When the Going Gets B.A.N.I., the Caring Get Going
“When the going gets tough, the tough get going,” my old sales manager used to say back in the ’80s.
But let’s be honest—just “getting going” isn’t enough anymore.
Despite our bravado and rallying cries—“Suck it up.” “Tough it out.” “Roll with the punches.”—We are in tough times. For decades, we described this as V.U.C.A.: Volatile, Uncertain, Complex, and Ambiguous. But in 2018, futurists and business anthropologists introduced a more piercing lens: B.A.N.I.—Brittle, Anxious, Nonlinear, Incomprehensible. It’s not just an environmental descriptor—it’s how our people and cultures now feel.
What does B.A.N.I. look like in a sales culture?
The bottom line?
When B.A.N.I. sets in, company culture isn’t a nice-to-have. It’s a strategic imperative. Culture becomes the stabiliser, compass, and energy source teams need to stay resilient, hopeful, and high-performing. Leaders who ignore the warning signs risk cultivating cultures that are fragile, reactive, and misaligned.
So what can sales leaders do?
After 30 years of helping organisations create high-performing cultures, one lesson stands above the rest:
Just CARE.
Yes—knowledge of culture, frameworks, and strategy matters. But it starts with caring.
When people feel noticed, listened to, understood, valued, supported—and most of all, believed in—everything changes.
Caring isn’t soft. It’s the secret to sustainable performance.
People care about what matters. And if they don’t care, nothing else matters—not KPIs, not strategy, not your next sales initiative.
Optimising a sales culture doesn’t require grand gestures. It’s the small, consistent moments of care that move the needle:
CARE is the antidote to B.A.N.I.
It empowers leaders to:
And perhaps most importantly, leaders must remember to care for themselves, too.
You can’t pour from an empty cup. The capacity to give care, to lead with presence and energy, depends on maintaining your well-being. Tending to your own resilience, mindset, and recovery isn’t selfish—it’s essential.
In a B.A.N.I. world, trying harder is outdated.
Trying softer, through care, is far more powerful.
Because at the end of the day, high-performance sales teams care more about their customers, colleagues, craft, and capacity to thrive.
And that all begins with a leader who chooses to care, including for themselves.
- Michael Henderson. Corporate Anthropologist. Cultures At Work.