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The shadow you cast
We often talk about “Company Culture” as if it were a separate entity. A mission statement on a wall, a set of perks in a handbook, or a vibe that exists independently of the people in charge. But culture isn’t a project you “do”; it is the natural result of how you lead. If you want to know what your culture looks like, don’t look at your HR manuals. Look in the mirror.
The reality is that leadership is an act of constant broadcasting. Whether you are in a boardroom, on a conference call, or walking the floor of a restaurant, your team is subconsciously tuning into your frequency. They aren’t just listening to your words; they are watching your feet. They are looking for alignment between what you say matters and what you actually reward, tolerate, or exemplify in the heat of the moment.
The Core Concept
“The leader’s first job is to create an environment where others can do their best work. Culture is the shadows of the leaders.” — Larry Bossidy
This quote by Larry Bossidy cuts through the corporate jargon to reveal a fundamental truth: Culture is the shadow of leadership. A shadow is an exact reflection of an object’s shape. In an organization, the “shape” of a leader’s character, habits, and reactions is projected onto the entire team. If a leader is prone to panic under pressure, the shadow cast is one of anxiety and risk-aversion. If a leader prioritizes transparency and humility, the shadow is one of trust and psychological safety. You cannot separate the environment from the person at the helm. Your primary responsibility isn’t just to manage tasks; it is to manage the climate in which those tasks are performed.
How the “Shadow” Resonates in Leadership
To lead effectively, we must understand that our “shadow” isn’t just a metaphor, it is a functional blueprint for how our teams operate. Below are six ways this dynamic manifests in our daily professional lives, providing a roadmap for intentional leadership.
- Behavioral Mirroring and the Unwritten Rules Teams instinctively look to their leaders to understand the “unwritten rules” of survival and success. If you preach the importance of “family first” but consistently send non-urgent emails at 2:00 AM, your shadow tells them that “always-on” is the real expectation for advancement. Over time, the team stops listening to your speeches and starts mimicking your schedule, leading to eventual burnout.
- Psychological Safety as a Shield To do their best work, people must feel safe enough to fail or speak up. When a leader reacts to a mistake with curiosity (“What did we learn?”) instead of blame (“Who did this?”), they cast a shadow that encourages innovation. In this environment, employees spend their energy solving problems rather than hiding them, creating a culture of rapid, iterative growth.
- The “Temperature” of the Room A leader’s emotional intelligence sets the thermostat for the entire office. Because of the power dynamic, your mood is amplified. If you walk into a meeting with a cloud over your head, your shadow can freeze the productivity of a room in seconds. High-impact leaders are intentional about the energy they project, knowing that a steady, calm presence allows their team to stay focused on the mission rather than managing the leader’s emotions.
- Priority Alignment: What You Tolerate, You Promote Culture is defined by what you tolerate, not what you celebrate. If a leader ignores a “brilliant jerk” or toxic behavior because that individual hits their KPIs, the shadow cast is that results matter more than values. This creates a mercenary culture where trust erodes because the team knows the “core values” on the wall are negotiable when money is on the line.
- Removing Friction: The Leader as a Servant Bossidy notes that the first job is creating an environment for others to do their best work. This means a leader must be an “obstacle remover.” Your shadow should provide cover for your team to focus, rather than becoming a distraction they have to work around. If your leadership style adds layers of bureaucracy or unnecessary “fire drills,” you are casting a shadow of friction that slows everyone down.
- Integrity and the Sharpness of the Shadow Trust is built in drops and lost in buckets. When a leader’s actions align perfectly with their words, the shadow is clear and sharp; everyone knows where they stand. When there is a gap, saying you value “collaboration” while making siloed decisions, the shadow becomes blurred. This lack of clarity leads to hesitation and a lack of organizational “buy-in,” as the team waits to see what you’ll actually do.
Understanding these resonance points is the difference between accidental leadership and intentional influence. By recognizing that our behaviors are being projected onto the walls of our organization, we can begin to adjust our “posture” to ensure the shadow we cast is one that empowers, protects, and inspires.
Culture is not a destination; it is a living, breathing reflection of your daily choices. As leaders, we must be mindful that we are always being watched, not out of scrutiny, but out of a need for direction. Your shadow is long, and it reaches further than you might realize. If you don’t like the culture you see, start by changing the way you stand.
