When executive teams talk about transformation, they tend to frame it in terms of speed: implement faster, decide faster, adapt faster.
Artificial intelligence reinforces that logic. We're already hearing about agentic commerce — intelligent agents that will make purchases and choose payment methods autonomously. Technological change is advancing at an exponential pace, and the pressure to keep up is real.
The problem arises when that speed is extrapolated to processes that operate on a different timeline. Cultural change, leadership development, strategic decision-making — none of these processes can be compressed without consequences. When organizations try, they don't gain efficiency. They get exhausted teams that respond to symptoms without understanding the root problem, and leaders who confuse activity with progress.
Hyperactivity has a seductive logic: movement gives the feeling of control. But in contexts of high complexity and uncertainty, moving without first observing is precisely what multiplies errors and burnout. The standard argument is that "there's no time."
But the scarcity isn't time — it's the judgment to manage it. The more honest question isn't whether there's time, but where it's being invested. And when you look closely, a significant portion of that time goes into meetings that produce no decisions, into putting out fires that could have been anticipated, and into implementing solutions to problems that were never deeply analyzed or understood.
Systems thinking offers an operational distinction between zoom in and zoom out.
Without zoom out, leaders end up trapped in an endless chain of urgencies. There's an image that illustrates this well: before attacking, lionesses step back a few paces to widen their field of vision. That step back isn't hesitation — it's part of the strategy. In crisis situations or high-impact decisions, creating distance before moving forward doesn't slow the process down: it makes it more effective.
Something similar happens with metaphorical thinking and the reflection that activates outside the work environment. It's no coincidence that many executives report finding their best insights during activities seemingly far from their professional agenda — gardening, sports, music, or a walk. This isn't avoidance. It's that thinking feeds on different contexts to make connections that daily pressure prevents. Organizations that dismiss these spaces as unproductive are, in fact, squandering a key part of their teams' cognitive capacity.
What's at stake is the identity of leadership itself. Many professionals built their value on permanent availability. For them, pausing calls their role into question: what kind of leaders do they want to be? A leader who doesn't make time to think will struggle to create the conditions for their team to do so.
We are going through a profound reconfiguration of how value is created. In this new paradigm, the most critical capability won't be executing faster — it will be stopping to think clearly.
Organizations that help their leaders develop the ability to read the system before intervening in it won't just weather transformation better — they'll be positioned to lead it.
By Paula De Caro, partner at Olivia.