think about disruption. It’s not a one-time event, it’s an ongoing process. And if we can start to think of it in terms of evolution with not necessarily a finish line, but just evolution and how we work and how we approach problems, that’s a good place to start. Is it an easy place to start? You tell me, but that’s a place to start.
Ren:
I really love it. And what made me think as you’re talking about the evolution is this idea of perspective. It’s that because crisis is a norm, crisis doesn’t have to be disruptive because we’re looking in the scope of years, in the scope of not just a single project, but the entire thing. And language that we use in this is the idea of from crisis to canvas. It’s how can I start to think each one of these is actually just a small part of a much larger picture that, if done managed the right way, it can turn into the change for our future organizations?
I think you saw this when COVID happened, was people were in the midst of perpetual crisis, and how many organizations rebuilt themselves? I mean, how much has e-commerce and dining changed in America alone, let alone the world, because of that kind of thing? And I think that’s one of those things where we start to say, “Well, how do we manage this crisis, this crisis, this crisis?” All of a sudden it’s like paint-by-numbers or it’s like the Picasso dot painting. It’s like all of these little crises, when you zoom out, then all of a sudden create some kind of a real picture.
And it’s interesting, the balance, too. You talked about this skills and how do we navigate that inside of vertical development because there’s a tension too where I think really a big in vogue thing is shifting mindset, but also a recognition of a skills-based organization that provides fluid teams, which is just what I mean by leadership and leaders. How do we rethink how we build, mobilize, and lead skill-centric teams and organizations, versus a role-centric, which is really core to interdependence? The idea, “Well, I’m the boss and I do this.” I’m like, “No, if you have the right skills for this kind of crisis, we bring you to the front and we let you lead the way, and then it’s like that’s your bit of the painting and then someone else’s bit of the painting.”
And if we’re coordinating those efforts, then crisis, when we zoom out, we start to say, “Well, this dominoed.” I think you painted a picture of the domino effect of negativity, what can stem from something in the interconnected environment. And the goal would be to look on the other side of that coin. It’s like, what happened when this crisis happened? The dominoes of creative thinking, of new products, of new solutions. And again, I think we saw that in droves 4 or 5 years ago and we continue to see that where crisis then gives people an opportunity to think, “Well, what’s the next answer?”
And so I think that crisis to canvas really resonates for me right here.
Allison:
Oh, yeah, I love that visual too. And something you mentioned before is that this isn’t something a single leader can fix, and so it’s about looking at leadership as a concept a little bit differently too. And CCL has always found in our research and we’ve always said that leadership exists regardless of what your title is. However, in more hierarchical organizations, it will be important for those types of companies to really reconsider what, quote, unquote, “leadership” looks like because this isn’t something a single leader can fix. These big-system types of obstacles are not solved by a heroic effort. I think you said that almost verbatim, Ren.
And so yes, talented people, strong training programs, those things absolutely matter, but they’re not enough. And what makes the difference, as you were just highlighting, is that coordinated strategy that connects the dots across the entire organization so that you can tackle those interconnected challenges together because they are interconnected. Again, at a very tactical level, what hits Operations and challenges Operations is also going to challenge Marketing, for example, and so on and so forth. And you might argue again, yes, that’s always been the case, but it’s just at a grander scale now.
So really looking at how can we have a coordinated strategy interdependently at our organization, which I know is word salad again, but there is good news. I feel like this can feel sort of heavy, I suppose, but there are solutions. There’s always a solution. And I think it’s tempting for more senior leaders too to focus on process change within this type of environment, and of course that can be important, but leading through these types of challenges really does mean focusing on people and culture as well and those 3 different pillars that you’ve already mentioned. I also think about within those pillars, polarity management, so both/and thinking, and boundary-spanning leadership, how can you span boundaries in your organization in ways that you haven’t before?
There’s probably a lot we could touch on here, but I’m curious, Ren, if you were talking to a leader of any level, what’s one piece of advice that you could give a leader that could be actionable today? Because we’re talking about mindsets and these big conceptual things. What’s one action step you might suggest?
Ren:
Yeah, I’d probably build on the polarity thing that you said, because something that’s critical to this idea of disruption being a force for change is to rethink risk. Risk is a polarity. One side of the polarity being risk as a threat, the other side is risk as an opportunity.
