
“Climbing Through Change: How Everest Teaches Us to Adapt and Lead in Uncertainty”
In the corporate world, leadership is often defined by strategy, vision, and results. But true leadership is tested in moments when uncertainty clouds judgment, when risks are high, and when decisions have to be made with incomplete information.
For us, that test came not in a boardroom, but on the slopes of Mt. Everest and gave us a unique perspective on Crisis Management.
The Avalanche: When Everything Changed in an Instant
On 25th April 2015, as we sat sipping tea at Everest Base Camp, the ground shook violently beneath us. Within seconds, the roar of an avalanche filled the valley. We were thrown off our feet, buried under snow and ice. When we clawed our way out, the camp we knew was gone—tents flattened, equipment scattered, climbers injured and calling out for help.
I still remember one climber, covered in snow and blood, looking at me with panic in his eyes:
“What do we do now? Do we run? Do we wait?”
At that moment, our years of planning, logistics, and summit dreams evaporated. The challenge was no longer about reaching the top of the world. The challenge was survival—and deciding whether to retreat to safety or stay back and help others.
That decision marked a profound leadership lesson: sometimes, true leadership means setting aside personal goals to serve the greater good.
Crisis Management: Decisions in the “Death Zone”
At altitudes above 8,000 meters—the aptly named Death Zone—every decision carries weight. Do you push for the summit with worsening weather, or turn back and live to climb another day? In 2017, during another Everest attempt, I recall our Sherpa gasping through his oxygen mask:
“Sam Dai, if we don’t move now, we may not make it down at all.”
The decision to descend in that storm was agonizing. Months of preparation and sponsorship were at stake. But the mountain doesn’t care about sunk costs. Logic had to prevail over emotion.
From Everest, we learned that effective crisis management demands:
- Critical Decision-Making in Uncertainty – Acting decisively when the full picture isn’t clear. Waiting for certainty often leads to disaster.
- Risk Assessment & Prioritization – Balancing ambition with safety. Knowing which risks to take and which to walk away from.
- Logic Over Instinct – Emotions scream “push on.” Leadership whispers “think long-term.”
Change Management: Turning Adversity into Opportunity
After the avalanche of 2015, Base Camp was silent except for the distant rumble of aftershocks. In the mess tent, someone finally asked:
“Are we going home?”
We looked around at the injured, at the chaos, and made our choice: “No. We’re staying. If we can’t climb, we’ll help.”
That shift—from chasing the summit to becoming part of the rescue effort—was not what we had planned. But it became one of the most meaningful decisions of our lives.
This is the essence of change management: when circumstances shift dramatically, leaders must pivot with clarity and purpose.
In organizations, change often feels like an avalanche—sudden, overwhelming, and destructive. Employees look to leaders not just for instructions, but for reassurance and direction. Leaders who can reframe priorities, communicate purpose, and guide their teams through uncertainty build resilience and loyalty that lasts far beyond the crisis.
Key Change Lessons from Everest:
- Adaptability Over Rigidity – Plans will collapse. Adaptability is survival.
- Communicating Purpose – People follow meaning, not just orders. Purpose rallies teams in chaos.
- Transforming Setbacks into Growth – Our abandoned summit attempt became a story of resilience that shaped Adventure Pulse. In business, setbacks can become catalysts for innovation.
Change Management for the better
When Starbucks expanded too fast in the 2000s, quality slipped and customer loyalty began to decline. The financial crisis made things worse. Howard Schultz returned as CEO in 2008 and made tough change management calls — shutting down hundreds of underperforming stores, retraining baristas, and refocusing on customer experience rather than aggressive expansion. That turnaround brought Starbucks back to growth and is often cited as a practical, people-centric example of managing change.
Leadership Beyond the Summit
Leadership in adversity isn’t about bravado or heroics. It’s about resilience, empathy, and clarity when others are overwhelmed by fear. It’s about knowing when to lead from the front, when to support from behind, and when to sacrifice personal wins for the collective good.
Our Everest journey taught us that true leadership is not defined by standing on top of the world, but by the decisions made when everything seems to be falling apart. Whether in the mountains or in the corporate world, leaders who embrace crisis as a crucible for growth—and change as a catalyst for transformation—are the ones who inspire trust and create lasting impact.
If your organization is navigating change or grappling with uncertainty, we invite you to explore our Leadership in Adversity Webinar—an immersive experiential program where we bring these lessons from Everest into the boardroom. Through real-life accounts, decision-making simulations, and reflective discussions, we help leaders not just manage crisis, but thrive in it.
Because in the end, leadership is not about avoiding storms, but about learning how to navigate through them.