Management vs. Leadership: What’s the Real Difference? | Simon Sinek
Management applies to processes and projects; leadership is a human responsibility that must be deliberately learned.
Overview
Simon Sinek draws a hard line between managing things and leading people, arguing they are fundamentally different functions. He traces a common organizational failure: high performers get promoted into leadership roles without ever receiving training for them, then are expected to succeed at a job they were never prepared to do.
Key takeaways
You can manage a process, project, or schedule, but people require leadership, not management.
Leadership is a responsibility to help those around you grow, not a rank or title.
Most companies invest heavily in technical training but provide little preparation for leadership roles.
Promotion based on job performance routinely places people into a leadership role they were never trained for.
The best leaders treat leadership as a discipline they are always studying, never mastering.
Worth quoting
"You can manage a process, you can manage a project, you can manage a schedule, but you lead people."
"You'll eventually get promoted into a position where you no longer do the job that you were trained to do."
"They never ever think of themselves as experts — they always think of themselves as students."
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