Event report
Webinar | Navigating the Next Phase: Resilience, Recovery and Business Momentum in the Gulf
From passive resilience to decisive action: why the next 90 days will define competitive positioning in the GCC
In a context shaped by geopolitical tensions, supply chain disruptions, and prolonged uncertainty, companies operating in the Gulf face a dangerous illusion: macroeconomic stability as a shield. During this webinar, TNP leaders delivered a clear message: waiting is no longer a neutral stance, but the riskiest one. Between margin pressure, structural dependencies, and execution gaps, the ability to make fast, targeted decisions is emerging as the key differentiator. The coming weeks will not simply test resilience, they will determine who captures the next wave of growth.
“The most common posture in organization right now, it’s some version of wait and see… we think that posture is a trap.”
Moving beyond the illusion of stability toward decisive strategic action
The opening argument challenges a widely shared instinct: caution. Many organizations are adopting a “wait and see” posture, perceived as prudent but, in reality, increasingly dangerous. In the GCC, this inertia is amplified by a structural bias: the presence of sovereign wealth and strong national balance sheets creates a sense of macro stability. As Benoit Ranini points out, “leadership teams start to confuse national resilience with corporate resilience.” Yet, this perceived safety net does not protect margins, revenue models, or cost structures. The strategic tension is stark: absorb the shock or actively reposition. Companies that will emerge stronger are not those that endure best, but those that move fastest. This requires a shift in management logic, away from outdated annual budgets toward new metrics, such as speed of reallocation. The real differentiator is no longer resilience itself, but the ability to pivot under pressure.
“Protect what you still have right now. Not recover, not rebuild, but protect.”
Redirecting commercial efforts toward resilient and growing revenue pools
The second imperative reframes commercial strategy with urgency and precision. The objective is not recovery, but protection and redeployment. Revenue streams tied to international flows (tourism, cross-border services) remain structurally constrained and slow to rebound. However, not all markets are equally affected. As highlighted during the session, “domestic B2B spending is structurally protected,” while certain regional corridors, particularly with South Asia, are outperforming expectations. The strategic implication is immediate: reallocate commercial resources toward segments that are active today. This may involve repackaging offerings for domestic clients or redirecting sales teams to regional opportunities. The tension lies in abandoning familiar markets in favor of less traditional, but more accessible, growth drivers. Organizations that act now can secure short-term revenue while competitors remain focused on eventual recovery.
“Cutting costs and building flexibility are two completely different exercises.”
Shifting from cost reduction to structural adaptability
In an environment where cost pressures are persistent rather than temporary, driven by logistics disruptions, energy volatility, and trade friction, the traditional response of cost-cutting proves insufficient. “Cutting protects your cash flow today. Flexibility gives you the ability to adapt,” Julien Benitah emphasizes. The challenge is to transform fixed cost structures into variable ones, enabling organizations to absorb ongoing volatility. Practical levers include renegotiating contracts with flexibility clauses, adopting modular resource models, and revisiting logistics arrangements. The strategic trade-off is clear: immediate savings versus long-term adaptability. Timing is critical: negotiating from a position of strength today, rather than under pressure tomorrow. For CFOs, the framework is actionable: identify fixed commitments and assess whether they can be restructured within 90 days. This exercise becomes a cornerstone of financial resilience.
“What was optimized for a stable world has become a liability in an unstable one.”
Reducing critical dependencies to mitigate systemic risk exposure
The current crisis exposes a fundamental vulnerability: over-concentration. Strategies designed for efficiency (centralized logistics, single-source suppliers, concentrated cloud infrastructure) now represent structural risks. “If you have no viable alternative… you don’t have a logistic strategy. You have a bet.” This applies equally to physical and digital infrastructures. For instance, concentrating critical workloads in a single cloud region creates exposure comparable to relying on a single shipping route. The tension here is between efficiency and resilience. Diversification comes at a cost, but failing to diversify increases exposure to disruption. An often-overlooked dimension is insurance: many business interruption policies exclude force majeure or cyber events, leaving companies financially exposed. The implication is clear: resilience must be engineered, not assumed.
“Every in-flight transformation initiative belongs in one of these three buckets: accelerate, reframe, or stop.”
Reallocating transformation capital to high-impact priorities
With constrained resources and shifting priorities, transformation portfolios require rigorous reassessment. The proposed framework (accelerate, reframe, or stop) forces decisive action. Initiatives aligned with current needs (operational autonomy, digital capabilities, supply chain resilience) should be accelerated. Those still relevant but based on outdated assumptions must be redesigned. Others, lacking strategic value in the current context, should be discontinued. As noted, “the cost of continuing a program with logic no longer holds is not zero.” This is not merely a financial issue: it is about management attention and execution capacity. The tension is internal: overcoming organizational inertia and vested interests to reallocate resources effectively. This triage becomes a defining test of leadership discipline.
“The standard corporate risk framework were not built to manage the crisis you are facing.”
Embedding extreme risk management into corporate governance
The final shift concerns the nature of risk management itself. Existing frameworks are designed for volatility, not rupture. “Risk committees assess probability. They don’t war game rupture scenario.” The proposed approach introduces practices from military environments: scenario simulations, real-time intelligence, and pre-authorized response plans. A concrete example was shared from the automotive sector, where war rooms were deployed to manage supplier risk in real time. This represents a profound shift, from reactive crisis management to proactive scenario planning. The organizational challenge is significant: integrating these capabilities into governance structures traditionally built for stability. This includes the emergence of a Chief Risk Officer with a comprehensive, cross-functional mandate. The objective is clear: anticipate disruptions and act before they escalate.
Watch the replay now
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OWGfURmUkyY
