Why purpose-driven business isn’t risky business

If there is one thing business leaders can agree on today, it is that risk is everywhere. Geopolitical shocks, climate disruption, artificial intelligence, shifting social norms — the pace and complexity of change is relentless. In such conditions, the instinct to tighten control and wait for calmer waters is understandable. But it is also perilous. In a world defined by uncertainty, standing still is often the riskiest move of all.

History proves the point. Kodak invented the digital camera but was fixated on protecting its film cash-cow. Blockbuster optimised its stores and late fees while streaming surged. Bookstore chain Borders outsourced online sales to Amazon and lost its customers. Toys ‘R’ Us was too debt-burdened to invest in omnichannel. Nokia clung to legacy software as the smartphone era dawned. Different sectors, same error: These companies didn’t fail because they took bold bets on the future — they failed because they did the opposite. In their inward-looking complacency, they mistook efficiency for strategy and risk aversion for prudence. The result was premature — and entirely avoidable — demise.

The risk of not acting

Here in New Zealand, as economist Cameron Bagrie recently observed in the New Zealand Herald (28 September 2025), too many boards are going/have gone down the same road. Citing the OECD’s 2022 Economic Survey of New Zealand, he pulled no punches in reminding readers that “Management boards in New Zealand’s firms are often more focused on preserving existing value and regulatory compliance than on growth strategies that involve productivity-enhancing investments and international expansion.”

Relying on old-school thinking, New Zealand’s boardrooms remain preoccupied with preservation over progress and efficiency over strategy. They’ve convinced themselves that waiting is wisdom — that the safest move is no move at all. Which, in plain speak, is inertia.

Yet the world outside their boardrooms is anything but inert. It is shifting — technologically, socially, demographically and geopolitically — at speed. Business governance is shifting too. Yesterday’s ‘business-as-usual’ model is being dismantled in real time by future-focused companies that understand risk and opportunity are now two sides of the same coin. Fossil-fuel firms are being overtaken by purpose-driven clean-tech innovators. Artificial intelligence is redrawing industries and redefining value creation. Conscious consumers are demanding transparency and authenticity. Increasing numbers of workers are gravitating towards employers that share their values and have a purpose beyond just making profit. Investors are pricing sustainability and resilience, not just returns.

Purpose as the antidote to risk and uncertainty

In this environment of constant change, evolving, grasping the future and pivoting towards being purpose-driven is anything but risky — it is the opposite. It is a golden opportunity:

  • To embed a unifying and future-focused governance framework — a Single Organising Idea (SOI®) — that anchors decision-making and aligns the business behind a shared purpose.
  • To shift the focus from protecting the status quo to channelling effort and resources into tangible outcomes that deliver both financial and social value.
  • To empower boards and leaders with a north star that reduces ambiguity, sharpens decision-making and builds the confidence to act.
  • To attract talent, partners and investors who are increasingly drawn to organisations with clarity of purpose and the courage to lead through change.

Because when a business knows who it is, why it exists and how it creates value for others, risk and uncertainty cease to be threats — they become sources of advantage.


NG&A works worldwide. Our Associates are based across the globe, with our head office in New Zealand.

Neil Gaught & Associates Ltd
44 Khyber Pass Rd
Grafton
Auckland 1023
New Zealand
contactus@neilgaught.com

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