What Makes a Leader Great?
Leadership is a choice anyone can make, defined by courage and service rather than rank or authority.
Overview
This piece challenges the common assumption that leadership is tied to organizational rank, arguing instead that it is a deliberate choice to serve and elevate those around you. It outlines the core traits that distinguish genuine leaders from those who simply hold authority. The central argument is that courage — not vision or charisma — is the most undervalued and essential quality in effective leadership.
Key takeaways
Authority and rank do not make someone a leader; trust and voluntary followership do.
Servant leadership means prioritizing others' growth and ambitions over your own financial metrics.
Financial goals and metrics are valid, but they measure value delivered, not leadership itself.
There is no such thing as an expert leader; continuous learning is a permanent requirement.
Courage — to take risks, speak truth, and act with integrity — is leadership's most undervalued trait.
Worth quoting
"Leadership is the awesome responsibility to see those around us rise."
"I serve your dream rather than you serve my bottom line."
"Courage is a very undervalued characteristic of leadership."
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