Most businesses donโt โsuddenlyโ fail.
They sink slowly.
Not because they hit an iceberg out of nowhere, but because they ignored the warning signs that were flashing in plain sight.
In this episode of Impactful Teamwork, I unpack reinvention through a story you already know, the Titanic. Not for drama, but for truth.
Because if youโre leading a scaling business right now, youโre navigating icy waters whether you admit it or not.
And your job is not to be fearless.
Your job is to be awake.
Reinvention is not โnewโ, itโs evolution
Two weeks ago, I talked about reinvention or extinction, and Iโm doubling down today.
Reinvention is:
- taking the best from the past
- adapting it for the future
- staying responsive as the world shifts beneath you
Itโs why leaders now spend a huge chunk of their time reinventing, not just โmanagingโ. Because the pace of change doesnโt care about your org chart.
Weโve seen what happens when businesses donโt evolve:
- Nokia didnโt adapt fast enough
- Blockbuster didnโt take streaming seriously
- Netflix reinvented itself again and again, from distribution to production
The lesson is brutal and liberating:
the market rewards the teams who notice early and move together.
The Titanic didnโt just hit an iceberg, it ignored six signals
Hereโs the part most people miss.
The Titanic had warning signs. Six of them.
And when I look at teams struggling with misalignment, silos, decision drag, burnout, trust breakdown, I see the same pattern.
Letโs walk through the six signs, and what they look like in modern business.
1) The missing handover: โWeโll just figure it outโ
On the Titanic, a last-minute leadership change happened, and no proper handover took place. Crucially, the keys to an important cabinet never got passed on.
In business, this looks like:
- someone leaves and their knowledge leaves with them
- key context lives in someoneโs head, not in the team
- โhandoverโ is a rushed chat and a half-written doc
- the team inherits a mess and calls it โresilienceโ
Bold truth: if your business canโt survive a key person leaving, you donโt have a team, you have a dependency.
Action:
- Create a โhandover ritualโ for any role change (even internal moves).
- Document the why, not just the what.
- Make ownership visible, not assumed.
2) No binoculars: the team canโt see whatโs coming
The lookouts didnโt have binoculars. Not because they didnโt exist, but because they were locked away, and nobody thought to break in and get them.
Thatโs such a metaphor it hurts.
In business, โno binocularsโ looks like:
- no real-time data
- no customer feedback loop
- no horizon scanning
- no proper team retros
- leaders relying on intuition while drowning in noise
This is where attention becomes a leadership superpower.
Most teams arenโt failing because theyโre incompetent, theyโre failing because theyโre distracted.
Action:
- Run a monthly โIceberg Scanโ meeting: what risks are emerging, what signals are we dismissing?
- Ask: What are we pretending not to see?
- Make one person responsible for โexternal signalsโ, rotate it monthly.
3) No safety drills: no one has embodied Plan B
On the day the ship sank, the emergency drill was cancelled. People hadnโt practised. So when chaos hit, confusion led.
In business, this is:
- no contingency planning
- no decision rules under pressure
- no rehearsal for crisis moments
- a culture that assumes โitโll be fineโ
And honestly, in todayโs climate, Plan B isnโt enough.
You need Plan C, D, and E, because disruption doesnโt come politely.
Action:
- Pick one scenario per quarter and rehearse it.
- Ask: If our biggest client left tomorrow, what do we do in 48 hours?
- Build decision velocity by clarifying โwho decides whatโ before you need it.
4) Not enough lifeboats: the illusion of โweโve got it coveredโ
The Titanic had insufficient lifeboats because they believed it couldnโt sink.
Thatโs complacency dressed up as confidence.
In business, it looks like:
- under-resourcing key functions
- expecting heroic effort to fill gaps
- โstretching the teamโ becoming the norm
- cutting capacity while demanding innovation
And it gets worse. Even the lifeboats they did have werenโt filled to capacity because people didnโt know what to do.
Thatโs what happens when you under-resource and under-train.
Action:
- Identify your โlifeboat functionsโ: customer success, delivery, operations, sales pipeline, leadership cover.
- Ask: Where are we one sick day away from chaos?
- Build redundancy as strength, not waste.
5) The message never reached the captain: signal loss and misaligned priorities
A crucial iceberg warning message wasnโt passed to the captain because the crew were focused on customer service and first-class comfort.
Itโs a painful reminder:
You can do the wrong thing brilliantly.
In business, this is:
- busywork masquerading as productivity
- internal politics trumping reality
- โserving the stakeholdersโ while ignoring the fundamentals
- urgent crowding out important, again and again
Action:
- Create an โMSG ruleโ in your team: what must be escalated, always.
- Define โred flag channelsโ for risk messages.
- Reward people for surfacing uncomfortable truths early.
6) Past success becomes a trap: yesterdayโs brilliance creates todayโs blindness
The first officer did what had worked before: turn the ship to avoid collision.
But this time it was too late, and the manoeuvre likely made it worse.
This is the leadership edge:
Past success is not proof of future safety.
In business, it shows up as:
- โWeโve always done it this wayโ
- relying on a leaderโs heroics instead of team capability
- defaulting to old patterns under pressure
- confusing confidence with clarity
Action:
- Ask in every strategy meeting: What assumption are we carrying from the past that might now be false?
- Build โpattern interruptโ moments into decisions.
- Invite one person to play โdevilโs advocateโ and make it a respected role.
The real lesson: Titanic Syndrome is a corporate disease
This is what I call Titanic Syndrome:
organisations facing disruption bring about their own downfall through arrogance, attachment to past success, or failure to recognise emerging reality.
Itโs not just about markets.
Itโs about attention, leadership, trust, decision-making, and willingness to reinvent before youโre forced to.
And hereโs the hopeful bit:
You donโt need to be perfect.
You just need to be awake.
Your reinvention prompt for this week
Take five minutes and answer this honestly:
- What iceberg are we pretending isnโt there?
- Where is a โmissing handoverโ quietly building risk?
- What have we normalised thatโs actually a warning sign?
- What would we change if we stopped clinging to past success?
Then do one brave thing:
start the conversation inside your team.
Ready to go deeper?
If this landed, go listen to the full episode of Impactful Teamwork and let it challenge how youโre leading, how your team is communicating, and what youโre not paying attention to.
And if you want support spotting the icebergs, speeding up decisions, and building a team that can reinvent without drama, message me and weโll talk.
Whatโs one warning sign youโre choosing to face this week?
Show Notes
00:00 Introduction to Impactful Teamwork
00:52 The Importance of Reinvention
02:39 Lessons from the Titanic
04:23 Six Warning Signs Before the Sinking
11:34 Business Parallels and Personal Anecdotes
16:44 Conclusion and Final Thoughts
18:01 Podcast Outro and Call to Action





