You can’t wait for things to “settle down” anymore. Leadership is now a full-time job in uncertainty. Whether you’re building a company, leading a team or navigating a personal career pivot, the ability to adapt, stay grounded and bring others with you is essential.
I’ve spent my career leading through change. I’ve been a homicide detective, a founder, a fintech executive and a security leader at Meta. Now, I’m helping scale Sui, a leading blockchain built for mass adoption, where my role spans guiding internal teams and working directly with builders, brands and users to shape what comes next. Every one of those chapters looked and felt different, but the same leadership principles kept showing up again and again.
Here are five of those principles that have helped me stay effective, even in environments where the only constant is change.
Related: 5 Principles for Dealing With Constant Change
1. Clarity wins
When you’re surrounded by complexity, people crave simplicity. Whether it was coordinating an operation as a detective or leading infrastructure security at Meta, I learned that teams move faster and with more confidence when they’re clear on what matters.
At Meta, where I oversaw security for large-scale systems, it was easy to get lost in the noise. But I always came back to one thing: protect the core. That clarity became a North Star my team could rely on.
Today, the Sui Foundation is scaling a network that supports millions of transactions per day. Clarity remains essential. Internally, I work to guide our team to stay focused on the core priorities that drive long-term value. Externally, I spend just as much time in conversation with enterprise leaders and everyday users to understand their challenges, goals and where they see real gaps. Those inputs help shape our path forward.
True clarity comes from listening, refining and adjusting. It means understanding what people truly need, not just what we assume they want.
2. Trust is everything
In high-stakes environments like SWAT, trust is the foundation. Without it, even the best strategy falls apart. You had to trust the person next to you with your life. That kind of trust is built slowly and only through consistency.
The same thing applies in business. People don’t trust titles or talk. They trust patterns. Do you show up when it’s hard? Do you follow through? Do you listen? If the answer is yes, they’ll follow you.
The Sui Foundation is building trust into its systems, too. This digital infrastructure is designed for other people and businesses to depend on. That means performance, security and reliability aren’t features — they’re promises. And keeping those promises builds real trust both internally and externally.
Related: 3 Qualities of Leaders Who Succeed During Uncertain Times
3. Stability fuels growth
The tech world loves speed. And speed is great, until it causes you to crash. During my time at Meta, I learned that real growth only works when it’s matched with real stability. Security, for example, can’t be an afterthought. It has to be built in, from day one, or the whole system is at risk.
That mindset has carried into how I help scale Sui. As supporters of one of the fastest-growing blockchains in the world, Sui Foundation is not chasing vanity metrics. We’re building in a way that serves long-term needs for the ecosystem, for developers and for the enterprises and consumers who are starting to rely on this infrastructure.
Every leader should be thinking this way. Don’t just ask “How fast can we grow?” Ask, “Can we handle the growth if it shows up tomorrow?”
4. Adaptability is a superpower
I’ve gone from the world of finance, to homicide investigations, to building tech companies, to securing some of the world’s most complex digital infrastructure, to now helping lead a major blockchain ecosystem. It wasn’t a textbook career trajectory, but each shift deepened my ability to adapt and lead through change.
Here’s what I’ve learned: Change forces you to grow. It keeps you humble. And it sharpens your ability to listen, observe and learn fast. Leaders who resist change become irrelevant. Leaders who embrace it — and learn to thrive in it — are the ones who survive and evolve.
Adaptability isn’t just about career pivots, though. It’s about mindset. It means staying open, being willing to admit when something isn’t working and being fast to reorient when the world shifts around you.
5. Purpose beats burnout
When you’re leading through chaos, purpose is the fuel that keeps you moving. It’s what keeps teams from falling apart when things get hard. It’s what brings people back after a failure or a setback. And it’s what makes the work feel worth it.
At Sui, the purpose is clear: building the infrastructure for a more open and equitable digital future. Sui is designed to give people ownership over their data, their assets and their digital identities. Behind all the systems and protocols is a simple idea: Technology should serve people, not the other way around.
Leaders who can articulate a clear purpose will always have an edge. People want to be part of something bigger than themselves. Your job is to give them that something.
Related: Don’t Neglect This One Crucial Step of Leading Through Constant Change
Leadership today doesn’t require that you’re the smartest person in the room or have a perfect plan. Instead, the best leaders stay centered in the storm. They build trust, embrace reinvention and keep people focused on what matters most.
If you want to thrive as a leader in this new era, start by asking yourself: Am I clear? Am I trustworthy? Am I building for the long term? Am I open to change? And, most importantly, do I know why I’m doing this?
Because when you have a true purpose, everything else gets easier.