Leader development doesn't happen just because they show up in an office. Leadership development is a key challenge for many firms, including a lot of hybrid and remote-first organizations that I work with. Managers don't know how to lead distributed teams, leaders who are under pressure to deliver and don't have time to learn, and gaps in who gets mentored -- and who doesn't. Michael Hudson and a team from Hudson Institute of Coaching have a case study on how they helped a global consulting firm build an environment that drove development into how people worked. Highlights below, and you should really read the details -- it's well structured and thought through: 🔸 Structured peer learning: Curated 6 person groups, diverse in experiences, backgrounds, and perspectives; "learning pods that might never have formed organically in a physical office." 🔸 Embedded development: Weekly 15 minute practices to build habits, continual learning and reinforcement. 🔸 Expert-facilitated sessions: Monthly structured forums for group learning and peer conversations. Expert coaches can help you get deeper, faster. 🔸 Competency-Focused Curriculum: Targeted specific leadership skills, especially around issues like belonging among diverse populations and in distributed teams. Check out the article, linked in comments. Also, I'd personally recommend Hudson Institute of Coaching. I found their LifeForward program to be immensely impactful, and know a number of incredible certified coaches who have been through their program. #Leadership #Development #Coaching #Coach #FutureOfWork
Adapting Leadership Styles for Remote Work
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Remote is freedom in the U.S. It’s isolation in parts of Europe. And in the world of executive hiring, that one cultural difference is shifting how companies win (or lose) talent fast. When I first started working across both markets, I didn’t fully understand just how differently “hybrid” landed in New York vs. Amsterdam. Or in Barcelona vs. Boston. But here’s what I’ve seen after placing senior leaders across both regions for 12+ years: → In the U.S., remote work is often positioned as autonomy. It signals trust. Flexibility. And in a culture that celebrates hustle and independence, it’s seen as a career enabler. → In Europe, remote work especially when not well integrated can signal distance. It can feel like a barrier to culture, learning, or leadership visibility. Especially in regions where collaboration and social cohesion are prized. Neither approach is wrong. But blanket hybrid policies miss the mark when they ignore regional nuance. Let’s take a real-world example: → I’ve placed execs in the U.S. who negotiated full-remote C-level roles—with board approval. → I’ve seen execs in Germany decline offers because the leadership wasn’t visible enough in the office to earn trust. This isn’t just about where people work. It’s about how they connect, build influence, and lead. Here’s what’s working: - In the U.S., leaders win when they prioritize asynchronous communication, results over hours, and flexibility over optics. - In Europe, leaders win when they blend in-office structure with intentional, high-trust hybrid systems especially in France, Germany, and Southern Europe. - In global companies, the best leadership teams localize their hybrid models by culture, not just function. Because leadership isn’t one-size-fits-all. It’s context-aware. The companies that retain top talent across borders are the ones who’ve realized this: → Hybrid policy = talent strategy. → Culture fit = localized leadership, not just compensation. → Remote can be freedom or friction depending on how you lead. I spend a lot of my time now helping FMCG leaders navigate these nuances. Hiring across regions is one thing. Retaining leaders across regions? That’s a whole different skillset. And if we want high-performing teams in this global market? We need to stop managing policy and start leading with understanding. Let’s talk if your cross-market leadership model could use a reset. #ExecutiveSearch #HybridLeadership #RemoteWork #TalentStrategy #FMCG #ConsumerGoods #LeadershipHiring #USvsEurope #CultureDrivenLeadership #FutureOfWork
