7 Common Mistakes Leaders Should Not Make During Covid-19

Franchising.com
Franchising.com
Published in
3 min readMay 5, 2020

1) Trying to control the situation

There is no rule book for a crisis like Covid-19. Rather than trying to control this situation, or feeling overwhelmed by lack of control, try to shift your focus to developing a new leadership skill: the ability to rapidly evaluate an evolving situation and respond with compassionate, creative, and collaborative solutions. In our leadership lifetime the world has never suffered a global pandemic, so this is new and uncharted territory. The closest experience leaders have is the most recent global economic recession, and already we see government and leaders quickly accessing that experience to tap into resilience and lessons learned. When the time comes, we will look back on this too, and learn the lessons and build our contingency plans accordingly.

2) Not stepping back to see the bigger picture

There is growing pressure on governments to exit lockdown and help the economy “get back to normal.” However, this emphasis on returning to “normal” implies that we think we can go back to where we were. We cannot. It will not be as simple as that. Leaders must step back and see the bigger picture, acknowledge the severity of both short- and long-term business economic fallout from Covid-19 and try to pivot their businesses accordingly to an adjusted or new set of products, services, and delivery platforms. It might help to think of pre-Covid-19 as “normal,” the current crisis as the “new normal,” and post-Covid-19 as the “next normal.”

3) Not communicating enough

In any crisis it is important to communicate more regularly and more often, because people want more reassurance and information than usual. Set out how regularly you plan to be in touch, and stick to your schedule. Don’t wait longer than a week for your employees and key stakeholders to hear from you. Otherwise, you create a vacuum of silence that will inevitably be filled with unhelpful, fear-led rumors. Never cancel any planned communications events. Even if there is nothing new to share, stick with the planned session to let people know there is nothing new to communicate yet, but you’re still concerned about their welfare. Take the opportunity to be encouraging and explain what plans are in place to continue working on solutions.

4) Not decentralizing decision-making

Centralizing decision-making in a crisis like Covid-19 is a mistake because, although the pandemic is global, it is occurring at different rates in different regions and countries. Allow regional or country heads to establish their own responses. Give clear direction to your teams on the key priorities, but decentralize decision-making and empower local teams to respond on how to deliver on those key priorities as they see appropriate, while still staying accountable to the big-picture purpose and values of the organization. However, just as individual team members should not isolate from one other, don’t let the team distance itself from the rest of the organization and what is happening at headquarters and around the nation or world. Ideally, different regional and country teams can be leveraged to help each other through the worst parts of this crisis.

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