A Personal Reflection from the Front Lines
In the world of global restaurant and hospitality, this concept of “leadership shadows” is incredibly visceral. In our industry, the “environment” isn’t just an office; it’s a high-stakes, fast-moving ecosystem where technology meets human service. Whether we are discussing unified commerce strategies in a boardroom or implementing a new POS system in a kitchen, the leader’s temperament dictates the outcome.
I’ve seen firsthand how a leader’s “shadow” during a massive global digital rollout or a peak-hour service rush determines the guest experience. If the leadership is frantic about a technical glitch or a supply chain delay, that stress cascades instantly to the frontline staff. They, in turn, project that stress onto the guest. Conversely, when leadership remains composed and focuses on supporting the team through the friction, that sense of “hospitality” remains intact despite the challenges.
In my journey across restaurant and hospitality tech, I’ve learned that our job is to provide the “digital hospitality” that allows our partners to shine. If I cast a shadow of technical elitism or rigidness, our solutions fail to be human-centric. But when we lead with a “servant-leader” mindset, ensuring our teams have the tools and the autonomy to solve problems, the culture becomes one of seamless service. We are the stewards of the experience, and that starts with the environment we build for our own teams.
Recommended Reading
Book Recommendation: The Obstacle Is the Way by Ryan Holiday.
Since culture often breaks down during times of stress, this book is essential for any leader. It draws on Stoic philosophy to show how we can turn trials into triumphs. It teaches leaders how to cast a shadow of resilience and steady-handedness when everything else seems to be falling apart.
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The architecture of attention
In the high-stakes arena of global commerce, we often mistake movement for progress. We keep our calendars full and our “pings” active, yet we wonder why certain strategic initiatives remain stagnant. The answer lies in a fundamental law of nature. Our attention acts as a literal nutrient; just as a plant turns toward the sun to find the fuel for its expansion, our teams and projects lean toward the light of our focus. If we are constantly distracted, we are essentially casting a shadow over the very things we claim we want to see thrive.
We live in an era of “fragmented focus,” where the average leader is pulled in a dozen directions before their first cup of coffee is finished. We pride ourselves on multitasking, yet multitasking is often just the art of spreading our energy so thin that nothing receives enough “warmth” to actually germinate. To lead effectively, we must move beyond the role of a taskmaster and become an architect of energy. We must decide, with surgical precision, which parts of our organization deserve the sun and which parts must be left in the shade to wither away.
The only thing that can grow is the thing you give energy to. — Ralph Waldo Emerson
To lead with intentionality is to recognize that energy is a finite currency. When we spend it on the trivial, the “vital few” begin to wither. I’ve often explored the idea that leadership is less about doing and more about discerning; it is the discipline of withdrawing energy from the “noise” of the day-to-day to reinvest it into the “signal” of our long-term vision.
As we look at the landscape of our organizations today, we must audit our investments. Are we watering the weeds of bureaucracy and legacy thinking, or are we fueling the seeds of innovation and talent? Growth is never a byproduct of chance, it is the inevitable result of where a leader chooses to place their power. If you find your team’s morale is low or a project is stalling, look first at your own output. Are you feeding the problem with your frustration, or are you feeding the solution with your presence?
Leadership in Action: Applying the Law of Energy
Understanding the theory of focused energy is the first step, but the true test of a leader is how they apply this lens to the messy, unpredictable reality of the workplace. Below are five specific scenarios where shifting your energy can fundamentally alter the trajectory of your team and your results.
- Intentional Culture Building Culture is the byproduct of what a leader celebrates and rewards. If you give energy to transparency and radical candor, those traits will take root in your team. Conversely, if you ignore toxic behavior, you are effectively giving it the “energy” of your silence, allowing it to grow.
- Developing the Next Generation The fastest way to grow a future leader is to give them your energy through mentorship. When you invest time in coaching rather than just correcting, you are transferring energy into their professional maturity.
- Strategic Focus over “Busy-ness” High-performing leaders distinguish between “urgent” and “important.” By withdrawing energy from low-impact tasks and reinvesting it into long-term strategy, you ensure that the vision, not just the daily checklist, is what expands.
- Resilience in the Face of Failure When a project fails, a leader has a choice. You can give energy to the frustration, or you can give energy to the lesson. Whichever one you focus on will determine whether your team grows more cautious or more capable.
