Poland

EN

My Top 5 Leadership Lessons – Andrea Cardillo

JUMP TO SECTION

In this series we have been talking to some of our Partners who have been sharing their Top 5 Leadership Lessons. In this blog, Andrea Cardillo,  Managing Partner of our Italian office shares his.

  1. Power is given not taken

    Power is given to leaders by others when they act in ways that improve their life. Therefore power is gained and maintained through a focus on others. Your ability to build trust in your aims is key, and being guided by noble purposes is a pre-requisite for authentic leadership.

  2. Watch out for signs of self-importance

    Once leaders have power, they may fall prey to their own self-importance, believe they are special, and rationalize unethical or selfish actions with narratives about their intellectual or moral superiority. If this is what you experience, you are entering a danger zone.

  3. Exercise empathy and deep listening as antidotes to self-importance

    Self-importance, especially when coupled with hybrid and remote working, can easily lead to loss connection of empathy. When this happens, contributing and creating value for others becomes more difficult, and abuse of power is a risk. Keep on listening to your people, and try to understand how they experience life in your organization from their framework of reference, not yours.

  4. Watch out for signs of disempowerment in your organization

    Often, abuses of power (even unwilling) create powerlessness. When people feel disempowered, their brain goes in to a stress response, which leads to loss of engagement, performance, and results. To avoid this, keep on asking yourself: do people in my organization feel their ideas and needs for change are seriously taken into account?

  5. Develop a sense for when it is time to let go of your role

    Keeping empathetic and purpose focused is hard, let’s face it. And sometimes, even with the best intentions, our ego, our stress, our limits can make us blind. When people lose trust in your intentions and capacity to serve, sooner or later they will take their power back. There is no shame in letting go of your role when you have a sense you are not the right person anymore to make a difference. It is actually often the last and greatest act of leadership.

Have a leadership challenge? Feel free to contact us, to see how we can support.

Share this article:

Topics:

Tagged:

Read Next

How do you measure the success of a leader?

State of the Heart: Burnout, resilience and the importance of truly sustainable leadership In their 2024 State of the Heart report, Six Seconds revealed a sobering picture of the global

Is connecting more via technology harming our emotional resilience?

State of the Heart: Is connecting more via technology harming our emotional resilience? In their 2024 State of the Heart report, Six Seconds revealed a sharp decline in global emotional

Select Your Location and Language

Use our site switcher to easily navigate between our different offices (in your preferred language where available), or select “Global” for our head office.

Privacy Overview
Poland

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.

3rd Party Cookies

This website uses Google Analytics to collect anonymous information such as the number of visitors to the site, and the most popular pages.

Keeping this cookie enabled helps us to improve our website.