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Navigating Leadership in Turbulent Times- A few days ago, I had an interesting conversation with a friend about how Non Profits are facing this period of unknowns and instability. For organizational leaders, the role we play in guiding our teams and ensuring the stability and resilience of our organizations has never been more critical. Here are a few things I learned about leading through uncertainty- 1. Focus with Intent We are constantly being hit with a barrage of incoherent tweets, rash decisions, and contradictory messaging that can feel overwhelming. Reacting to everything will leave us scattered, unfocused, and ineffective. Leaders must prioritize their organizational goals and focus on what they are best equipped to address. 🔑 Choose your battles wisely and resist the urge to 'play whack-a-mole' with every issue. Not every fight is yours to take on, and sometimes, the wisest move is not to fight at all. Focused leadership drives meaningful impact. 2. Embrace Collaboration - In this season of uncertainty, collaboration is not optional—it’s essential. Community and partnerships have always propelled movements forward. 🤝 Build a collaborative work culture, encouraging your team to cultivate strong relationships both internally and externally. Collaboration builds trust, and allows people to build upon their strengths and leads to better decisions and outcomes. 3. Flexibility & Adaptability -"Be stubborn about your goals but flexible about how you achieve them." Strategy is not a fixed plan but an evolving path to reach a predetermined destination. Recognize when adjustments are needed and model adaptability for your team. 📣 Communicate openly with staff about changes and align around shared objectives, even if absolute agreement isn’t always possible. Pathways can emerge when teams are nimble and solutions-oriented. 4. Support Your Staff- Amid external crises, organizational trust often becomes strained. Now is the time to double down on creating a supportive environment for your team. Focus on the short-term goals and the long-term mission when conflict arises. Look for areas of agreement to rally around. 💡 Consider what your organization can offer during this period, whether that’s flexible policies, open communication channels, or empathetic leadership. Teams perform best when they feel valued and supported. 5. Safeguard Your Organization - If your mission runs counter to the incoming administration’s policies, preparation is key. 📋 Run a risk assessment and review your policies/processes to ensure compliance and readiness. Develop clear protocols and maintain a strong relationship with your legal counsel. A proactive approach will protect your organization from unnecessary risks. I can say from experience that leadership in turbulent times isn’t easy, but it’s also an incredible opportunity to model resilience, inspire focus, and foster collaboration.
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Create Environments Where Your Teams Can Thrive How to Address Burnout as a Leader: It's our responsibility to spot burnout early and take action. Here’s a cheat sheet to help you lead with empathy and prevent burnout: 1. Foster Open Communication (Talk It Out): ↳ Create a safe space for discussing stress and workload. ↳ Focus one-on-ones on well-being, not just performance. 2. Promote Work-Life Balance (Boundaries Matter): ↳ Encourage disconnecting after hours and taking vacations. ↳ Lead by example! Log off at a reasonable hour. 4. Recognize and Reward (Appreciation Counts): ↳ Acknowledge efforts and celebrate small wins regularly. ↳ Hold weekly shout-outs to boost morale. 6. Provide Stress Management Resources (Tools & Support): ↳ Offer wellness programs and mental health resources. ↳ Share resources during meetings or in a Slack channel. 8. Encourage Professional Growth (Invest in Development): ↳ Provide learning and development opportunities. ↳ Invest time and budget in workshops or courses. ___ 👉 Pro Tip: Pin this cheat sheet at your desk or share it with your team to keep burnout prevention top of mind. 🔄 Join the Conversation: What strategies have you found effective in preventing burnout within your team? 👋 Follow me, Hetali Mehta, for more leadership insights.
