• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

Vested

Based on research with…

HASLAM College of Business. The university of Tennessee, Knoxville
  • Home
  • What Is Vested?
    • Vested FAQ’s
    • The Story of the Vested Movement
    • About the Vested Faculty
  • Books
  • Blog
  • Speaking
  • Resources
    • Books
    • Vested Courses
    • Vested White Paper and Case Study Library
    • Workshops
    • Assessments
    • Vested Toolkit
    • Vested Certified Deal Architects
    • Vested Centers of Excellence Coaching and Consulting
  • Toolkit
  • Courses
    • Overview of Vested Courses
    • Online Courses
    • On Site Courses
    • Certified Deal Architect Program
    • Courseware FAQ
  • Login

The Flip Side of Brexit?

September 7, 2016 by Kate Vitasek

BrexitBrexit isn’t the first major surprise that organizations have had to deal with, nor will it be the last. I’ve written in this space about disruption, specifically about innovative disruption and technological disruption. The current thinking is that disruption can be a good thing if handled correctly – but was the Brexit disruption a good thing?

As usual, the answer is, it depends. In a recent interview, Deloitte Advisory’s Andrew Blau discussed the surprising result of the Brexit referendum, the broader lesson it provides for business leaders, and how to find opportunity amid disruption.

Blau notes that disruption generally “defaults” to technology, but “disruption also occurs when the conditions or assumptions that underlie a company’s business success change—and change quickly. A textbook example? The shock and aftershocks brought about by the Brexit referendum.”

After the June 23 vote to “exit,” businesses “were forced to confront a situation that few had taken seriously,” Blau says. “This is particularly true for companies with investments, people, and exposure in the United Kingdom, as they face unparalleled disruption and a reorientation to a new set of trading relationships.”

But Brexit offers a broader lesson, he continues. Geopolitical, geo-economic, and international issues beyond our control “can suddenly disrupt conditions that had only yesterday seemed like safe bets, and the circumstances upon which we make decisions on how to compete and win in the marketplace can shift in abrupt and unexpected ways.”

Blau cites two challenges as a result of Brexit: The first and most immediate challenge is how business leaders should react to prolonged uncertainty, because “there is no precedent to know what this transformation will look like.”

Get Your Free Copy of THE VESTED WAY

The second and longer-term challenge for business leaders is “how to better anticipate and manage strategic surprise.”

So back to the initial question: is there a flip side to Brexit? In this case it is not a cop-out to say that only time will tell, because estimates of the disruption at hand range anywhere between two to 10 years. It’s hard to make strategic decisions within that time frame because it is difficult to know where and when the opportunities may lie.

“,” Blau says.

The lesson is to move past denial and paralysis and “mobilize” before the dust settles.

Image: Keep calm and carry on #Brexit by #tom #malavoda via Flickr CC

Related posts:

  • Deloitte and the Next Wave of Globalization
  • Deloitte Says Outsourcing “Accelerates Forward”
  • Going “All-In” on Innovation
  • Innovate AND Exnovate

Filed Under: From the Blog Tagged With: Brexit, Deloitte, disruption, innovation, Kate Vitasek, Vested

Vested 411

  • What is Vested
  • Vested FAQ's
  • Vested Faculty

Support

  • Technical Support

Join the Movement

  • Courses
  • Books
  • Speaking

Resources

  • Assessments
  • Books
  • Case Studies
  • White Papers
  • Toolkit
  • Centers of Excellence

Media

  • Contact

Privacy Policy

  • Privacy Policy
11410 NE 124th St. #311 Kirkland, WA 98034
Ph 762-475-8378
[email protected]
Vested

© 2025 Vested Outsourcing Inc. All Rights Reserved.