You can say all the right things as a leader—
and still fail to get your team to believe you.
People don’t respond to what you say—
they respond to what they believe about you.
If you’re struggling to get your team aligned and moving in the desired direction,
it’s often not because your message is unclear.
It’s because it isn’t believed.
Many leaders focus on explaining what needs to be done.
But what appeals to logic—not emotion.
And people are not inspired by what.
They are inspired by why.
As Simon Sinek often points out,
people don’t follow you because of what you say—
they follow you because they believe what you believe.
That’s where culture becomes critical.
Because culture is what reinforces belief.
Consider the example of TiVo.
TiVo created the first DVR.
It was technically superior and had all the features anyone could want.
Yet it failed to achieve lasting success.
Why?
Because it tried to sell what the product did—
instead of why it mattered.
Contrast that with companies that communicate a clear why.
They don’t just inform—they inspire.
And when people believe, behavior changes.
Your team is no different.
They are not just completing tasks.
They are deciding whether or not to buy in.
When people understand what needs to be done,
they will work for a paycheck.
When they believe in why it matters,
they will commit to a mission.
That belief is built—and sustained—through culture.
It is reinforced by consistent messaging, aligned behavior, and visible standards.
We’ve seen it in sports.
In 1983, the NC State Wolfpack were not the most talented team on the floor.
But they believed.
They were aligned.
They were committed.
And they bought into a culture that carried them to a national championship.
Because when belief is present,
performance follows.
And when belief is absent,
even the best strategy falls short.
So the question becomes:
Where are your people looking for meaning and belief today?
And how are you using your words—and your actions—
to give them a reason to believe?

