During this chaotic time, social impact leaders have a new task in front of them: metabolizing disruption. This is the work of discerning signal from noise, deepening relationships when funding is uncertain, and protecting people, resources, and values while the ground keeps shifting. More and more, this is what leadership requires.
Across the sector, we keep seeing extraordinary courage. It’s coming from every corner of mission-driven organizations. Executive leaders, middle managers, program staff, and frontline teams are all making hard choices in real time. In a moment like this, leadership often looks like clarity, steadiness, and wise judgment under pressure.
A few common patterns keep emerging:
- Strong organizations stay focused on what must be preserved. They protect the mission, reprioritize quickly, and make hard tradeoffs while holding onto their identity. Amidst the noise, they keep listening for the signal. And again and again, that signal is found in the mission itself.
- They work as collaborative ecosystem actors. They coordinate rather than compete. They invest in trust-based relationships that help them move faster, make difficult decisions, and sustain legitimacy during instability. In times like these, trust does more than strengthen partnership. It becomes a shock absorber.
- They build operational agility. Lean decision-making, rapid experimentation, and strong coordination help them pivot while staying effective. They understand that adaptation is no longer occasional. It is part of the ongoing work.
- And they turn disruption into learning. They ask: What has changed? What must we learn? What new capabilities do we need now?
That shift matters. When disruption is metabolized, it can become learning. Learning can become capacity. Capacity can help an organization move forward with greater wisdom.
For over a year, we have had the privilege of working with leaders in the Minnesota Department of Health’s Infectious Disease Division. They have been navigating federal funding clawbacks, the loss of expertise following layoffs, and relentless political pressure on public health work.
And still, they keep moving the mission forward.
What stands out is a growing discipline. They’re strengthening coordination, improving how they prioritize, and staying focused on where their agency lives in the middle of continuous disruption. Most importantly, they’re turning exhaustion into learning and learning into better choices.
That is what metabolizing disruption looks like.

