The way we work has changed faster in the last five years than in the two decades before it. Remote, hybrid and field-based roles are now common across almost every industry. Yet as the workforce becomes more mobile, the traditional concept of “duty of care” has struggled to keep pace.
Every organisation talks about safety, but few talk about tiredness. Fatigue is one of the most underestimated risks in the modern workplace. It creeps in quietly, blurs judgment, and makes skilled professionals prone to errors they would never normally make.
According to the American Hospital Association (AHA)’s June 2025 report, U.S. hospitals and health systems spent an estimated $18.27 billion in 2023 dealing with workplace and community violence.
In the last few years, extreme weather events, port congestion, labour shortages, and geopolitical shocks have revealed just how fragile even the most established supply chain can be. For corporate risk managers, operations directors, and procurement leaders, the conversation has shifted from efficiency to resilience.
Every executive knows that unforeseen events are part of modern business. Yet when a crisis hits, the difference between an organisation that navigates it successfully and one that struggles often comes down to the qualities of its leaders. It is not just about having a plan on paper; it is about inspiring confidence, making decisions under pressure, and adapting quickly when circumstances change.