For many B2B leaders, volatility no longer feels like an interruption to “normal”. It is now the standard operating environment. Economic uncertainty, geopolitical shocks, AI-driven disruption, and shifting buyer behavior are colliding — exposing weaknesses in traditional go-to-market models and leadership assumptions.

The good news? Volatility can benefit those that adapt faster, focus harder, and lead more deliberately.

Our latest research on how B2B leaders can thrive through volatility in 2026 highlights a clear message: this moment calls for sharper choices, stronger leadership, and a more disciplined approach to risk.

Ruthless Focus Is A Growth Strategy

During volatile market conditions, trying to control for everything isn’t an effective strategy. The most successful leaders narrow their focus — while staying flexible to adapt as conditions change. This requires leaders to:

  • Continuously prioritize the right markets and buyers rather than spreading investment broadly
  • Actively reduce complexity by cutting duplicative technology and nonstrategic work
  • Reallocate resources toward higher-impact change initiatives, such targeted use cases for AI in high-cost or friction-filled, buyer-facing processes

Importantly, growing (not just surviving) during volatility shouldn’t be about short-term cost controls alone. Focus and build capabilities that sustain buyer value — even as their budgets may tighten and purchase conditions shift.

Change Leadership Is Now A Core Capability

Volatility also changes how leaders lead. Today’s B2B cycles of disruption are faster, broader, and, surprisingly, often reversible (e.g. tariff policy and its impact). This makes traditional annual marketing and sales planning less effective. The strongest leaders:

  • Set a clear “north star” direction for go-to-market teams while being open to adjusting how fast and how often decisions get made
  • Balance revenue process redesign with real attention to the impact on people’s well-being not only their behaviors
  • Model calm, consistency, and brand-centered values when uncertainty is highest

Change leadership isn’t just about moving faster. It’s about maintaining team trust, fostering engagement, and ensuring clarity when go-to-market teams are under sustained pressure.

Treat Risk As Continuous, Not Episodic

Finally, thriving through volatility requires a different posture toward risk. B2B leaders can no longer afford to simply react to enterprise risks in the moment. Instead, leaders should engage in proactive scenario planning, build and test crisis communications plans, and continuously assess:

  • Enterprise risks tied to internal agility and changing buyer behaviors
  • Ecosystem risks stemming from shifting trust, partners, and platforms
  • External risks driven by geopolitics, regulation, supply chains, and competitive pressure

In many cases, inertia around past ways of working feels “safe” but actually introduces risk by hampering the organization from adapting to changing conditions.

Turning Uncertainty Into An Advantage

Volatility isn’t going away. But organizations that ruthlessly prioritize, lead change with intention, and treat risk as a continuous discipline can do more than endure it — they can use it as a source of competitive advantage to fuel growth.

If you are a Forrester client, you can read the full report to explore deeper guidance, frameworks, and best practices. And, if you haven’t registered yet for Forrester’s B2B North America Summit (April 26-29), it’s not too late to do so and connect with me and my colleagues there.