And so if a leader right now, I think part of your job, especially when we think about economic or talent turbulence coming our way, or the continued generational shifts … I mean, I’m just talking to another client the other day. All their leadership team is aging out, and not 10 years from now, legit 5 years from now. And they really struggle with knowledge transfer, because it’s an organization that has not been interdependent, it’s been dependent, and at best, independent. But that means that there’s all these silos of years and years of wisdom that people aren’t letting go of.
And so I think there’s a leader. Part of what we got to start to diagnose is, do we have the right talent with the right mindsets and the ability and the agility to evolve? That becomes the competitive advantage. And if we don’t focus on that, then that’s a risk. And so I think maybe diagnosis, leaders, what you could do today, maybe diagnose your risks. Which part of your risks are the biggest threat? And then inside of that, which part of the risk is the biggest opportunity?
I think, like this organization that I’m working with right now, a major risk is their aging population and their leadership aging out. The major opportunity in there is that there is a real urgency inside the organization and a desire to collect all of that information and put it somewhere. And so that’s a way for us to balance it where I think the worst parts of it is, “Well, this is a threat. What do we do here?” versus an opportunity to change the org culture. With all these leaders leaving, they can now start to say, “Well, this is something we need to do in the future. So we have the knowledge here and we don’t have to frantically scramble.”
So I’m thinking back to your question. I don’t know if that’s like a super practical thing. So again, leader, if you’re listening, diagnose, look at risk, and rethink it. What risks do I traditionally see as a threat? And then what is the opportunity inside of it? That is then how we literally, not even literally in a figurative sense, but literally look at disruption and say, “Ooh, this is disruptive. Great, what’s the opportunity here?” And so again, may not be easy, but it’s something I might suggest.
Allison:
Yeah, I love that. And I love the call out of there are populations that are going to be exiting the workforce and how can you harness that wisdom and not say, “Could you write down your best practices?” That’s not very … “Just go ahead and write down what you’ve been doing for the last 40 years and how you approach things.”
Ren:
For your career, yeah, your whole life.
Allison:
But there’s something in what you said too around embracing a relational view of leadership, and some organizations do this already. I would say a lot don’t. Embracing that relational view will help your organization move beyond those shared individual goals and focus on shared collective outcomes. And I’m simplifying here, but doing that enables the organization to then continuously assess, like you were saying, Ren, and adapt capabilities to meet the challenges that are coming, the challenges that might even be unknown.
And again, you and I have talked about this probably ad nauseum on our recordings, but the Direction – Alignment – Commitment tool is a really, really great starting out point to determine the precursors for action in an organization. So do we have a clear direction? Are we aligned as an organization, as a team, and are we committed as an overall organization or a team to resolve these challenges?
And alignment, I would guess … Well, I’m making some assumptions here. Alignment tends to be the trickier part depending on the size of your organization, but when organizations achieve direction, alignment, and commitment, then they’re able to tap into those collective forces that can really motivate individuals and organizations.
And I think too, given the wild times that we are in, that motivation part might be tricky for some organizations too inclusive, Ren, of what you were saying about populations who are about to age out of the workforce. What’s their motivation? What is their motivation to share that wisdom that they’ve had when they’re potentially just exhausted and ready to retire? Again, that’s a whole other podcast, for sure.
Ren:
Yeah. Well, I mean, we can answer it and there may not be motivation, which is the problem. I think that’s the opportunity here is how do we create a culture where there is a motivation for it?
And I love where you’re at when you were talking to that because I think a big part of organizational resilience is this idea of values, trust, and psychological safety. Inside of new tensions, do I value my teammates? Do I know what they value? Do I have trust? Do I have psychological safety? Because technological advantage alone is not going to win the day.
Allison:
No.
Ren:
Leaders have got to cultivate a relational and cultural competencies at scale. It’s like, who are we and how do we operate despite the weather?
And so the DAC is exactly the precursor for any kind of action, and it’s the root of the collective agility that we’re talking about in our disruption point of view, is you look at your organizational culture, you identify and diagnose individual capacity, and then you build collective agility using DAC, some shared sensemaking, and ultimately having a culture where we value each other, we trust each other, we have safety.
And so I think part of the incentive for these leaders aging out is, well, how can the current leadership structure or those who will be left behind demonstrate value and trust in who these people are? And how can these leaders feel psychologically safe enough to say, “Well, will I be sunsetted even faster if I let go of my wisdom?”
