Leading with Authenticity and Vulnerability: Brené Brown & Adam Grant
Courage, vulnerability, and grounded values as practical leadership tools for performance and trust.
Overview
Brené Brown and Adam Grant cover the foundations of courageous leadership: how to identify and operationalize core values, why vulnerability is a prerequisite for courage rather than a soft concept, and how grounded leaders outperform those driven by ego or fear. The conversation draws on Brown's grounded theory research background, her Dare to Lead framework, and concrete tools for difficult conversations and managing up.
Key takeaways
Values are not just what you care about—they are what you are willing to sacrifice for, revealing your true priorities.
Courage requires vulnerability; if there is no uncertainty, risk, or exposure involved, the act is not brave.
Playing not to lose is always losing—leaders and teams must orient around winning, not ego protection.
The "story I'm making up" framing allows honest, non-accusatory check-ins that build rather than erode trust.
Self-awareness combined with sovereignty over your own attention and thinking separates effective leaders from the rest.
Worth quoting
"Playing not to lose is always losing."
"Just because the concept is more popular doesn't mean the behavior's more popular."
"When people are seen, heard, and respected and valued, they're unstoppable. You can get good performance using fear and bad behavior for a very short amount of time. But fear has a very short shelf life."
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