- The Power of Recognition Growth follows praise. When you highlight a team member’s specific strength, they are more likely to lean into that skill. Your recognition acts as the “energy” that turns a spark of talent into a flame of expertise.
By viewing these five areas through Emerson’s lens, we stop being victims of our schedules and start being masters of our outcomes. When we consciously withdraw energy from the friction of the past to fuel the momentum of the future, we create an environment where excellence is the only logical conclusion.
Personal Reflection: Leadership in Hospitality Tech
In the world of Restaurant and Hospitality Technology, we live at the intersection of high-touch service and high-scale innovation. These are industries that never sleep, and the “energy drains” are constant: system outages, integration hurdles, or shifting market demands.
I’ve found that this Emerson quote is my North Star during complex digital transformations. For example, when implementing a new global commerce platform, it’s easy to give all your energy to the technical glitches. However, I’ve learned that if I don’t give equal energy to the “human element”, ensuring the end-users and the team feel supported and heard, the technology itself will never truly take root.
In my daily routine, I try to consciously pivot. Instead of just asking my team “What’s broken?”, I make it a point to ask “What’s working that we can scale?” By giving energy to our successes, I ensure that excellence is what grows, rather than just a culture of constant troubleshooting.
Book Recommendation
“Essentialism: The Disciplined Pursuit of Less” by Greg McKeown
If Emerson’s quote resonates with you, this book is the practical manual for it. McKeown argues that we often feel “stretched but not productive” because we are spreading our energy in too many directions. He teaches you how to identify the “vital few” from the “trivial many,” allowing you to give your energy only to the things that truly matter. It is a must-read for any leader looking to reclaim their focus and ensure their energy is being spent on their highest point of contribution.
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The Unseen Force of Leadership
In our daily scramble to keep up with new technology, optimized workflows, and competing project management software, we often lose sight of the most volatile variable in the productivity equation: human connection.
We assume that if we have the right strategy, the best talent, and the fastest tools, success is guaranteed. But experience tells a different story. Great teams don’t crumble because their internet connection is too slow; they crumble because their interpersonal connection is too weak.
To understand why, we must turn to one of the masters of human effectiveness, who famously said:
“Trust is the glue of life. It’s the most essential ingredient in effective communication. It’s the foundational principle that holds all relationships.” — Stephen Covey
Understanding the “Relational Glue”
Stephen Covey wasn’t talking about a naive hope that everyone gets along. He was describing a structural reality of leadership. In any organization, strategy is the structure, but trust is the cement that keeps the bricks from falling. Without it, you aren’t leading a team; you are simply directing a collection of isolated individuals who are constantly guarding their flank.
When trust is absent, communication is not “communication.” It is merely a careful, legalistic exchange of words designed to avoid liability. Trust is what transforms a group of competent people into a dynamic, high-functioning organism.
6 Ways Trust Resonates in Leadership
If trust is the foundational principle, how do we see its presence, or absence, affecting our leadership daily? Here are five key ways this quote resonates:
1. Communication Speed Increases (or Decreases)
In a low-trust environment, every email is over-analyzed, and every meeting needs a detailed follow-up “clarification” to avoid misinterpretation. When trust is high, people assume positive intent. Communication happens at lightning speed because it doesn’t require constant decoding.
2. Innovation Cannot Exist Without Safety
Innovation requires taking a risk. People do not take risks when they fear being punished for failure. Trust is the baseline requirement for psychological safety; it tells your team that if they stretch for a new idea and fail, you will support them rather than penalize them.
3. Delegation Becomes Delegation (Not Abdiction)
True delegation requires letting go of the how and focusing on the what. When you don’t trust your team, delegation is merely micromanagement in disguise. Trust allows a leader to empower others to own their decisions, leading to a much more scalable organization.
4. Accountability Becomes Shared, Not Imposed
In low-trust teams, accountability feels like surveillance. People are focused on “not messing up” rather than “winning together.” In high-trust teams, peers hold each other accountable because they are genuinely committed to the shared goal and do not want to let the team down.
5. Crisis Management Becomes Unified, Not Blaming
When things go wrong, and they always do, the true strength of your relational glue is tested. Teams without trust immediately splinter and look for a scapegoat. High-trust teams rally, pull together, and focus 100% of their energy on fixing the problem, because they know no one is going to be thrown under the bus.
