The primary responsibility of a leader is to develop more leaders.
That requires developing both the confidence and the competence of the people we have the privilege to lead.
To do that well, a leader must adopt an outward-focused mindset. Leadership is not about making people great—they already are. It is about helping them discover, develop, and capitalize on the greatness they already possess.
And that doesn’t happen through talking.
It happens through listening.
When we truly listen—with our eyes, our ears, and our full attention—we begin to understand a person’s passions, strengths, and unique gifts.
If we don’t create space for people to express themselves, we risk guiding them down a path of our choosing rather than their own.
We see this often in life. Even as parents, with the best intentions, we sometimes try to direct our children down the path that makes the most sense to us—failing to recognize that their gifts may lead them somewhere different.
As leaders, we can fall into that same trap.
We prescribe solutions before fully understanding the individual.
We lead based on our perspective rather than their potential.
Great leaders take a different approach.
They listen first—with a genuine desire to understand.
They create space.
They ask.
They observe.
Because the goal is not to create clones—it is to develop leaders.
Leaders with their own strengths, perspectives, and capabilities.
We are there to support, guide, and challenge—but not to define their path.
That is the essence of coaching.
That is the essence of leadership.
Do your team members know what their gifts are?
What can you do today to help them discover and fully utilize them?
What can you do today to help them discover and fully utilize them?

