
The best leaders don’t just push through hard times. They build teams that know how to bend, recover, and grow from them.
By Hall of Fame Speaker & Author Connie Podesta
I have been studying human behavior and working with leaders for 40 years. So I have a lot of opinions about resilience.
The biggest one: resilience is not a personality trait. It is a skill. Learnable, teachable, and very much your job as a leader to model.
Here is what the best leaders I have seen actually do to build resilient teams.
They name what is hard without living there
Resilient leaders do not pretend. They acknowledge the difficulty clearly and briefly, then pivot to the path forward. “This is a tough stretch. Here is how we are going to move through it.” That combination of honesty and direction is extraordinarily powerful.
Skipping the honesty part does not protect your team. It just teaches them not to trust you with the real stuff.
They regulate themselves first
Your team’s nervous system tracks yours. When you are reactive or shut down, your people cannot focus on their work because they are too busy reading your signals.
Know your triggers. Have a plan for the moments when you are about to respond in a way you will regret. The pause is not weakness. It is strategy.
They make meaning out of hard chapters
Resilient leaders help their teams see what grew from the difficulty. The skill built. The clarity gained. The trust earned. When you name it out loud, “look at what we built through that,” you give your team a story about themselves that carries them through the next hard thing.
They use humor as a tool, not a mask
Here is one of my favorite things to teach leaders because it surprises them every time. Humor is not the opposite of seriousness. It is a neurological reset that reduces cortisol, builds connection, and signals safety.
Teams that can find something to laugh about together during a hard stretch consistently outperform teams that cannot. The laugh is not a break from the work. The laugh is the work.
Give yourself and your team permission to find the funny in the difficult. It will not undermine your credibility. It will build it.
They build connection as a daily discipline
Isolated people break. Connected people bend and come back. The research on resilience is clear: strong relationships are the single biggest predictor of how well people handle pressure.
That means connection is not a soft skill. It is a core leadership responsibility. Tend to it accordingly.
Resilience is not about never falling apart. It is about knowing you can put yourself back together. And teaching your team that they can too.
Ready to Give Your Leaders the Edge?
Understanding people is not a soft skill. It is the skill. And when your leaders finally have it, everything else — the culture, the performance, the results — starts clicking into place.
I work with leadership teams in a few different ways. A keynote at your next event. A half or full day workshop, in person or virtual. Or an ongoing coaching engagement with your leadership group. Whatever fits your organization, the goal is the same: leaders who know how to bring out the best in the people around them.
Let’s talk about what that looks like for your team.
Contact me today to explore how my message can be tailored to meet exactly where your team is right now. Whatever the challenge — change fatigue, leadership gaps, sales pressure, culture reset — I’ve got the content, the credentials, and yes, the comedy to make it land.