6. True Talent Retention is Built on Trust
People may join a company for the brand or salary, but they leave managers they cannot trust. Trust creates an environment where people feel seen, respected, and part of a community. Your best talent is your hardest glue to keep if the foundation is unstable.
These six examples remind us that trust isn’t a static achievement, it’s a dynamic environment. When these elements are strong, leadership feels like a tailwind, pushing the team forward with minimal friction. When they are weak, even the simplest task feels like wading through deep water. As leaders, we don’t just ‘manage’ these pillars; we must actively model them every single day to keep the glue from becoming brittle.
Investing in your Foundation
We need to stop categorizing trust as a “soft skill.” In reality, it is the hardest, most tangible business asset a leader possesses. It is a quantifiable multiplier: high trust acts as a performance catalyst, while low trust acts as a hidden tax on every transaction, every meeting, and every deadline. If you aren’t deliberately and consistently building trust, you are inadvertently architecting friction into your organization.
As leaders, your primary mandate is not merely to make the right decisions; it is to cultivate an environment where those decisions can be executed flawlessly. You can have the most brilliant strategy in the world, but if the “relational glue” is brittle, the structure will crack under the first sign of external pressure. The quality of your trust determines your organization’s ceiling, you simply cannot scale a team that doesn’t feel safe enough to be honest.
Spend this week auditing your foundation: are you pouring cement, or are you just trying to build on shifting sand? Covey’s definition of trust as “glue” has become a vital diagnostic tool for my leadership. In high-stakes environments, it is easy to become obsessed with the “what” and the “when.” But I’ve learned that if you ignore the “how,” the “what” eventually stalls.
Personal Reflection
Covey’s definition of trust as “glue” has become a vital diagnostic tool for my leadership. In high-stakes environments, it is easy to become obsessed with the “what” and the “when.” But I’ve learned that if you ignore the “how,” the “what” eventually stalls.
I no longer just ask, “Is the work done?” I ask, “How did we interact while getting the work done?” To ensure that “relational glue” stays strong, I focus on three specific habits:
- Radical Accessibility: Trust is built in the small moments. The three minutes before a meeting starts or a quick follow-up after a tough presentation.
- “Drops in the Bucket” Mentality: You cannot make a withdrawal during a crisis if you haven’t made “small drop” deposits during the calm. Genuinely listening to a colleague isn’t a distraction from the work; it is the work.
- Identifying Relational Debt: When a project slows down, my first instinct isn’t to audit the tech stack, it’s to look for the friction. Usually, “technical debt” is actually “relational debt”, unspoken disagreements or a lack of clarity.
I prioritize focusing on the environment I create rather than the external forces beyond my control. When the glue is strong, the speed of the business follows naturally.
Book Recommendation
“The Speed of Trust: The One Thing That Changes Everything” by Stephen M.R. Covey
It is only fitting that for a quote by the father, I recommend the definitive work on the subject by the son.
While the elder Covey laid the groundwork for principle-centered living, Stephen M.R. Covey took the principle of trust and broke it down into practical, business-centric language. He explains how trust is not just a moral virtue; it is a pragmatic, economic driver that always affects two key variables: speed and cost.
This book provides the perfect toolkit for a leader who wants to go from “valuing trust” to “building trust” as a strategic advantage. It perfectly validates how “glue” isn’t just about feeling nice; it’s about going faster.
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Talent Diversity, Commitment Unity
As the calendar turns to mid-March, a familiar electricity fills the air. March Madness is officially upon us. It’s a time of buzzer-beaters, “Cinderella” stories, and the intense drama of win-or-go-home basketball. But beyond the brackets, the tournament is a masterclass in leadership and team dynamics.
Success in this high-stakes environment rarely comes from having five players who do the exact same thing; it comes from a coach’s ability to weave disparate skills into a single, unstoppable thread. This brings us to a timeless piece of wisdom from one of the greatest architects of team culture, former Duke and Team USA coach Mike Krzyzewski:
“Different talents, same commitment.” — Coach K
In leadership, we often fall into the trap of seeking “culture fits” who think and act just like us. However, Coach K’s principle suggests that elite performance is found in functional diversity. You don’t need a team of clones; you need a team of specialists who are all pulling the same rope with the same level of intensity.
