“I need to take on enough challenges to keep me interested and engaged with the world, but not too many to the point where I am exhausted.” MIND
Today’s business development and marketing [BDM] professionals sit at the intersection of internal pressure and external volatility: economic uncertainty, tech disruption, hybrid working, generational shifts, post-Covid fatigue, and the climate crisis.
It’s little wonder “resilience” is a boardroom buzzword. Businesses are evolving their working practices and adapting to a working life that embraces AI so now, more than ever, our approach to resilience is important as individuals, teams and organisations.
In professional services, the challenge is amplified by client-first cultures and high responsiveness expectations. These pressures trickle down into BD and marketing teams – often without the autonomy or authority to influence workload or timelines: stress becomes a part of daily working life.
BDM teams often attract service-oriented professionals who aim to over-deliver. Sometimes lumped under the label of ‘people-pleasers’ many chose this career precisely because they thrive on the energy, creativity, and challenge of working with hyper-smart individuals.
Managing stress is very personal and differs between individuals. Research shows that it is easier to develop resilience if we aren’t managing other stressors – such as money, health, family circumstances, loneliness and discrimination – which we may feel are out of our control.
We’ve all heard the jibes: “Gen Z are snowflakes” and “Boomers won’t adapt.” But resilience isn’t about generational tropes – it’s about adapting, performing and staying well under pressure. And in BD and marketing teams, where demands are fast-paced and expectations high, resilience is not a soft skill, it’s business-critical.
Resilience is more than just bouncing back. It’s the ability to navigate change, maintain performance, and manage wellbeing under pressure. The best way to think about resilience is imagining it is a spring – if you subject a spring to stress by stretching it, it will usually spring back into shape.
However, if you stretch it too far, too often, it won’t recover. In the same way an engineer knows the tolerances of their materials, it helps to know your own resilience and – if you manage others – the tolerances of your team members.
Five factors contribute to individual resilience:
The process of building resilience has been termed “ordinary magic” by Ann Masten in her 2001 article on children’s development (American Psychology March 2001 56(3):227-38). Rather than being a result of unusual factors, she found resilience was formed from ordinary rather than extraordinary processes. Building resilience needs the combination of the right environment, right relationships and right opportunities for individuals to safely explore and experiment.
Over delivery can become habit forming. Busy, energetic workers can continue for some time without any visible issues but watch out for early symptoms of burnout or excessive stress.
The short-term symptoms of low resilience include getting stuck on problems, feeling helpless, overwhelmed, anxious or frustrated. The associated behavioural changes are the ones to watch out for, as they might indicate someone needs help. These can manifest as procrastination, poor concentration, withdrawal/detachment, irritability, exhaustion, unhealthy coping mechanisms (food/drink/substance), tardiness or unexplained/increasingly frequent absences.
“My advice would be if you’re feeling stressed, be kind to yourself. Everything starts with you” MIND
Left unchecked, low resilience saps performance and morale – both for the individual and their team. Often the last person to be aware is the person most likely to burnout. I’ve been there: it’s not pretty feeling perpetually tired, fighting brain fog, and being uncharacteristically short-tempered. Fortunately I sought help. But it’s better to avoid it entirely. And that means greater understanding and building up your resilience. Managing stress can help shift you from feeling fragile to becoming agile. So what can you do?
Steps to take to improve your resilience:
A resilience culture doesn’t happen by accident, it requires proactive leadership. If you manage others, then regular self-checks and open dialogue are essential. As a team leader you’ll need to embrace normalising conversations around energy management, not just delivery. Giving your team and yourself permission to say ‘no’ is very important – and helps build a culture of resilience.
Tech might be an enabler, but we also need to adjust our working practices around tech better to ensure it builds rather than weakens resilience. According to Microsoft’s 2023 Work Trend Index, while collaboration tools proliferated, digital overload and mental fatigue rose sharply. The lesson? Structure and clarity matter more than ever and having boundaries in place is important in reducing the leakage between work and leisure time.
There are four pillars to building stronger team resilience:
As a team leader, you’ll need to ensure you’re factoring all of these into how you manage your team. Some top tips for managers:
Resilience doesn’t only sit at individual and team level. Firms that build it into their strategy see stronger performance and retention. But what does that look like in practice? And, as importantly, what should you look out for?
If you’re planning to make your next move to a new firm, then I’d advise you find out about their approach to resilience. Are they agile or fragile? The attitude, processes and adaptability of a firm can make the world of difference to how successful you can be in your new role. Consider asking questions about the following to find out more about their strategic resilience:
If the responses are thin or vague, then you might want to proceed with caution.
Resilience isn’t a one-off trait or exercise. It’s a practice – rooted in mindset, preparation and support, and undertaken consistently. In the high-pressure world of innovative BD and marketing, it’s also potentially one of your competitive advantages when navigating change. Getting it right means both you and your team are more engaged, more agile, more creative, more innovative, more productive and, ultimately, much happier.
Further reading:
https://www.linkedin.com/posts/mhballard_four-types-of-resilience-activity-7270933202880344065-5um1/
https://www.wavestone.com/en/insight/developing-your-resilience-culture/
https://www.ccl.org/articles/leading-effectively-articles/8-steps-help-become-resilient/
https://healthyacadia.org/blog/building-resilience-to-navigate-life-challenges
https://www.open.edu/openlearn/mod/oucontent/view.php?id=140101§ion=_unit2.5
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/embracing-resilient-mindset-world-change-michael-a-campbell-bfhrc/
Gail Jaffa
Managing Partner, PSMG
gail.jaffa@psmg.co.uk
07956 443745
David Leck
Editor, Centrum
david@davidleck.com
07710 326256
davidleck.com
Milly Suttton
Event Manager, PSMG Annual London Summit
milly@mylondonevent.com
07876 643 655
mylondonevent.com
The White Collar Factory
1 Old Street Yard
London
EC1Y 8AF
Tel: 020 39481087
Managing Partner: gail.jaffa@psmg.co.uk