Strategic Crisis: Leaders' Constant Busyness Threatens Business Viability, New Data Warns
Breaking News: The Hidden Cost of Busyness
A startling new wave of data reveals that leaders' addiction to constant busyness is actively crippling strategic thinking, putting the long-term survival of their businesses at risk. According to the Microsoft Work Trend Index 2025, 80% of employees and leaders report insufficient time or energy to complete their work, while 52% of leaders describe their work environment as chaotic and fragmented.

“Just because you can doesn’t mean you should,” says a senior leadership coach who has observed the trend across multiple sectors. “Many leaders are mistaking frantic activity for effective leadership, when in reality it’s a coping mechanism that masks deeper issues.”
The Data Speaks: A System in Overdrive
Leaders today face unprecedented inflection points: AI breakthroughs emerge weekly, geopolitical tensions disrupt supply chains overnight, and market uncertainty reshapes consumer behavior. Yet, as the PWC 27th Global CEO Survey (2024) found, 63% of APAC CEOs believe their business will not be viable in a decade without major transformation—but they remain consumed by short-term operational demands.
“They’re so engrossed in the dance floor, they forget to get up to the balcony for a broader view,” warns Ron Heifetz, senior lecturer at the Harvard Kennedy School, using a metaphor that underscores the strategic myopia caused by constant busyness.
Background: Why Leaders Choose Busyness
Busyness often arises as a reaction to overwhelm. When faced with daunting shifts, old habits kick in: leaders dive into action to regain a sense of control. A full calendar and completed tasks feel like progress, signaling urgency and modeling clarity to teams.
But this is a folly. “Control is not the answer when we’re at critical inflection points,” notes the coach. “Constant activity actually prevents leaders from addressing poor performance, lack of accountability, and the need for creative innovation.”
What This Means: The Real Cost of Doing Too Much
The opportunity cost is steep. When leaders are stuck in the weeds of daily operations, they miss the bigger picture—emerging threats, transformative opportunities, and the chance to pivot strategically. Cost-cutting becomes the default response, offering momentary relief but sacrificing long-term growth.
Meanwhile, teams suffer: the same Microsoft report shows that 80% of employees lack energy, and the chaotic meeting culture (ad hoc, after-hours) erodes morale and productivity. Without deliberate space for strategic thinking, businesses risk becoming obsolete.
Learn more about the root causes in our Background section. For a deeper analysis of what leaders can do instead, jump to What This Means.
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