Coronavirus and the workforce: leading through a crisis
How to build organisational resilience during and beyond COVID-19
How to build organisational resilience during and beyond COVID-19
Crises are moments in time where organisation leaders are put to the test and where flawed or unfit leadership teams come unstuck. At their most harmful, disasters can unseat leadership teams and even bring down organisations. The consequences of organisation failure can be prolonged and hugely harmful to supply chains and networks, customers, communities and of course to employees and the wider workforce.
Following the BP Deepwater Horizon disaster in 2010 there was much exploration of the issues that caused management to overlook several opportunities to avert disaster. Investigations highlighted numerous missed opportunities: failed checks and balances, poor communication, inability to act both proactively to plan, and reactively as the crisis unfolded. Opportunities come and go as crises scenarios unfold, signals are missed, and leaders miss vital opportunities to prepare for disaster.
Arguably the current COVID-19 outbreak places even more stressors on organisations than those felt during the BP Deepwater Horizon disaster, or even the global financial crash in 2008. The situation is unprecedented in modern times: unique, dynamic and hugely complex. Some organisations will have prepared for such events, but the vast majority will not have. However, it isn’t too late for leaders to take steps to improve an organisation’s likelihood of survival – this is where the concept of organisational resilience comes in.
Organisational resilience is an emergent property that develops in complex systems as a precursor and response to stressors and risks. Understanding system resilience is a central part of organisational development and design practice, and a key strategic activity undertaken by leaders across the people profession.
Scientific evidence identifies three important categories of resilience: planned resilience which arises from planning and preparation for potential crises (eg, known seasonal flu epidemics), adaptive resilience, an emergent, reactive response to acute stressors or system shocks causing change and disruption (eg, volcanic ash cloud, COVID-19), and finally everyday resilience which is built-in resilience to unpredictable, but complex stressors (eg, staff shortages).
For leaders trying to understand how to respond to COVID-19, understanding the nature of the risk, its magnitude and likely course of development, is key. Clearly COVID-19 is a complex, fluid and unknown stressor on organisations requiring adaptive resilience – after all, significant pandemic events are projected to happen just once a century. Although predictable, events like this are difficult for many leaders to plan for.
There are however several key factors of organisational or system resilience that leaders should try to understand which will help their organisations to survive challenges the size and scale of COVID-19:
The literature on organisational resilience is clear on the value of effective leadership and the importance of acknowledging the value of people and their human capital. Studies exploring organisation responses to crises highlight the value that effective leadership brings, and the harm that develops in its absence. Effective leadership is therefore central to navigating a real and active risk of the magnitude of the COVID-19 crisis.
Now more than ever leaders must draw on and amplify the knowledge, skills and capabilities of their workforce and other key stakeholders. Organisational resilience to COVID-19 can still be improved if leaders take steps to learn from the evidence. The challenge ahead is considerable: exceptional system-shocks like the present pandemic provide ample opportunity for leaders to lose sight of what is important to their business, exacerbate weaknesses and diminish strengths. Now is not the time to lose focus.
By Edward Houghton
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