Leadership Learning

Sep 23, 2025

Strategy Execution by Design Series

Lever 1: Trust & Leadership
Element 3: Leadership Learning

What happens when as leaders, we stop learning?

I’ve seen it firsthand: a senior leader convinced their past experience was enough. They dismissed feedback, resisted new ideas, and relied on what had worked a decade earlier. Slowly, their team stopped sharing fresh thinking. People felt unheard, execution slowed, and morale drained away. The strategy hadn’t failed; leadership had.

Learning isn’t a luxury for leaders. It’s a necessity.

When leaders stop growing, inconsistency creeps in - saying one thing in the room but failing to follow through outside it. Kouzes and Posner call credibility “doing what you say you will do,” but sustaining that credibility takes reflection and growth. Carol Dweck’s work on growth mindset reinforces this: leaders who stay curious and admit they don’t have all the answers build cultures that adapt and perform. Those who cling to certainty lose credibility and create environments that play it safe.

Look at Satya Nadella’s shift at Microsoft: he moved the company from a “know-it-all” to a “learn-it-all” culture. That change reignited collaboration and innovation - and transformed execution.

I’ve felt the same lesson personally. In my late 30s, I chose to complete my eMBA. It wasn’t easy, but it reshaped the way I think and lead. More importantly, it reminded me that vulnerability - admitting you don’t know it all - is where leadership strength really comes from.

Learning doesn’t have to mean taking years out to study. It can be as simple as asking better questions in meetings, seeking out coaching, reading broadly, or even reverse mentoring from people earlier in their careers.

The challenge, of course, is time. Leaders are busy, and it’s tempting to default to delivery over development. But even five minutes of reflection at the end of a day, or carving out space to debrief decisions, builds the habit of learning without slowing execution.

In leadership roles, people often expect you to have the answers. But you’re human, and showing that is not a weakness. It’s an invitation. By admitting what you don’t know, you create space for your team to contribute, shine, and grow. That’s not letting go of authority; it’s using it to empower others.

When leaders stay open, humble, and curious, they create teams that do the same. And those teams are the ones that adapt, align, and deliver strategy with pace and purpose.

So what can leaders do differently today?
- Ask yourself: where am I still learning? Where have I gone stagnant?
- Share your growth edges openly - it permits others to do the same.
- Replace “I know” with “I’m curious.”

This is why growth and vulnerability matter in execution and are central to Lever 1: Leadership Cohesion & Trust in my Execution by Design series.

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