Two weeks ago, I wrote about “Turning chaos into triumph: How to win big in times of crisis and uncertainty.” Given the strong feedback from readers, and because the Philippines is currently in times of higher uncertainty and change, this is a follow-up to that article.

In uncertain times, many leadership teams and business owners make a subtle but very expensive mistake. They do the strategic work. They gather the data. They identify the risks. They run the scenarios. They discuss supply chain shocks, geopolitical instability, customer hesitation, commodity prices, margin pressure and competitive shifts.

Then they stop. They leave the room with a better understanding of uncertainty—but not with a better grip on execution. That is where businesses lose momentum.

Execution is king

Because in volatile conditions, insight is not enough. A scenario plan, however intelligent, does not protect cash flow, calm customers, stabilize operations or create advantage on its own. It only becomes valuable when it is translated into action—clear decisions, accountable owners, specific trigger points and a fast operating rhythm.

That is why great CEOs do not stop at planning. They turn uncertainty into a 90-day action plan. Not a vague annual strategy. Not a heroic five-year vision. Not a thick slide deck full of possibilities. A 90-day action plan.

Why 90 days? Because it is long enough to make meaningful moves and short enough to stay anchored in reality. In uncertain environments, 12 months is often too far away to manage intelligently. Ninety days is a useful window for focus, execution, adaptation and momentum.

Your key questions

Great questions produce high-quality outcomes. What are we watching? What will trigger action? What exactly will we do? Who is responsible?

Without those answers, scenario planning is merely intellectual comfort. It may create the feeling of seriousness, but it does not create operational readiness. The CEO’s job is to force the translation from thought into action.

That means every major scenario must lead to a set of defined moves. If costs spike, what happens? If a supplier fails, what happens? If demand softens in one segment but rises in another, what happens? If a competitor retreats, what happens?

The companies that move best under pressure are rarely the ones with the most elegant analysis. They are the ones who have already decided how they will respond when reality begins to tilt in a particular direction.

Simplicity breeds execution

Reduce complexity and define the few priorities that matter now. In uncertainty, many organizations try to do too much. They create sprawling plans with 20 initiatives, multiple work streams, endless cross-functional meetings and a long list of “strategic responses.” It looks impressive. It is usually ineffective.

When the environment is unstable, the discipline is not to add more. The discipline is to reduce. Your 90-day plan should focus on a very small number of priorities—typically three to five, not 15. For a lot of businesses, those priorities can fall into some variation of these categories: protect cash, secure the core customer base, stabilize operations, defend margin and pursue a few high-upside opportunities.

That last point matters. In a crisis or unstable market, the goal is not simply survival. It is selective advantage. So while the core business must be protected, a small part of the plan should also be aimed at winning business, gaining share or opening new pathways while competitors hesitate.