Orvin Kimbrough | Blog

How Do I Lead Through Uncertainty When I Don’t Have All the Answers? (Steady Leadership in Unsteady Times)

Written by Orvin Kimbrough | June 04, 2026

Uncertainty exposes every crack in a leader’s confidence.

It tests your instincts, your emotional discipline, your clarity, and your faith. And here’s the part most people won’t tell you:

Uncertainty doesn’t care how experienced you are. It humbles every leader equally.

When the pandemic hit…
When markets shifted…
When our culture evolved…
When our organization took risks that stretched us…
There were moments I didn’t have the answers.
Moments I was searching.
Moments I was praying.
Moments I was wrestling.

But something grounded me:

People don’t need you to predict the future. They need you to steady the present.

Leadership in uncertainty isn’t about knowing everything.
It’s about anchoring the room when everything feels like it’s moving.

Here’s what I learned:

1. You lead through your scars, not your certainty.

My life taught me resilience long before my career demanded it.
Growing up in foster care…
Losing my mother early…
Navigating instability…
Those moments taught me how to hold pressure without crumbling.
Uncertainty doesn’t intimidate leaders who have already lived through storms.

2. Your honesty creates psychological safety.

Early in my banking journey, I learned something important:
People don’t expect perfection from leaders they expect truth.
“I don’t know yet, but here’s what we’re doing right now,” builds far more trust than false confidence ever could.

3. You must manage your energy before you manage the environment.

Uncertainty amplifies whatever is already inside you.
If you are anxious, the room will feel it.
If you are grounded, the room absorbs it.
Your internal state becomes the thermostat for the organization.

4. Vision becomes more important when clarity is limited.

When conditions are unpredictable, the why becomes the compass.
People can handle ambiguity when they understand purpose.
Purpose creates direction even when the details are blurry.

Reframe: Uncertainty doesn’t make you less of a leader it reveals the leader you’ve been becoming.
Reclaim: Your history has already prepared you for moments your résumé hasn’t.
Rename: You’re not leading through uncertainty you’re leading through becoming.