Leading Through Turbulence: What Aviation Can Teach Today’s Business Leaders
What can aviation teach leaders when turbulence hits? Emma Henderson shares why adaptability, trust and clear communication matter in uncertain times.
What can aviation teach leaders when turbulence hits? Emma Henderson shares why adaptability, trust and clear communication matter in uncertain times.
Watch the full video interview below.
Drawing from years of experience in aviation — one of the world’s most high-pressure industries — Emma Henderson, explores how leaders can remain calm, communicative, and adaptable when turbulence hits both organizations and people.
At the heart of the discussion is a powerful idea: “You have to keep flying the plane.” In other words, leaders cannot afford to lose focus on the mission while reacting to constant disruption, change, and pressure.

“The businesses that succeed won’t be the ones with the least turbulence — they’ll be the ones most adaptable within it.”
– Emma Henderson
The conversation highlights why communication becomes even more critical during difficult moments. According to the Emma, many leaders become so focused on solving problems that they forget to communicate clearly with the people around them — employees, customers, stakeholders, and teams. Under pressure, decision-making naturally narrows, which is why strong structures, clear processes, and repeated messaging are essential.
Emma challenges HR leaders to move beyond a purely operational role and step into a more strategic “co-pilot” position within organizations. As the function that understands people, culture, retention, and workforce challenges better than anyone else, HR holds data and insight that are increasingly valuable in an AI-driven and rapidly changing business environment.
Another key theme is trust. In aviation, trust must be established almost instantly between people operating under immense responsibility. The same principle applies to leadership today: trust is built through presence, relationships, and genuine human interaction — not only through systems and screens.
She also emphasizes the growing importance of face-to-face connection in a world dominated by digital communication. While technology keeps us constantly connected, it can never fully replace the trust, empathy, and understanding created through real human encounters.
Ultimately, the message is clear: the organizations that succeed in the future will not necessarily be the ones facing the least turbulence — but the ones that become the most adaptable within it.
In a world where disruption is permanent, agility, communication, and human-centered leadership are no longer optional. They are the operating system of modern leadership.