Understanding the Principle: Talent vs. Alignment
Before we dive into how this looks in practice, we must understand the fundamental distinction Coach K is making. Talent is what an individual brings to the table—their technical skills, their personality, and their unique way of processing information. Commitment is the price they are willing to pay to see the team succeed. A leader’s greatest challenge isn’t finding the “best” people; it’s ensuring that the point guard who facilitates the offense and the center who battles for every rebound are equally devoted to the final score. When talent is diverse but commitment is fractured, you have a group of superstars who lose to a unified team.
6 Leadership Examples of “Different Talents, Same Commitment”
- The “Glue” Player vs. The “Scorer”: In any organization, you have high-profile “scorers”—the sales leaders or creative directors who bring in the big wins. Then you have the “glue” players—the project managers or HR specialists who keep the culture intact. Their talents are polar opposites, but if the glue player isn’t as committed to the deadline as the scorer, the project collapses.
- The Visionary and the Integrator: Think of the relationship between a CEO and a COO. One looks at the horizon (vision); the other looks at the gears (execution). Their daily tasks look nothing alike, yet their commitment to the company’s North Star must be identical for the business to scale.
- The Architect and the Operator (Technology & Business): In technology leadership, the CIO/CTO focuses on scalability, security, and technical debt, while a Marketing or Operations leader focuses on speed, features, and immediate ROI. These talents naturally pull in different directions. However, when both are equally committed to the enterprise’s long-term health, the friction produces a balanced, robust digital strategy rather than a technical mess.
- Cross-Functional Product Launches: When launching a new product, the engineer values precision and technical stability, while the marketer values emotional resonance and speed to market. These talents naturally clash. Leadership’s job is to ensure that despite their different lenses, both are equally committed to the user experience.
- The Introverted Analyst and the Extroverted Presenter: A data analyst may prefer the quiet of a spreadsheet, while a keynote speaker thrives on a stage. One provides the “what,” and the other provides the “so what.” Their commitment to truth and clarity is the shared bond that makes the data meaningful to an audience.
- Crisis Management Teams: In a crisis, you need a legal expert (risk mitigation), a PR expert (reputation), and an operations expert (logistics). Their talents are siloed, but in a moment of heat—much like the final two minutes of a tournament game—their shared commitment to the organization’s survival overrides their individual professional biases.
In the world of leadership, you aren’t just looking for five people who can shoot; you’re looking for the rim protector, the floor general, and the defensive specialist who are all willing to dive for the same loose ball. Leadership is the art of recognizing that while everyone on the court has a different role, they must all share the same heartbeat. When you stop trying to “fix” people’s differences and start aligning their commitments, you create a team that doesn’t just play the game—they win the tournament. Excellence is found where individual brilliance meets a collective, unbreakable “why.”
Personal Reflection
Looking back on my own career, I’ve realized that my most frustrated moments as a leader occurred when I confused ability with attitude. I used to get annoyed when a teammate didn’t approach a problem the way I did, or when their “vibe” didn’t match the rest of the room. I mistakenly thought that for us to be “one team,” we had to be “one type of person.”
Coach K’s quote changed my perspective: I was looking for “same talent” because it felt safer and more predictable. Once I shifted my focus to “same commitment,” I realized that the teammate who constantly challenged my ideas wasn’t being difficult; they were actually showing the highest level of commitment to the project. They had the talent of critical thinking that I lacked in my own optimism. By valuing their different approach while ensuring we both wanted the same outcome, the work became exponentially better.
Now, I don’t look for people who mirror me; I look for people who care as much as I do, even if they show it in ways I never would have imagined. True alignment isn’t about looking the same; it’s about wanting the same victory with the same intensity.
Book Recommendation
Book: Leading with the Heart: Coach K’s Successful Strategies for Basketball, Business, and Life by Mike Krzyzewski.
Why you should read it: If this quote resonates with you, this book is the blueprint for your leadership library. Coach K goes deep into the “fist” metaphor—the idea that five individuals are like five separate fingers, but when they function together and “clench,” they become a powerful, singular force. He provides detailed anecdotes from his time at Duke and with the Olympic “Redeem Team” on how to build trust between superstars who have nothing in common except a goal. It’s an essential read for any leader trying to navigate the complexities of modern, diverse teams during “tournament-level” pressure.
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The Discipline of Presence
In a world dominated by back-to-back Zoom calls, relentless Slack notifications, and the pressure of “what’s next,” the rarest commodity in leadership isn’t capital or talent… it’s attention. We often celebrate leaders who are visionary, looking five years down the road. While foresight is vital, it becomes a liability when it prevents us from seeing the person sitting right in front of us.
