In a business environment that keeps accelerating, many leadership teams are no longer leading so much as they are keeping up. New priorities land before existing ones have settled. Decisions get made faster and revisited more often. Attention spreads thin.
The problem, after a while, is not the volume of work. It is whether the organization can stay focused long enough to actually finish something that matters.
Most reactive cultures do not start with poor leadership. They start with capable people responding to real pressure, over and over again, until reaction becomes the default operating mode.
And for a while, it feels like momentum.
Then it does not.
Research from Predictive Index found that workers now spend an average of 47 seconds on a task before interrupting themselves, and that regaining focus afterward takes roughly 23 minutes.
That level of interruption changes more than productivity. It changes the quality of attention inside the business.
When Everything Appears Urgent, Nothing Is
The work that actually moves the business forward keeps getting pushed. Projects take longer than they should. The same conversations get revisited because decisions never fully settle. And somewhere in the middle of all of it, the leader stops being the person setting direction and becomes the person absorbing everyone else’s.
A client working with a Focal Point coach came to a realization that many leaders recognize but rarely say out loud: she had built something real, and then slowly let everyone else become the point of it. Her team, her clients, the next fire that needed putting out. After years of running her firm that way, she sat down with her coach and said she needed to find some peace for herself. That she had made the whole business about everyone else and had not stopped to protect what she had actually built it for. It was not a dramatic breakdown. It was just an honest moment. And it changed how she led from that point forward.
Gallup’s workplace research found that leaders express higher levels of stress, anger, sadness, and loneliness than the people they manage. That is not a coincidence. It is what happens when the person responsible for holding everything together has nothing left for themselves.
Reactive environments do not just slow execution. They degrade judgment.
And degraded judgment, made at pace, is where the real damage accumulates.
The most useful mid-year question may be the simplest one:
“Are we still focused on what matters most, or have we quietly handed control of our attention to whatever is loudest?”
Simplification Is Key
The pressure is not going to let up. Wiley Workplace Intelligence recently described many organizations as caught in a “cascade crisis,” in which teams are asked to absorb new disruptions before previous changes have stabilized.
That pattern, left unmanaged, does not produce agility. It produces exhaustion dressed up as hustle.
The organizations that sustain momentum are not the ones reacting fastest. They are the ones disciplined enough to protect that clarity while everything around them speeds up. They narrow priorities, make cleaner decisions, and create enough stability for execution to deepen instead of constantly restarting.
The organizations that sustain momentum are not the ones moving fastest. They are the ones disciplined enough to decide what deserves their attention and protect it.
At some point the question stops being about productivity and becomes a more personal one. Do we actually intend to finish what we started. The organizations that keep moving forward tend to have someone in the room willing to ask that honestly, and willing to hear the answer.
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Sources:
https://www.gallup.com/workplace/708332/leaders-better-lives-worse-days.aspx
https://www.predictiveindex.com/blog/reactive-leadership
https://www.pwc.com/gx/en/news-room/press-releases/2026/pwc-2026-global-ceo-survey.html
https://www.deloitte.com/us/en/insights/topics/talent/human-capital-trends.html https://hbr.org/2026/04/how-to-convince-your-boss-they-need-a-coach