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    Home » The Businesses Most at Risk Are Often the Busiest Ones
    EXECUTIVES

    The Businesses Most at Risk Are Often the Busiest Ones

    May 26, 2026
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    Dori Moreno
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    A recent Microsoft Work Trend Index report has revealed that employees are interrupted every two minutes on average by meetings, emails or messages. But the bigger issue is not just interruption — it is what all that activity may be hiding: slow decision-making, poor alignment and stalled execution.

    For Dori Moreno, a growth strategist specialising in the development of individuals, teams and businesses, this reflects a deeper leadership issue she is seeing more frequently inside growing organisations and leadership teams. She observes that leadership teams are confusing motion with progress — everyone is busy, meetings are full, messages are constant, and there is no shortage of effort. But when asked simple questions about what the business is actually trying to move forward, what the priorities are, who owns decisions and what has been agreed, the answers are often far less clear than the activity suggests.

    According to Moreno, many businesses are operating in a state of constant movement without a clear enough strategy underneath it. The result is activity without alignment: organisations that appear productive on the surface while internally struggling with unclear ownership, reactive decision-making and effort that does not always move the business forward. Leaders are so busy doing that they are not thinking — solving operational issues, sitting in meetings, dealing with inefficiencies and firefighting problems that should often sit elsewhere in the business.

    This is especially common in founder-led and organically grown businesses, particularly SMEs that have scaled successfully through instinct, speed and operational involvement. While that approach can drive growth in the early stages, Moreno says many businesses eventually reach a point where the same leadership habits that helped them grow begin limiting the next phase of expansion. A business can grow organically for a long time because of the founder’s energy, instinct, experience and involvement, but at a certain stage the founder has to start seeing the business as its own entity, with its own systems, leadership capacity and future.

    Moreno says the problem is often misdiagnosed as workload, poor communication or underperformance, when the real issue is a lack of strategic clarity and leadership alignment. She adds that the pattern is often reinforced when businesses promote strong operators into leadership roles without helping them shift into true people leadership. Many people are promoted because they are excellent at the work, but being operationally strong does not automatically mean someone can build alignment, manage people, create ownership or enable growth.

    Leaders often cite symptoms — an overwhelmed team, people not taking ownership, poor communication — when these are frequently consequences rather than causes. A team cannot take ownership if ownership has not been clearly defined. Communication cannot improve if decisions are not properly closed. Performance cannot stabilise if priorities keep changing.

    This lack of clarity tends to show up first in priorities, decision-making, ownership and culture. Everything starts becoming important, which means nothing really is. Decisions get reopened repeatedly because people are not sure where their responsibility starts and ends. What many organisations call culture is often just language on a wall — real culture is what people experience in decisions, accountability, feedback, conflict and behaviour under pressure.

    The issue becomes even more visible during periods of uncertainty. Moreno explains that external pressure often pushes leadership teams into reactive behaviour, where immediate problems consume all available attention and longer-term thinking disappears. When panic starts shaping the business, people become anxious, decisions become reactive, and the organisation loses the ability to think clearly. The issue is not always poor planning — it is often poor strategic discipline under pressure.

    For teams on the ground, the consequences have a knock-on effect. People can handle hard work better than they can handle unclear work. What drains people is not only the volume of work, but the constant uncertainty around what matters, what has changed, who is responsible, and whether today’s instruction will still apply tomorrow.

    Moreno recently worked with a business of more than 100 employees where the problem was not disengagement or lack of effort, but too much energy being spent compensating for unclear systems and informal ways of working. People cared deeply about the business and were working hard, but much of that effort was being used to navigate uncertainty instead of moving the business forward. The issue was alignment, not commitment.

    Moreno believes many leadership teams need to confront an uncomfortable possibility: effort is not always the problem. A busy team is not necessarily an aligned team. Activity can hide a lack of direction for a long time, and good numbers can hide it too. At some point, leadership has to stop asking whether people are working hard enough and start asking whether the business is actually clear enough for that work to lead anywhere meaningful.

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