How leaders react when crisis and uncertainty rear their ugly heads?
As we watch events unfold in Ukraine, we're reminded of the ubiquity of uncertainty — and even full-on crises — in the world. And it's not just geopolitics: a viral pandemic, supply chain woes, extreme weather events ... it seems leaders are facing an inordinate number of crises today that create challenges for day-to-day decision-making.
But crises and uncertainty have always been a part of life, and good leaders can learn to anticipate and manage these phenomena.
In her research and experience, Professor of Practice and Walentas Jefferson Scholars Foundation Professorship Chair Vivian Riefberg has examined how leaders react when crisis and uncertainty rear their ugly heads — and she’s identified best practices for getting through them successfully. A former senior partner with McKinsey, Riefberg now serves on boards including PBS, Johns Hopkins Medicine and Signify Health. She spoke with Ideas for Action about leading in uncertainty and some of the do’s and don’ts of successful crisis management.
Q: Why is it so important for managers to learn to how to effectively manage crisis and uncertainty today?
Riefberg: Decision-making under substantial uncertainty and crisis is different from daily management and leadership decision-making. The magnitude of the impact is often substantial and the situations you encounter are not things you face in the day-to-day realm of what you do, so you don’t have a lot of experience to draw from and you often have to make decisions more rapidly.
[This article has been reproduced with permission from University Of Virginia's Darden School Of Business. This piece originally appeared on Darden Ideas to Action.]