IS IT RESILIENCE OR ENDURANCE?
When a business keeps delivering under pressure, it is worth asking whether it is resilient — or whether it has simply learned to endure.
A business can appear, from the outside, to handle pressure exceptionally well. The metrics we might use are attendance, efficient decision making and deadlines efficiently met. The business might move through market volatility, periods of uncertainty, complex change and ambiguous demands without visible collapse and typically, because nothing has dramatically failed, we make the assumption that the business is resilient.
In my experience, we’re frequently observing endurance and the distinction is commercially consequential.
THE Definition
Here are the two definitions I work with:
- Endurance is our ability to tolerate unpleasant or difficult conditions.
- Resilience is our capacity to respond constructively to change and challenge.
In short bursts, endurance has genuine value and may be exactly what a business needs. The capacity to hold on through a difficult quarter, absorb a sudden disruption or maintain delivery while significant change embeds is not a problem. It becomes problematic when it becomes the default operating mode of a team or business. The reality is, a team running on endurance will produce similar short-term results to a genuinely resilient team. The difference tends to invisibly cumulative, typically leaving your people depleted and unable to access innovative or critical thinking.
Where endurance absorbs, resilience by contrast is responsive, adaptive and, critically, involves periods of recovery. A resilient business maintains its operational capacity despite the pressure, processing what has happened and remaining genuinely available for what comes next. The distinction matters most in businesses where pressure is not an occasional event but a structural reality, particularly where one demanding period immediately follows another without a natural gap to allow recovery to occur. In those conditions, a team that has built genuine resilience continues to access clear thinking, good judgement and constructive problem-solving.
THE SCIENCE
This is not an abstract distinction; in fact, we rely on neuroscience research to inform our approach to resilience.
Research published in the Journal of Neuroscience established that stress shifts human behaviour away from goal-directed decision-making and toward habitual, autonomic responses. A more recent study published in Nature identified the specific neural pathways involved showing that chronic stress dampens the brain circuits responsible for flexible decision-making while simultaneously activating those governing habitual behaviour. In practical terms: the more sustained the pressure, the more reliably people default to what they have always done, regardless of whether that response is still appropriate. Separate research confirms that acute stress inhibits the ability to focus attention and make complex decisions, precisely the capabilities that are most critical in a business navigating change. The prefrontal cortex, which governs planning, judgement and executive function, is among the first things to go offline under significant pressure.
This suggests that, on a biological level, a team under sustained pressure is not choosing to make slower, less flexible decisions. They are operating in conditions that make slower, less flexible decisions predictable. Endurance, sustained for long enough, produces exactly this: a business running on habit rather than adaptability.
THE COST
We believe there is a commercial case for taking the resilience of a leader, team or business seriously rather than deeming it a “nice-to-have” or “soft skill.”
The World Health Organisation estimates that the most prevalent stress related conditions cost the global economy approximately $1 trillion annually in lost productivity. The American Institute of Stress Job reports that stress accounts for around 40% of employee turnover, and replacing a single employee typically costs between 120% and 200% of their annual salary. But those are macro figures, often intangible and unrelatable.
At the level of an individual business, the cost is harder to attribute to one source which is precisely what makes it expensive. Endurance erodes without a clear moment of failure. It shows up as decisions that loop back unnecessarily. Execution quality that drops before anyone notices. Follow-through that becomes inconsistent without an obvious explanation. Good people who begin doing less than they are capable of because their discretionary effort is the first thing to go when they are depleted.
Research from Wiley Workplace Intelligence found that 60% of employees experiencing high stress reported a negative impact on their productivity. The same research identified constant change as the leading cause of increased stress. For businesses managing significant transitions: new investment, rapid growth, leadership change, simultaneous shifts in process and technology or people, constant change becomes their operating reality.
OUR VIEW
We look at a business through the interdependence of three lenses impact on human capital, human capacity and human systems.
- Human capital is what your people bring to the business: their knowledge, their relationships, their judgment and experience. It is the asset the business runs on, and under sustained pressure it will be depleted. The erosion is rarely visible and has usually been underway for some time before it becomes commercially damaging.
- Human capacity is what your people have available to give at any given time. A business can have exceptional human capital and depleted human capacity simultaneously: exceptional people, running on diminished bandwidth. The consequence is that they are present but not fully functioning: slower to decide, less able to absorb new information, more likely to act from habit than innovate.
- Human systems are the operating infrastructure through which both flow: the routines, decision structures, escalation pathways and accountability rhythms that shape whether a business’s human capital and capacity translate into consistent delivery. When a business is running on endurance, human systems are almost always part of the picture: decisions that don’t have a clear authority line, problems that get absorbed individually rather than escalated appropriately, expectations that are implicit rather than explicit.
Research consistently demonstrates that resilience is shaped by the operating conditions at an organisational level rather than by the intrinsic characteristics of individuals. Resilient businesses tend to have clear role and responsibilities, meaningful work that is autonomously owned, functioning escalation pathways, decision authority that is explicit rather than assumed and operating rhythms that allow pressure to be released.
OUR APPROACH
Our approach is built around my experience as an ICF PCC-accredited behavioural coach using a neuroscience and ACT-informed methodology to understand what is actually happening behaviourally and neurologically under pressure.
The neuroscience lens allows me to work with what is actually happening in a business under pressure, specifically to identify where habitual patterns have replaced adaptive ones, where cognitive load is being carried in unproductive ways and where the operating environment is generating unnecessary demand on an already stretched human system.
ACT (Acceptance and Commitment Therapy), applied in a coaching and advisory context gives us a way to work with the values and behaviours that shape how a leader or team responds to pressure. By identifying the specific behavioural patterns that protect or undermine delivery, we can build in sustainable productivity, adoption or engagement.
In practice, I use various licensed and proprietary diagnostics to make this produce concrete data on human capacity. Two of my preferred tools include:
- ResilienceBuilder® behavioural assessment which profiles an individual’s capacity for resilience based on five domains: Mental Strength, Purpose and Direction, Physical Stamina, Emotional Intelligence, and Social Support giving the individual clarity on where their capacity is strongest and where, under sustained pressure, it is most likely to collapse.
- DiSC® profiling surfaces communication preferences and behavioural patterns under pressure, making visible the dynamics that slow execution, create friction, or leave conflict unaddressed.
These are examples of the data we can gather to help move from “things feel hard” to “here is where the system is most exposed and what we do about it.” Our intended output is an operating environment in which teams can function, adapt, and deliver consistently.
THE BIG QUESTION
There are businesses that operate under sustained pressure not as a structural reality. The nature of these businesses means that significant pressure cycles follow one another without the gaps that allow recovery to happen naturally. In these businesses, endurance can become normalised until the cost becomes visible, usually at the moment when the business can least afford it. It is likely your business can absorb more pressure, certainly in the short-term. I would ask:
- When your people are under sustained pressure, are they still making the decisions you’d want them to make? Are they solving problems, or managing them?
- Importantly, when a difficult period ends, how do they recover or are they already into the next high stakes cycle?
If you cannot answer with confidence, it may be worth finding out, the difference between a business that holds up under pressure and one that has simply learned to endure it is not always visible from the inside.
Tell us what’s changing
Change exposes pressure patterns. If you want to protect performance and profitability, start here.



