Senior leadership is demanding, and even the strongest leaders can burn out. Resilience is essential to sustaining performance — and to leading well over time. Here is how to think about it.
Why resilience matters
Senior leadership carries sustained pressure — high stakes, relentless demands, difficult decisions, and, for CEOs especially, isolation. Even highly capable leaders can be worn down over time, and burnout affects not just the leader but the business, which depends on their judgement and energy. Resilience — the capacity to sustain performance and wellbeing under this pressure — is therefore not a soft nicety but essential to leading well over time. It matters for the leader and for those they lead.
Managing energy and boundaries
A key to resilience is managing energy and boundaries deliberately — not treating leadership as an endless sprint of maximum effort, but sustaining performance over the long term. This means protecting time to recover and think, setting boundaries where possible, and being intentional about where energy goes. Leaders who run themselves relentlessly without recovery eventually pay for it, in judgement and health. Sustainable pace and energy management are part of leading well, not a sign of weakness.
Support and perspective
Resilient leaders build support and maintain perspective. The isolation of senior roles makes deliberate support important — peers, mentors, advisors, and honest relationships that provide counsel and a release valve. Maintaining perspective — not letting every pressure feel existential, keeping sight of what matters — also sustains resilience. Leaders who build genuine support and keep perspective weather the pressures of leadership far better than those who carry it all alone and let it consume them.
Recognising burnout early
Finally, resilience includes recognising the signs of burnout — in oneself and in one's leaders — early, before it becomes serious. Persistent exhaustion, cynicism, and declining performance or judgement are warnings worth heeding. Addressing them early, for oneself or a struggling leader, is far better than ignoring them until a crisis. For businesses, supporting leaders' resilience and watching for burnout is part of sustaining strong leadership over time.
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Explore Executive Search →Frequently asked questions
What is executive resilience?
The ability to sustain performance and wellbeing under the sustained pressure of senior leadership — built by managing energy and boundaries, building support, maintaining perspective, and recognising the signs of burnout early. It's essential to leading well over the long term.
How can executives avoid burnout?
By managing energy and boundaries deliberately rather than running relentlessly, building genuine support (peers, mentors, advisors), maintaining perspective, and recognising the signs of burnout — persistent exhaustion, cynicism, declining judgement — early, before they become serious.
Related: How to Retain Your Leadership Team · First-Time CEO: What to Know · Leading Through a Crisis
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