Field Notes/Video

"Dare to Lead": Brené Brown says vulnerability is the "only path to courage"

Brené Brown argues courage is a teachable skill set built on vulnerability, trust, and honest communication.

Overview

Brené Brown presents the core framework from her book on leadership, making the case that vulnerability is not weakness but the foundation of courage. She outlines four specific skill sets leaders can develop and explains why cultures that reward "armor" over honesty undermine performance. The conversation also addresses whether fear-based leadership can work and why she argues it cannot sustain results.

Key takeaways

Courage cannot exist without vulnerability — defined as tolerating uncertainty, risk, and emotional exposure.

Brown identifies four leadership skill sets: rumbling with vulnerability, living into values, building trust, and learning to rise.

Leaders are more willing to take courageous action upfront when they know how to recover from failure.

Courage and fear are both contagious; organizations must stop rewarding armored, avoidant behavior to build culture.

The single behavior change Brown recommends for every leader: "clear is kind, unclear is unkind" — stop avoiding hard conversations.

Worth quoting

"There is no courage without vulnerability."

"Vulnerability is the only path to courage and it is the birthplace of innovation, creativity, trust, empathy."

"Clear is kind, unclear is unkind — stop avoiding the tough conversations because you think you're being polite."

Watch the full video on YouTube
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