Resilience Isn't a Plan. It's a Culture.

  • 22 May 2026
  • , 15:15 UTC+1

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Most organizations have a plan. Far fewer have a culture that can actually execute it under pressure.

This webinar makes the case that resilience is not something you build into a document. It is something that lives, or doesn't, in how your leaders behave when a crisis hits, how they communicate in the hours and days that follow, and whether the people around them feel steady or adrift.

The session draws on direct experience inside a major crisis: the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing. As a firsthand account of what institutional leadership looks and feels like from inside a disruption, where it supports people and where it fails them. That experience, combined with subsequent work on federal disaster mental health policy, informs a practical framework for what culture-driven resilience actually requires.

The central insight is this: organizations tend to measure recovery by operational metrics. Systems are back up. The office is open. The plan worked. Recovery for people runs on a different timeline, and leaders who don't understand that gap make decisions that can quietly erode the trust and cohesion their organization needs to be resilient next time.

Participants leave with a clear, applicable framework for assessing whether their leadership culture would hold under real conditions, and what to do if the honest answer is no

Learning Outcomes

  1. Distinguish between a resilient plan and a resilient culture — and why the gap between them is where organizations fail
  2. Identify the leadership behaviors that build or erode trust during and after disruption
  3. Recognise the human recovery timeline and why it outlasts the operational one
  4. Apply a practical framework for auditing your leadership culture against real crisis conditions

We look forward to welcoming you!

Speakers:

  • Manya Chylinski

    Consultant, Speaker

    Manya Chylinski is a speaker, advisor, and communications specialist who helps leaders strengthen their response after crisis so fewer people get left behind when it matters most. A survivor of the Boston Marathon bombing, she brings lived experience and research-informed insight to her work on leadership, recovery, and long-term human impact.

    Manya speaks nationally on the responsibility leaders carry after disruption, including at the Pennsylvania Governor’s Emergency Management Conference, the National Homeland Security Conference, and SXSW. Through keynotes and advisory work, she helps organizations recognize invisible harm, navigate recovery, and respond with greater accountability and care long after crisis response ends.

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