We’ve entered a new era of risk for the modern CEO
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We’ve entered a new era of risk for the modern CEO

April 14, 2026
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The call comes on a Tuesday morning. Taiwan Strait tensions have escalated overnight. Markets are already moving. Your CFO is on one line, your General Counsel on another. By the time you’ve hung up, your head of communications is in the doorway. Most CEOs have planned and prepared for this moment. In my work running a global communications firm, I’ve been part of the war-gaming sessions.

We’ve entered a new era of risk for the modern CEO

But I’d contend that most leaders aren’t ready for it. Not because they haven’t been paying attention to geopolitics—they have. But because their teams have been assessing the Taiwan risk through a single lens: geoeconomic exposure. The financial model has been stress-tested. The team has contingencies for supply chain disruption, semiconductor access, and revenue at risk in Asia-Pacific. What hasn’t been stress-tested is everything else. For most companies today, a crisis in the Taiwan Strait won’t arrive purely as a geoeconomic event. It will cut across the four modern risk domains—political, economic, cultural, and technological. Companies that have only prepared for one will be managing the other three in real time. A man collects oysters near anti-landing spikes at a beach where the Chinese city of Xiamen is visible from afar, in Kinmen, Taiwan, on May 11, 2025. [Photo: Daniel Ceng/Anadolu/Getty Images] The four modern risk domains Political Risk Your company’s existing posture in China becomes a liability overnight. Your joint venture in Shenzhen, the market access statement you made two years ago, and the politically-connected hire you made in Beijing are all read through a new lens by lawmakers in Washington and Brussels. Economic Risk The first casualties aren’t on the balance sheet—they’re in the narrative. A Substack reporter with 200,000 subscribers publishes a thread mapping your China revenue exposure—incomplete and partially wrong, but specific enough to travel. Within 24 hours, AI-driven research tools have ingested it, flagged your ticker, and surfaced it in portfolio managers’ morning briefings. By the time your team is returning calls, two analysts have downgraded their outlook. Cultural Risk Within hours, an internal petition circulates among your workers: “Don’t use this as cover to shift production to cheaper markets and call it patriotism.” It gets screenshotted. It lands on X. A mid-level manager’s LinkedIn post about “what this company really stands for” gets ten thousand shares before your team has even seen it. The fault lines already forming around AI displacement, economic anxiety, and corporate trust crack open wider. Technological Risk The geopolitical tension brings data security and reputation into collision. You are hit with a sophisticated ransomware attack that paralyzes key systems. Within hours “OSINT” social feeds, Taiwanese state media, and others are attributing the attack to China. You aren’t sure where the attack has come from, but narrative is outstripping assessment. On Reddit threads, you’re accused of concealing China’s involvement. The Single-Lens Problem Most companies are not ignoring risk. But they’re assessing it through a single domain, while the threat is multidimensional. Consider this: A major financial institution announces it will eliminate a significant share of its analyst workforce due to AI-driven efficiencies. It’s a technology and efficiency-driven decision. Share price volatility hits the markets as soon as it becomes public. The political and regulatory environment—already sensitized to AI’s workforce implications—sharpens its focus. Employees take to social media, followed by customers. Or this: A global manufacturer, caught between U.S. and Chinese trade policy on a critical issue, announces it will reduce reliance on Chinese manufacturing for U.S.-bound goods. It warns investors—then finds itself targeted by an AI-generated content campaign mocking U.S. trade policy. Chinese influencers encourage American customers to buy direct, bypassing the manufacturer entirely. All of this spreads before the company can frame a coherent response. These are not hypotheticals. They’re real events that occurred at major multinational corporations within the past year. Navigating The New Era The modern risk environment demands a different approach—one that treats political, economic, cultural, and technological exposure as interconnected by default. Every domain of risk in the modern era is ultimately experienced as narrative—by investors, regulators, employees, and customers. The mandate for modern corporate affairs teams is to bring upstream intelligence on how decisions will land before they’re made, which demands a new conversation inside the C-suite. What’s needed is a genuine, integrated assessment—political, economic, cultural, and technological exposure mapped together—before the Tuesday morning call comes. The companies that build this discipline won’t just manage risk better. They’ll be faster to act, and more credible and better positioned when they do. When a single geopolitical trigger can cascade across all four domains in 24 hours, the capacity to navigate across all of them isn’t defensive. It’s the foundation for value creation.

Fast Company
Fast Company

Coverage and analysis from United States of America. All insights are generated by our AI narrative analysis engine.

United States of America
Bias: lean left

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