In today’s business environment, leaders are expected to make strategic, future-forward decisions — even as market conditions shift, economic uncertainty mounts, and emerging technologies rewrite the rules faster than most organisations can keep up. Staying grounded in that context takes more than optimism or grit.
In a piece published in Forbes Business Council, twenty business leaders share the habits and mindsets that help them lead with clarity and confidence through periods of uncertainty. Among them is iDS President Hunter McMahon, whose contribution stands out for its simplicity and depth.
Keep Asking Why
McMahon’s habit is deceptively straightforward: keep asking why — even when you think you already know the answer.
The discipline doesn’t stop there. It must be followed by a genuine pause to ensure that all perspectives have been considered, because the “why” a leader sees is often fundamentally different from what others around them see. That gap — between how leadership perceives a situation and how it is experienced on the ground — is where decisions go wrong, innovation stalls, and teams lose confidence.
His default response to that process? A “Yes, and…” mindset. Rather than closing down possibilities in the name of efficiency or certainty, McMahon argues that combining relentless curiosity with an additive, collaborative instinct is what allows leaders to find not just clarity and confidence, but genuine innovation and resilience.
It is a deceptively compact idea that carries significant weight, particularly for legal and professional services environments where pressure to react quickly is constant and the cost of getting it wrong is high.
What the Other Leaders Say
McMahon’s contribution sits alongside nineteen other perspectives from leaders across industries. Common threads run through the collection: the value of pausing before reacting, the importance of anchoring decisions to long-term vision rather than short-term noise, and the discipline of separating genuine signals from the relentless churn of crisis cycles. Together they form a practical playbook for anyone navigating leadership in an environment that rarely offers certainty.
At iDS, these principles aren’t just leadership philosophy — they shape how we approach every client engagement. Asking why, considering all perspectives, and defaulting to collaboration over assumption are the habits that allow our Investigations, Digital Forensics, and eDiscovery & Disclosure teams to deliver outcomes that hold up under the most demanding scrutiny.
To connect with an iDS expert, visit idsinc.com.
iDS provides consultative data solutions to corporations and law firms around the world, giving them a decisive advantage – both in and out of the courtroom. iDS’s subject matter experts and data strategists specialize in finding solutions to complex data problems, ensuring data can be leveraged as an asset, not a liability. To learn more, visit idsinc.com.