Over the past two years, the Covid-19 crisis has forced a fundamental reordering of work and life around the world. But has the experience helped organizations prepare for future crises? To answer this question, we studied how relationships between businesses and society have changed during the pandemic in several global cities known for their dynamic growth but also deep fragility.
What Covid-19 Taught Us About Doing Business During a Crisis
A 2021 survey of seven cities around the world during the Covid-19 pandemic offers clues to how businesses handle crises. Analyzing responses from 78,000 people in Bogotá and Medellín, Colombia; Beirut, Lebanon; Cape Town, South Africa; Caracas, Venezuela; San Pedro Sula, Honduras; and San Salvador, El Salvador, the authors find that many of the biggest challenges that firms face under crisis are sociopolitical in nature, not financial. As such, these challenges are complex, systemic, and hard to quantify. They also scare managers operating in these contexts, especially in cities where extortion and business violence are pervasive. In such settings, firms benefit from community embeddedness and a recognition that they are both influenced by and able to shape the systems around them — positively or negatively.