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Resilience in Leadership: The Sar Kissati Leaders Circle
Where Your Performance Carries Institutional Consequences

About This Event
In the modern corporate landscape of Zug, we often forget that leadership is an ancient burden. The term Sar Kissati (Sumerian for "King of the World" or "King of All") refers to a leader whose performance is inextricably linked to the prosperity or ruin of the entire "realm"—the institution.
When you reach this level, you are no longer a private citizen; you are a performance anchor. If you falter, the institution feels the tremor. This session explores how to carry the weight of "The King of All" without breaking under the institutional consequences.

Core Pillars of the Sar Kissati Leader
We will break down resilience through the three lenses of this ancient framework:

  • The Ordeal (The Test): How to remain "fit for the throne" when faced with external market shocks and internal systemic failures.

  • The Mandate of Stability: In the Sar Kissati tradition, the leader’s primary duty is maintaining Me (Universal Order). We discuss how your emotional regulation directly dictates the "order" of your organization.

  • The Price of the Crown: Analyzing the specific psychological toll of "Institutional Loneliness"—the unique isolation felt when your performance is the final line of defense.

Agenda

  • 18:30 – 18:50: The Gathering. Networking among peers who understand the weight of the "Sar" (Leadership).

  • 18:50 – 19:30: The Sar Kissati Briefing. A deep dive into why institutional resilience requires a different psychological toolkit than personal resilience.

  • 19:30 – 20:15: The "Labyrinth" Workshop. A peer-to-peer exercise where we dissect a recent "institutional ordeal" and how the leader's performance shifted the outcome.

  • 20:15 – 20:30: Integration. Defining your personal "Rite of Resilience" to take back to your office tomorrow.

To lead is to be the eye of the storm. If the eye moves, the storm consumes everything.

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