There are two ways to lose a fight — and both are killing organizations today. The first: standing still, relying only on your armor and your strength. The second: moving too much, chasing every trend, but having no stable ground when the real blow lands. The skill that separates the two is what I call Stagility.
I trained as a historical fencer for years. In sparring, you quickly learn that the problem is never just speed or power — it is the ability to remain stable while moving. A fighter who only stands firm gets outmaneuvered. A fighter who only moves never lands a decisive blow. The arena taught me that true mastery is the integration of both: stability and agility, at the same time.
Organizations face the exact same challenge. I see it in every change project: either the company freezes — protecting what exists, resisting the new — or it chases every innovation without building any real capability. Both paths lead to the same place: irrelevance, or collapse.
Stagility is my term for the integrated capability that separates great organizations from the rest. It is not a balance between stability and agility — balance implies compromise, giving something up. Stagility is the full expression of both. A strong core that enables rapid, confident movement. Leaders and teams who can hold their ground and adapt simultaneously.