Allison:
Nice.
Ren:
And so I think some of the incentive, it doesn’t maybe exist right now, but could exist. And we talk to leaders all the time around the idea of legacy, of impact, of what are you leaving behind? But in the very least, for those who are self-focused, which is nothing inherently wrong with that … I talk to leaders all the time at this point in their career, the goal is to articulate your mastery. The next mountain for you to climb is telling me how you climbed all the mountain, not just relying on those impulses that you’ve cultivated over 40 years, “Write down your best practices.” “Well, I don’t even know how I did that.”
Yes, that’s the trick. The trick is now giving these leaders an opportunity to tell their story, not just write a bullet list of best practices, but your story is meaningful, we value it, we trust your wisdom. If you can feel safe enough to share it, then you can demonstrate the kind of culture that we need in the future.
But I don’t know. I don’t know if that would incentivize these people or not, but that’s a really good question. I think that’s something they need to be asking themselves. But either way, I think that if you could build a culture of values, trust, where we value each other, where we know of our values, where we trust each other, and we create safety, then we can navigate those new tension zones really well.
Allison:
Yes, I love that. And I’ll add one more thing that plays perfectly into what you just said, which is that human beings tend to be predictable in times of disruption and uncertainty, so that’s some good news. And what we can share with you is that uncertainty or things that are not clear tends to be one of the roots of the biggest stress for people.
And so as a leader, one thing that is simple in concept that you can do now to immediately start to improve resilience and build that trust that, Ren, you were just talking about is by communicating. And again, that’s very simple in concept, but acknowledging the uncertainty when it calls for, communicating a clear picture of priorities, assuming that you know those, and if there are any next steps, even if the next steps mean that, “in one hour, we’re going to do this thing,” or, “by next week, we are going to do this thing,” because again, even if the long-term plan is still evolving, what people need is something to anchor into so that they know “we are taking care of this as an organization.”
So again, simple in concept, but that is one takeaway that you can action immediately.
Ren:
Yeah, yeah. I’ll just tack on VUCA 2.0. It’s like, what are you doing to contribute to a vision? What are you doing to contribute to an understanding of that vision? How does that provide clarity for what you’re going to do next? And then do you have the capacity to be agile to do what’s required of you next?
Allison:
Yep.
Ren:
And so I think those are really practical approaches for any of us to answer right now. If you’re feeling that disruption and you’re feeling not the good parts, but the bad part, create some VUCA 2.0, create some collective agility, start expanding your own individual capacity, and then I think that will positively impact your culture.
Allison:
Yeah, indeed, indeed. And to reground our listeners, some of the things that Ren and I were both talking about today are in one of our new articles that’s titled, Reinvention Through Disruption: Moving From Perpetual Crisis to Collective Adaptability. You can throw that into Google and it will pop up for you. It’s a really fascinating research article that links to other research of ours that will go into a little bit more detail of some of those pillars that Ren and I were both talking about today.
Ren, any last words before we move probably out of our 2025 recordings?
Ren:
That’s right.
Allison:
Likely, our listeners, we’ll see you in 2026.
Ren:
Yeah, that’s 100%. No, just take care out there, everyone. Be safe, keep doing the good work. I feel lucky to work with people like Allison and people like you listening who care about the people they work with and care about the people they get to come home to. And I really believe that is what makes work work is the truth that we’re all just trying to do a good job. Most of us are really just trying to do a good job. And if we can treat each other like that and start to cultivate more understanding of one another, then disruption can really start to not be so disruptive.
So, thank you all. We appreciate you. Stay safe out there. Enjoy the holidays. Enjoy the end of ’25. And yeah, we’ll see you sometime Q1 in ’26.
Allison:
Yes, indeed. That’s well said, my friend. Happy holidays to our listeners. As always, you can find all of our podcast episodes and show notes on ccl.org. And a big thank you to our team that works behind the scenes to get our podcast off the ground. We will look forward to speaking with you again in 2026. In the meantime, find us on LinkedIn. Tell us what’s going on in your world. What would you like us to talk about in 2026? And we’ll see you soon. Thanks, Ren.
Ren:
Thanks, Allison. Thanks, everybody. See you next time.
Allison:
See you next time.
Ren:
Find Allison on holiday TikToks in 2026.
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