Change Management
Execution
Process
Strategy
September 16, 2021

6 Questions to Lead Your Team Through the Pandemic Leadership Principle

Contributor
Scott Cochrane
Scott Cochrane
Vice President of International
|
Global Leadership Network
6 Questions to Lead Your Team Through the Pandemic Leadership Principle

As tragic and as challenging as the Covid-19 pandemic has been, if you look closely enough, you’ll discover that it has also contained some important and timeless leadership lessons.

Among the most important principles, it has taught us this powerful truth:

In tumultuous times, hold your vision tightly and your strategies loosely.

I have come to refer to this as the PLP: the Pandemic Leadership Principle.

On March 13th, 2020, the truth of this principle became very real to me as I found myself sitting in a hotel in Johannesburg, South Africa, wondering how, or if, I would be able to return home to Chicago.

That day, the United States had declared Covid-19 a National Emergency and had announced air travel from Europe to the United States for non-U.S. citizens was now being closed.

In tumultuous times, hold your vision tightly and your strategies loosely.

I quickly recognized I had a potentially serious problem on my hands. My travel itinerary home from Africa was to see me leave Johannesburg in a few days’ time with flights to Frankfurt, Germany, then connecting on to Chicago. But now, for Americans and U.S. Permanent Residents (like me), getting home through Europe was looking tenuous, at best.

But this is where the Pandemic Leadership Principle kicked in. My vision remained unchanged; I wanted to get home to Chicago. But now I needed to be agile and flexible when it came to my strategy; my itinerary would need to be adaptable.

Some 48 stress-filled hours later, I was safely home. My vision (return home) had remained unflinchingly consistent, but my strategy (my original travel itinerary) had to be quickly changed. But the lessons that the Pandemic Leadership Principle would teach me were just beginning.

Following the initiative of The Global Leadership Summit here in the United States, which immediately adapted to a digital model, we began to overhaul our international strategy as well. This meant:

      • Transitioning 184 sites around the world from an in-person model to a digital model
      • Creating hundreds of “community micro-gatherings” in the developing world, where data was unavailable or too expensive for many people
      • In countries like India, re-formatting the GLS to be “Smart Phone Friendly”, knowing that thousands of people would be experiencing the Summit on their personal devices

The vision never changed—Excellent leadership was needed even more so now.

The strategies were overhauled.

As you and your team continue the challenging work of navigating your organization through this tumultuous season, take time this week to conduct a Pandemic Leadership Principle audit with your team by working through these six questions:

      1. How committed are we to the mission and vision of the organization?
      2. How could we reenergize our organization around our mission and vision?
      3. If we were starting our organization today, in today’s reality, which of our current strategies would we retain?
      4. Which strategies would we jettison?
      5. What new strategies would we introduce?
      6. What obstacles to these changes can we anticipate and remove?

As I sat in my Johannesburg hotel in March of 2020, my unwavering vision had never been clearer. Nor had my willingness to completely change my strategy to accomplish that vision.

As you continue to lead through these tumultuous times, may the same Pandemic Leadership Principle help your own leadership to thrive, as you hold your vision tightly and your strategies loosely.

Leading Others
Leading Organizations
March 21, 2024

The Paradoxical Superpower: Humility in Leadership

Leading Organizations
Leading Others
September 15, 2022

5 Emergency Preparedness Tips to Lead Through Crisis

Leading Others
Leading Organizations
August 4, 2022

The Leadership Genius Behind a Hollywood Legend—GLS22 Session Notes

No items found.
November 18, 2025

The Tech CEO who sold his home to live with the formerly homeless

Larry Smith, a former semiconductor executive, left his comfortable life to live in an RV at Community First! Village in Austin, where he and his wife built deep relationships with formerly homeless neighbors and lived out their faith in radical community. Now retired, Larry works to expand the model nationally, advising government leaders one day and equipping churches to serve marginalized people the next.
No items found.
November 6, 2025

Self-Care Should Not Be Selfish: Why Leaders Thrive When They Look Beyond Themselves

Sophia’s story illustrates how modern self-care culture, with its heavy focus on individual optimization, is actually deepening loneliness and exhaustion among leaders. Research shows that genuine well-being is strengthened not by withdrawing from others, but by meaningful connection and contributing to the lives of those around us.
No items found.
October 20, 2025

Does your team have a microculture?

A microculture is a group within your organization that has a distinct personality. These groups might form naturally based on shared interests or backgrounds, or they might be formal work teams that develop their own norms and dynamics.

Leadership That Lasts

Team365 isn’t just a platform. It’s a commitment to grow, lead and live with purpose — every single day. Whether you’re here for content, community or clarity, you’re in the right place. Your leadership matters. Let’s keep going.

Join Team365