We designed the 2025 CEO Summit to help portfolio CEOs develop, master, and embed healthy urgency into the DNA of the companies they lead. When CEOs create, channel, and sustain focused intensity that drives growth while building positive and sustained organizational capabilities and practices for competitive advantage, they are enabling healthy urgency.
As we finalized preparations for this year’s Summit, originally set in Kiawah Island, a tropical storm and parallel hurricane forecast forced a pivot to a virtual format. We had 48 hours to adapt. Suddenly, we weren't just teaching about urgency, we were living it.
It reminded me why this topic matters for growth-stage, PE-funded CEOs. Urgency isn't optional; it's baked into the business model from the moment the deal closes. Mastering it is the key.
The Paradoxes of Urgency
There is no leadership playbook for the current business environment as we move from a VUCA (Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity, Ambiguity) to BANI (Brittle, Anxious, Non-Linear, Incomprehensible) world. In addition to the pressures to perform and shifting contexts, growth-stage CEOs face a range of urgency paradoxes:
The Urgency Thermostat
Kurt Lewin, the famed early 20th century social psychologist, coined the behavioral equation: B = f (P, E). Behavior is a function of who we are in the context of the environment in which we operate. Stated another way: How we think + how we behave = the impact we make. This equation is highly relevant for modern growth-stage CEOs, who must:
We introduced a central framework through an Urgency Continuum: a thermostat that shows how CEO behavior sets the temperature for an entire organization.
You, as the CEO, are the thermostat. Your team doesn't just hear what you say about urgency; they feel what you emanate. They read your energy, your decision patterns, your recovery rhythms. Whether you realize it or not, you're always modeling what urgency looks like.
Which leads to a growth-stage paradox truth: the very intensity that got you here can become the ceiling that keeps you here. The difference between companies that scale successfully and those that plateau isn't the absence of urgency; it's the quality of that urgency.
Finally, as a Summit prework assignment, we asked attending CEOs to assess where their company stood along the urgency continuum. On average, they identified as being in the mid-range of operational urgency. But it was clear that each CEO might adjust that rating if they considered their board, the executive team, or the overall company’s point of view.
A Foundational Challenge
Working in small, facilitated groups led by experienced board members and former Edison CEOs, we also presented what we call "The Sequence That Works".
Most CEOs try to skip straight to step four. They attempt to create urgency without the foundation of clear planning and true distributed ownership. This doesn't create healthy urgency; it enables manufactured crisis.
One CEO participant put it perfectly during a breakout discussion: "I realized I've been using urgency as a substitute for clarity. When I don't know what to do, I just make everything urgent and hope the team figures it out.” That's the trap. And in a PE-backed environment where the clock is always ticking toward an exit, or another transaction, the temptation to manufacture urgency becomes almost irresistible.
This is where we posed a diagnostic question: When your team delivers on urgent projects, are you building organizational muscle or burning it down?
'Urgent People Systems' rely on individual heroics, burn out high performers, create single points of failure, and don't scale with growth. Urgent Operating Systems build urgency into processes, distribute capability across the team, create sustainable performance, and scale with organizational growth.
We asked participants to identify their top three "urgent people" dependencies: situations where urgent work depends on specific people working unsustainable hours. The discomfort in the (virtual) room was palpable. Most could immediately name names. The follow-up question landed harder: If your top performers quit tomorrow, could someone else deliver this type of urgent work?
Addressing the Question of Urgency Inside Your Company
Consider the following questions for reflection and discussion with your executive leadership team:
On your current state...
On your role as a thermostat...
On sustainability...
Actions to Take
Based on our Summit small-group conversations, we put forth a few practices to breed and sustain healthy urgency as CEO:
The Storm's Lesson
As our weather-forced pivot taught us, healthy urgency isn't about perfect conditions. It's about clear thinking and disciplined execution under constraint.
Several participants said the intimacy of the virtual format actually improved the experience. Small group breakouts created safety for vulnerable peer-to-peer conversations. The constraint forced focus.
That's healthy urgency in action: not the absence of pressure, but the transformation of pressure into productive energy.
Your team is watching how you handle it. What temperature are you setting?