Home » Uncategorized » Decision-Making Under Pressure How Future-Ready Leaders Stay Clear When Everything Feels Urgent
Learn continually – there’s always “one more thing” to learn! – Steve Jobs
By the time you reach the top of a Fortune 500 organisation, you’re no stranger to pressure. What changes is not whether pressure exists, but how frequently, how publicly, and how consequential your decisions become.
In today’s environment – geopolitical tensions, AI disruption, regulatory shifts, talent shortages – executives are expected to make fast, high-stakes decisions with incomplete information, while remaining calm, ethical, and forward-looking. That is no small task.
After coaching senior leaders across Singapore and the region, I’ve observed this clearly:
Great leadership under pressure is not about having nerves of steel. It’s about having systems – internal and external – that keep your judgment intact.
Let’s start with the science.
Under pressure, the brain shifts into threat mode. The amygdala becomes dominant, cortisol rises, and the prefrontal cortex – the part responsible for rational thinking, long-term planning, and ethical judgment – becomes less effective.
A well-cited study by Harvard Business School shows that stress can reduce working memory capacity by up to 30%. Another McKinsey study found that executives under sustained pressure were more likely to default to familiar patterns, even when those patterns no longer fit the situation.
When pressure is high, we think narrower, not necessarily better.
This is why capable leaders sometimes:
A regional CEO I coached last year was facing a major restructuring decision. Investor pressure was mounting. Employees were anxious. The media was watching.
On paper, the data supported a swift cost-cutting move.
But in our sessions, it became clear that he was making decisions late at night, after back-to-back calls, with little recovery time. His language shifted from strategic to defensive:
“What if we don’t act fast enough?”
“What if the market thinks we’re weak?”
Once we slowed things down just enough, he recognised that the real risk wasn’t speed. It was eroding trust internally while chasing external reassurance.
The final decision was still decisive, but more measured. Six months later, not only did performance stabilise, employee attrition dropped sharply.
Pressure doesn’t demand a faster decision. It demands a clearer one.
We often celebrate leaders who “decide quickly.” Speed looks confident. It reassures stakeholders.
But research from MIT Sloan suggests that decision effectiveness peaks at moderate speed, not maximum speed. Leaders who pause, even briefly, to reframe the problem make significantly better strategic calls over time.
The real skill is not speed. It is disciplined pacing.
As Warren Buffett famously said:
“The most important quality for an investor is temperament, not intellect.”
The same applies to executives.
From my work with senior leaders, five practices consistently stand out.
Not everything that feels urgent deserves immediate action.
Future-ready leaders ask:
This simple filter prevents reactive moves that look good short-term but damage enterprise value.
The best decisions under pressure are often made before the crisis, through:
When pressure rises, leaders don’t start from zero – they execute from clarity.
This is often overlooked.
Leaders who consistently make good decisions under pressure pay attention to:
Simple breath regulation techniques can lower cortisol in minutes, restoring cognitive clarity. This isn’t “soft.” It’s neuroscience.
As one CFO told me after adopting this practice:
“I didn’t change my strategy. I changed my state. The decisions followed.”
This might mean:
Pressure compresses perspective. Space restores it.
Waiting for certainty is often a disguised fear response.
Strong leaders ask instead:
Jeff Bezos describes this as distinguishing between Type 1 (irreversible) and Type 2 (reversible) decisions, a powerful mental model for pressure environments.
In Singapore and across Asia, we are entering a period where calm judgment will outperform raw brilliance.
AI will provide more data. Markets will move faster. Stakeholders will be louder.
What will truly differentiate leaders is this:
The ability to remain grounded, ethical, and forward-looking when others are reactive.
Decision-making under pressure is not a personality trait. It is a trainable leadership capability – built through awareness, preparation, and resilience.
And perhaps the most important reminder I leave leaders with is this quote by Viktor Frankl:
“Between stimulus and response, there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response.”
In leadership, that space is where your legacy is shaped.For help building decision-making frameworks & habits that guide you through our modern VUCA world, write in to Coach Sam at sam@coaching.com.sg
Comment: Is there any tip/hack that you have personally used in order to learn things quickly which has not been covered in this blog?
Let me know in the comment section below, I would love to hear your stories.
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