Discover the key situations where leadership is important. Learn when organisations need strong leadership most and how to step up during critical moments.
Written by Laura Bouttell • Tue 1st September 2026
Leadership is important in situations involving uncertainty, change, conflict, or high stakes—moments when groups need direction, motivation, and coordinated action that cannot emerge organically from individual effort alone. Understanding when leadership matters most enables professionals to recognise critical moments and respond with the guidance their teams require.
The question is not whether leadership matters—that much is self-evident—but rather when it matters most. Like the captain of a vessel navigating calm waters versus tempestuous seas, the importance of leadership intensifies dramatically under certain conditions. Gallup research indicates that managers account for 70% of variance in team engagement, but this influence concentrates during specific circumstances rather than distributing evenly across ordinary operations.
This examination identifies the situations where leadership proves indispensable, offering frameworks for recognising these moments and rising to meet them effectively.
Certain situations demand stronger leadership because they overwhelm the capacity of routine processes, established procedures, or individual initiative to produce effective outcomes. These circumstances share common characteristics that create leadership vacuums which, if unfilled, result in organisational paralysis, fragmentation, or failure.
High-leadership-need situations typically exhibit several defining features:
| Characteristic | Description | Leadership Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| Ambiguity | Unclear information, multiple interpretations possible | Sense-making and direction-setting |
| Urgency | Time pressure limiting deliberation | Rapid decision-making authority |
| High Stakes | Significant consequences for success or failure | Accountability and risk management |
| Interdependence | Multiple parties must coordinate actions | Alignment and orchestration |
| Novelty | No established playbook exists | Innovation and adaptation |
| Emotional Intensity | Strong feelings affecting judgement | Emotional regulation and support |
When these characteristics converge, leadership transitions from helpful to essential. The 2010 rescue of Chilean miners trapped underground for 69 days exemplified this convergence—ambiguous technical challenges, life-or-death stakes, multiple government and corporate actors requiring coordination, and intense emotional pressure demanded exceptional leadership at every level.
Crisis situations represent the most obvious circumstances where leadership is important, yet many leaders discover too late that crisis leadership differs fundamentally from steady-state management.
Crisis leadership differs from ordinary management in several critical respects:
Dame Stephanie Shirley, founder of Freelance Programmers, demonstrated crisis leadership when her company faced potential collapse in the early 1970s. Rather than retreating into defensive postures, she made the bold decision to transform her workforce model, pioneering remote work decades before it became mainstream. Her leadership during crisis created competitive advantages that sustained the company for decades.
| Crisis Type | Leadership Priority | Common Failure Mode |
|---|---|---|
| Financial | Stakeholder confidence, resource reallocation | Denial until options narrow |
| Reputational | Transparent communication, values alignment | Defensive messaging |
| Operational | Process stabilisation, customer protection | Blame assignment |
| Personnel | Safety, morale, legal compliance | Delayed response |
| External | Adaptation, advocacy, resilience | Rigid adherence to plans |
"In a crisis, don't hide behind anything or anybody. They're going to find you anyway." — Bear Bryant
Change represents another situation where leadership importance elevates dramatically. Whether the change is strategic transformation, merger integration, restructuring, or cultural evolution, leadership determines whether change initiatives succeed or join the 70% that fail according to McKinsey research.
Change requires intensified leadership because it disrupts the psychological contracts, routines, and relationships that enable people to work effectively. Even positive changes create losses—of familiarity, competence, relationships, or identity—that generate resistance unless leadership provides adequate support.
The leadership requirements during change include:
John Browne's transformation of BP from a mid-sized oil company into a global energy giant required sustained leadership across multiple change initiatives. His ability to articulate a vision of BP as "Beyond Petroleum" whilst simultaneously driving operational excellence demonstrated how change leadership must operate on multiple levels simultaneously.
Leaders during transitions should adopt behaviours that acknowledge uncertainty whilst maintaining forward momentum:
Leadership importance varies across team development stages, peaking during formation and storming phases before evolving into different forms during norming and performing stages.
Bruce Tuckman's model of group development reveals how leadership requirements shift:
| Stage | Team Characteristics | Leadership Importance | Primary Leadership Tasks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Forming | Uncertainty, politeness, dependence | Very High | Direction, structure, relationship building |
| Storming | Conflict, competition, resistance | Very High | Mediation, boundary-setting, encouragement |
| Norming | Cohesion, agreement, clarity | Moderate | Facilitation, delegation, refinement |
| Performing | Autonomy, productivity, flexibility | Lower | Support, resources, obstacle removal |
| Adjourning | Closure, transition, reflection | Moderate | Recognition, learning capture, emotional support |
The Apollo 13 mission control team exemplified leadership adaptation across stages. Flight Director Gene Kranz led with strong direction during the initial crisis (forming around the new challenge), mediated conflicts between engineering factions (storming), facilitated agreement on solutions (norming), and then supported execution (performing)—all within 87 hours.