True leadership doesn’t happen in the future; it happens in the immediate interaction. When our minds are preoccupied with the missed targets of yesterday or the projections for next quarter, we lose the ability to lead in the only moment where change is actually possible: right now. This mental “time traveling” creates a fog that obscures current reality, making us slow to react to shifting market conditions and, more importantly, making us emotionally unavailable to the people who are working hardest to build that future with us.
The Spirit of Leadership
As Bill George, former CEO of Medtronic, so eloquently put it:
“The capacity to be fully present is the spirit of leadership. It is the ability to focus your energy on the person you are with or the task at hand, without being distracted by what happened yesterday or what might happen tomorrow.”
This isn’t just “mindfulness” fluff; it is a rigorous discipline of the will. To be the “spirit of leadership” means to be the grounding force for an entire team. When a leader is fragmented, the organization feels a chaotic, vibrating energy that lacks direction. Conversely, when a leader is present, they act as an anchor, allowing the organization to find its collective focus and execute with a precision that is impossible in a distracted state.
5 Ways Presence Transforms Your Leadership
- Building Rapid Trust: Trust isn’t built in a strategy deck; it’s built in the nuances of a conversation. When you are fully present, your team feels heard and valued, which accelerates psychological safety. People can tell when you are “waiting for your turn to speak” versus actually listening, and that distinction is often the difference between a loyal team and a disengaged one.
- Sharpening Judgment: Anxiety lives in the future, and regret lives in the past. High-stakes decisions require the objective data available in the present. Presence clears the “noise” of “what if” scenarios and past failures, allowing you to see the “signal” and make calls based on the reality of the current situation.
- Operational Agility: You cannot pivot if your mental gears are still locked on the previous meeting or a project that didn’t go as planned. Presence allows you to drop the “last play” immediately. This mental flexibility ensures you can respond to the current market reality or a sudden technical hurdle with maximum speed and creativity.
- Emotional Intelligence (EQ) in Action: Being present allows you to catch the non-verbal cues—the hesitation in a designer’s voice, the underlying stress in a manager’s tone, or the excitement in a developer’s eyes—that you’d otherwise miss while checking your watch. These small details are often the early warning signs of major organizational shifts.
- Modeling Focus: Your team will inevitably mirror your energy. If you are distracted, checking emails under the table, or looking past people, you are implicitly giving them permission to do the same. If you are locked in and attentive, you set a standard of excellence that encourages your team to find their own “flow state” in their work.
Strategic planning is a necessary intellectual exercise, but strategic presence is the visceral engine that executes the plan. Tomorrow’s success is simply the cumulative result of how well you handle the “now.” It requires a conscious effort to silence the internal chatter of “what happened” and “what might be.” To lead effectively is to honor the current task with your full cognitive weight.
Challenge yourself this week: in your next one-on-one or team huddle, put the phone face down, close the laptop, and simply be there. You might be surprised at the level of insight and connection you’ve been missing while you were busy looking for the next thing.
Personal Reflection
This quote resonates deeply with me because I’ve learned that “presence” is the ultimate sign of respect. In my own leadership journey, especially within the fast-paced world of global hospitality and technology where the “next big thing” is always knocking at the door, it is incredibly easy to let the future pull me away from the current conversation. I’ve found that the most impactful moments in my career, the ones that truly moved the needle, didn’t come from a spreadsheet; they came from being 100% locked in during a difficult conversation or a breakthrough brainstorming session. I strive to lead by ensuring that when I am with you, I am nowhere else. It is a daily practice of silencing the “yesterday” and “tomorrow” to honor the person standing in front of me and the work we are doing together today.
Recommended Reading
Book: True North: Leading Authenticallly in Today’s Workplace by Bill George
Why Read It: Since we are reflecting on George’s wisdom, this is the definitive guide to finding your “Internal Compass.” Rather than focusing on traditional management tactics, this book dives into the heart of authentic leadership. George argues that your “True North” is the fixed point in a spinning world; your deeply held beliefs and values. By aligning your leadership with these values, you naturally become more present and “real” with your team. This updated edition is particularly relevant because it provides a practical roadmap for staying grounded in the C-suite, helping you navigate the immense pressures of modern business without losing your soul or your focus on the present moment.