If we asked whether your team is functioning but fragile, what would you say?
Most leaders would look at performance metrics, delivery rates, productivity dashboards. The team is hitting targets. People are showing up. Work is getting done. Everything looks fine.
But beneath the surface, there’s a different reality. According to the Resilience Institute’s 2025 Global Report, which analysed data from 8,419 professionals across five continents, 54% of workers sit in what researchers call the “Challenged” range. They’re showing up, delivering results, and maintaining professional standards — but they’re operating without reserves, one unexpected demand away from genuine struggle.
Individual weakness or poor work ethic isn’t the issue. Organisations are asking people to perform at levels that exceed their capacity to recover.
The real question for leaders: is that pressure building capacity or simply depleting it?
Understanding What Resilience Actually Means
Resilient teams aren’t collections of individually tough people who simply endure more. They’re systems built on collective capabilities: shared psychological safety, distributed support, and the organisational conditions that allow people to recover from setbacks rather than accumulate them.
From our experience working with organisations, sustainable performance isn’t about finding people who can take more pressure. It’s about creating conditions where people can perform well without burning through the capacity that makes performance possible in the first place.
The Capabilities That Sustain Performance
Identifying What’s Already Working
The temptation when addressing resilience is to focus on problems, gaps, and what’s missing. But lasting resilience builds on strengths, not deficits. Every team, regardless of current challenges, has existing capabilities they’re already using to manage difficult situations.
Consider these questions:
- What does your team do well when facing tight deadlines?
- How do they support each other during demanding periods?
- What informal practices have emerged for managing stress or recovering from setbacks?
These questions help you recognise and amplify what’s already contributing to resilience.
Creating Space for Honest Conversation
Psychological safety directly predicts team resilience. Teams where people can acknowledge when they’re struggling, when they need support, or when something isn’t working adapt faster and recover more effectively than those where everyone pretends to be coping.
Psychological safety is built through specific leadership behaviours:
- Responding to problems without blame
- Treating mistakes as information rather than failures
- Demonstrating through action that vulnerability doesn’t carry professional risk
Distributing Support Across the System
One person, typically a manager, cannot be the sole source of support for an entire team. Resilient teams develop peer support networks where help flows in multiple directions, not just top-down.
This means creating opportunities for shared problem-solving, structured check-ins, and open discussion of challenges. It means building a culture where asking for help is seen as professional judgement, not inadequacy.
The Practical Work of Building Resilience
Managing Energy, Not Just Time
The dominant productivity metaphor treats people like machines: more input should produce more output. This misunderstands how human performance actually works.
People don’t operate at constant capacity. Cognitive function, emotional regulation, and physical energy fluctuate throughout the day and across weeks. Sustainable performance requires matching demands to available energy and creating genuine opportunities to recover.
Be strategic about when you ask for peak performance and ensure recovery follows intense effort.
Reconnecting Work to Meaning
In conversations with L&D leaders, we hear that stress and overload quickly erode people’s sense of meaning. When people lose sight of why their work matters, resilience depletes even when capability remains intact.
Leaders who sustain team resilience help people maintain the connection between daily work and meaningful impact. Consistently remind teams how their specific contributions connect to outcomes that matter — especially during demanding periods.
Building Recovery Into Rhythm
Recovery isn’t what happens after work is complete. For most teams, work is never fully complete. Waiting for a natural break means never actually recovering.
Resilient teams build recovery into their regular rhythm. This might mean:
- Protected time for focused work without meetings
- Clear expectations around after-hours communication
- Project timelines that acknowledge the need for breathing space between intense efforts
Making It Real
We speak with businesses regularly about building sustainable team performance. Our Leadership and Management programmes address the capabilities leaders need to support resilient teams: creating psychological safety, managing team energy strategically, and building support systems that don’t rely on heroic individual effort.
Resilience develops through consistent attention to the conditions that support sustainable performance: psychological safety that enables honest conversation, peer support that distributes care, energy management that respects human limitations, and leadership that prioritises long-term capacity over short-term extraction.
Teams that thrive have the capabilities, support, and leadership to navigate pressure without depleting the very capacity that makes performance possible.
References
All statistics in this article are sourced from global workplace research:
- 54% of the global workforce sits in the “Challenged” range — Resilience Institute 2025 Global Report (November 2025)
Source:
https://resiliencei.com/resources/research/2025-global-resilience-report/