New teams require directive leadership that provides structure, clarifies expectations, and builds psychological safety. Research by Amy Edmondson demonstrates that psychological safety—the belief that one can speak up without punishment—enables team learning, but creating this safety requires active leadership intervention.
Effective practices for leading new teams:
When decisions carry significant consequences—financial, ethical, strategic, or human—leadership becomes essential for ensuring quality decisions and organisational commitment to implementation.
Certain decisions cannot be effectively delegated because they require:
The decision by Cadbury's leadership to accept Kraft's hostile takeover bid in 2010 demonstrated how high-stakes decisions concentrate at the top. Despite employee opposition and concerns about British manufacturing heritage, the board concluded their fiduciary duties required accepting the premium offer. Whether wise or mistaken, this decision could only be made at the leadership level.
Not every decision requires senior leadership involvement. This framework helps identify which decisions do:
| Factor | Low Leadership Need | High Leadership Need |
|---|---|---|
| Reversibility | Easily reversed | Difficult or impossible to reverse |
| Resource commitment | Modest resources | Major resource allocation |
| Precedent implications | Isolated case | Sets patterns for future |
| Stakeholder impact | Limited stakeholders | Broad stakeholder effects |
| Values alignment | Clearly aligned with values | Potential values tension |
| Strategic significance | Operational matter | Strategic direction |
Conflict situations escalate rapidly without leadership intervention, making early recognition and response essential.
Leaders must intervene when conflicts:
The leadership challenge in conflict involves timing—intervening too early prevents parties from developing their own resolution capabilities, whilst intervening too late allows damage to compound.
| Approach | When Appropriate | Risks |
|---|---|---|
| Facilitation | Parties willing but struggling | May be insufficient for deep conflicts |
| Mediation | Parties seeking resolution | Time-intensive, may not produce agreement |
| Arbitration | Decision needed, parties deadlocked | Creates winners and losers |
| Separation | Relationship irreparable | Disrupts teams, may not address causes |
| Coaching | Individual behaviour driving conflict | Slow, requires behaviour change capacity |
"The quality of our lives depends not on whether we have conflicts, but on how we respond to them." — Thomas Crum
Innovation represents a counterintuitive situation where leadership is important—counterintuitive because creativity seems to flourish with freedom, yet research demonstrates that appropriate leadership structures actually enhance creative output.
Leadership supports innovation by creating conditions where creative work can occur whilst maintaining connection to organisational purpose:
James Dyson's leadership of his engineering company exemplifies innovation leadership. His willingness to invest years and thousands of prototypes in developing the bagless vacuum cleaner, whilst maintaining business viability through licensing agreements, demonstrated how leaders create space for innovation within commercial constraints.
Innovation dies when leaders:
When organisations interact with external stakeholders—investors, regulators, media, partners, or communities—leadership representation becomes essential.
External situations require leadership presence because:
Richard Branson's personal representation of Virgin across diverse stakeholder interactions—from regulatory negotiations to media appearances—demonstrates how leadership presence creates brand value and stakeholder confidence that cannot be delegated.
| Stakeholder | Situations Requiring Leadership | Common Mistakes |
|---|---|---|
| Investors | Results announcements, strategy changes, crises | Delegating difficult conversations |
| Regulators | Major applications, compliance issues, policy discussions | Appearing only when problems arise |
| Media | Breaking stories, industry trends, company milestones | Hiding from scrutiny |
| Partners | Negotiations, relationship issues, strategic discussions | Treating as transactional |
| Communities | Local impacts, charitable engagement, controversies | Engaging only through PR |
Paradoxically, leadership is most important when leadership itself is changing. Succession situations require incumbent leaders to ensure continuity whilst preparing for departure.
Succession represents a leadership-critical moment because:
The transition from Steve Jobs to Tim Cook at Apple demonstrated thoughtful succession leadership. Jobs ensured Cook understood Apple's culture and priorities whilst giving him space to develop his own leadership approach. The result was continuity of values with evolution of practices.
Departing leaders should:
When organisations face ethical dilemmas—situations where values conflict or right action is unclear—leadership becomes essential for navigating these treacherous waters.
