By Sarah Nashati

The nature of crisis currently is complex and interconnected due to the global setup. In our global village, crisis can no longer be contained within borders. What begins as a local disruption can quickly ripple across economies, industries, and institutions. The COVID-19 pandemic was a stark reminder of this reality. A rare but high-impact event that paralysed economies, fractured supply chains, and threatened the survival of organisations once considered too big to fail. It was not merely a health crisis; it was a governance crisis.
How we perceive crisis often determines how we respond to it. Too often, a crisis is seen as something distant and unlikely to occur. Yet a crisis is precisely dangerous because it is often a low-probability but high-impact event. It may not happen often, but when it does, it strikes with a force that can overwhelm even the strongest. Past events have proven that it is rarely the absence of intelligence or resources that brings organisations down, but a failure to prepare for adversity.
When a crisis emerges, some organisations falter, paralysed by uncertainty or denial, while others rise to the challenge. Those who rise do so not because they can predict the future, but because they have prepared for it. The difference lies in good governance. Crisis management is not simply about reacting when disaster strikes; it is about building the processes and capabilities to prevent, prepare for, respond to, and recover from events that threaten operations. Organisations must be agile, informed, and decisive. We cannot predict adversity, but we can prepare for it.
One of the most consistent lessons from past crises is how easily early warning signals are missed or misinterpreted. Signals often appear quietly as regulatory friction, cultural strain, operational shortcuts, and success-induced complacency. Because organisations are busy “running the business,” these signals are frequently treated as routine issues rather than potential crisis indicators. Familiarity breeds tolerance, and tolerance breeds vulnerability. By the time the threat is fully recognised, the room for manoeuvre has already narrowed.
Boards are not immune to this. In fact, success itself can become a risk. When performance is strong, optimism rises, dissent softens, and uncomfortable questions are postponed. This creates a dangerous normalcy bias, the belief that tomorrow will look much like today. Crisis shatters that illusion. And when it does, boards that lack discipline, agility, and decisiveness often freeze at the very moment they are required to lead.
This is where scenario planning becomes indispensable. Scenario planning is a key discipline of crisis management. It is not about predicting the future but preparing for multiple plausible futures. It forces an organisation to take a step back, challenge assumptions, rehearse difficult decisions, and test the speed and quality of their responses before the actual event arrives. Think of it as a curtain raiser to the real act. It is, quite simply, a rehearsal for reality. When decisions have been debated and roles clarified in advance, organisations are far less likely to be paralysed when the curtain rises.
Effective crisis governance also depends on chemistry, trust between the board and management, clarity of authority, and the ability to act with speed without descending into chaos. In moments of crisis, bureaucracy is costly. So is second-guessing. Organisations that navigate crises well are those where boards provide clear strategic direction and legitimacy, while management executes decisively within agreed guardrails. This alignment cannot be improvised in the middle of a storm; it must be built deliberately over time.
Uncertainty is not a reason for paralysis. It is a call for disciplined and agile decision-making. Crisis will always be with us. Pandemics, geopolitical shocks, technological disruption, climate events, and social change are now part of the operating environment. What remains a choice is whether organisations prepare for these realities, or whether they wait to be overwhelmed by them.
We cannot predict adversity. But we can prepare for it. And in governance, preparation is leadership. To be forewarned is to be forearmed. Organisations that are agile, informed, and decisive are the ones that endure. Crisis will always be with us, but collapse remains a choice determined by our preparedness.