Ethical situations demand leadership because:
The leadership of Paul Polman at Unilever demonstrated ethical commitment through actions rather than statements. His decision to eliminate quarterly earnings guidance and focus on long-term sustainable performance required leadership courage that influenced the broader business community's conversation about corporate purpose.
| Ethical Situation | Leadership Requirement | Common Failure |
|---|---|---|
| Whistleblower reports | Protection and investigation | Retaliation or dismissal |
| Competitor intelligence | Boundary setting | Tacit encouragement of violations |
| Customer complaints | Fair resolution | Defensive minimisation |
| Supplier practices | Standards enforcement | Wilful blindness |
| Environmental impacts | Responsible mitigation | Regulatory minimum compliance |
| Employee treatment | Fairness and dignity | Short-term cost focus |
When organisations, teams, or individuals underperform, leadership intervention becomes essential for diagnosing causes and implementing recovery.
Turnaround leadership requires a distinctive combination of capabilities:
Stuart Rose's turnaround of Marks & Spencer beginning in 2004 required each of these elements. His combination of product quality improvements, supply chain restructuring, and brand revitalisation demonstrated how turnaround leadership must operate across multiple dimensions simultaneously.
| Stage | Leadership Focus | Key Actions |
|---|---|---|
| Recognition | Acknowledging reality | Honest assessment, stakeholder communication |
| Stabilisation | Stopping deterioration | Cash preservation, key talent retention |
| Analysis | Understanding causes | Root cause identification, benchmark comparison |
| Planning | Charting recovery path | Strategy development, resource allocation |
| Execution | Implementing changes | Project management, accountability systems |
| Embedding | Sustaining improvements | Culture change, process institutionalisation |
Recognising situations where leadership is important represents a learnable skill that improves with deliberate practice.
To improve your ability to recognise leadership-critical situations:
When uncertain whether a situation requires your leadership intervention, ask:
If you answer "yes" to several of these questions, leadership is likely important to the outcome.
The most common situation requiring leadership is organisational change, affecting virtually every organisation periodically. Change demands leadership for vision articulation, resistance management, and momentum maintenance. Research indicates 70% of change initiatives fail, primarily due to insufficient leadership rather than flawed strategies or inadequate resources.
Step up when you observe uncertainty spreading, decisions being avoided, conflicts escalating, or teams fragmenting. These signals indicate leadership vacuums that someone must fill. If you have relevant expertise, positional authority, or relationship credibility in the situation, you likely have both opportunity and obligation to provide leadership.
Stable situations require different but still important leadership—primarily in maintaining standards, developing people, and preparing for future challenges. However, the intensity of leadership importance concentrates during volatile, uncertain, complex, or ambiguous situations where established routines prove insufficient.
Leadership absence in critical situations typically produces decision paralysis, conflict escalation, communication breakdown, and eventual crisis intensification. Groups without leadership during high-stakes moments often fragment into competing factions or freeze entirely, allowing problems to compound until recovery becomes extremely difficult.
Different situations require adapted leadership approaches. Crisis situations typically demand more directive leadership, whilst innovation contexts benefit from facilitative approaches. Effective leaders develop range across styles and deploy different approaches based on situational requirements rather than personal preference.
Organisations prepare leaders through scenario planning, simulation exercises, developmental assignments, and mentoring from experienced leaders. Exposure to challenging situations under guided conditions builds capabilities that transfer to actual crises. The British Army's approach to officer development through progressive challenges offers a model for leadership situation preparation.
Emotional intelligence proves essential for situational leadership because recognising leadership-critical moments requires reading emotional signals—anxiety, conflict, confusion, or disengagement—that indicate emerging needs. Leaders with strong emotional intelligence detect these signals earlier and respond more effectively than those focused solely on technical or strategic indicators.
Leadership is not uniformly important—its importance concentrates in specific situations where guidance, coordination, and inspiration prove indispensable. Crisis, change, team formation, high-stakes decisions, conflict, innovation, external representation, succession, ethical dilemmas, and turnarounds all demand heightened leadership presence and capability.
The effective leader develops sensitivity to these situations, recognising early indicators that distinguish moments requiring intervention from those best left to established processes. This situational awareness represents perhaps the most valuable leadership capability—knowing not just how to lead, but when leadership matters most.
As you develop your own leadership practice, cultivate this awareness deliberately. Study the situations where your leadership proved consequential. Seek feedback on moments where you might have contributed more. Build your capacity to rise when circumstances demand it, for in those moments, your leadership may prove the difference between organisational success and failure.