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A topic that has come up recently in some of my manager development programs is how to lead during times of change and uncertainty (which, let's face it, feels like the norm these days). The core question is this: How do you show up and lead others during periods of uncertainty and change when you yourself may feel uncertain about the changes happening? When one person asks this question, many others nod in agreement, highlighting the universality of what many leaders are experiencing today. In the hopes of sparking further conversations between your leaders and their peers on this topic, I wanted to share a few key ideas we discussed as potential actions for leaders to try: 📌Put on your oxygen mask first - As the saying goes, take care of yourself first. Before you respond to others, make sure you are in a good place personally amidst the change and uncertainty. It can be challenging to support others when you’re not taking care of yourself. Take time to reflect, seek support, or journal—whatever helps you process the situation. But before you lead, start with yourself. 📌 Map out what’s within your control - It’s easy to feel overwhelmed by uncertainty, but in reality, some things are within your control, and others are not. Define what’s in your control and focus your energy there. It’s not easy, but it helps reduce the stress of feeling powerless. 📌 Meet people where they are - Everyone has their own relationship with change and their own ways of coping with fear, uncertainty, and change. Your goal is to understand where each person is individually and meet them there, helping them move in the right direction. This requires listening and personalizing your approach to each individual. 📌Turn outward (and encourage others to do the same) - During challenging times, it’s natural to want to turn inward and isolate yourself. While it’s completely reasonable to take care of yourself, remember the saying, “don’t suffer in silence.” If there’s uncertainty or change happening, you’re likely not the only one feeling it. Turn outward to your peers and colleagues. As a leader, model this behavior, and encourage your team to connect with their peers as well, if they feel comfortable. Many of society’s challenges have been solved through collaboration, and this situation will be no different. If you have other ideas or practices that are helping your leaders navigate change and uncertainty, I’d love to hear what you’re doing or trying! #leadership #leadershipdevelopment
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Instead of mandating an RTO, ask yourself: “How can I equip my team to work together effectively - no matter where they are today?” Because here’s what the data actually shows: ➡️ Office mandates ≠ office attendance Despite big headlines from Amazon, JPMorgan Chase, and others, in-office attendance has barely budged… up only 2% ➡️ Hybrid is still the norm 67% of U.S. companies offer location flexibility ➡️ Most enterprise teams are already distributed Microsoft went from 61% co-located teams pre-pandemic to just 27% by 2023 ➡️ Cross-functional = cross-location Enterprise project teams are rarely co-located anymore - and need a new playbook to succeed. ⚠️ Yet only 23% of companies have provided training on how to lead and collaborate effectively in hybrid, remote, and distributed environments It’s time to build a new leadership muscle. Omnimodal Leadership - the ability to lead with equal impact in: ✅ Fully in-person settings ✅ Hybrid setups (in-location majority or minority) ✅ Fully remote teams And switch between modes - sometimes even in the same day. How do you build these skills? Over the past 6+ years we’ve helped thousands of leaders build measurable results by teaching how to: ✨ Co-create team working agreements ✨ Set clarity around time zones and responsiveness ✨ Use async tools intentionally to reduce meeting overwhelm ✨ Coach and mentor direct reports at a distance ✨ Mitigate Distance + Recency Bias ✨ Build connection and trust remotely ✨ Grow influence and exposure - without a desk at HQ This takes more than theory. It requires repeatable, proven techniques. 📖 Full article from Inc. Magazine: https://lnkd.in/eKv-P528 📊 Want credible data? Follow: Flex Index, Brian Elliott, Nick Bloom, Global Workplace Analytics
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Do you feel unmotivated to take action of any kind? Do you no longer find joy in hobbies or spending time with loved ones? These could be symptoms of burnout, indicating you may be overworking and feeling mentally and physically drained. According to research by Deloitte: 77% of professionals experience burnout in their current jobs. As alarming as this statistic is, the real issue lies in the fact that many of us don't even recognize the signs until it's far too late. Throughout my career, I can recall several instances where in hindsight I experienced burnout. While from the outside I was succeeding in my career, on the inside I was struggling with my mindset, feelings and relationships. I was fortunate to have a strong support network (both professional and personal) that supported me through these struggles. This personal experience made me realize the importance of normalizing speaking about this topic and educating myself and others on prevention and management strategies. To get some practical insights and tips on this topic, I reached out to my friend Dora Vanourek. Dora is a Burnout Coach for Tech Professionals, a LinkedIn Top Voice on Resiliency, and a Senior Consulting Services leader at IBM. Here are 5 invaluable tips she shared on preventing and managing burnout: 1. Recognize Early Signs of Burnout: Burnout does not happen overnight - instead, it slowly creeps in. Watch out for early signs such as exhaustion, emotional overwhelm, disrupted sleep, changes in eating habits, disconnect from social life, reduced motivation and self-care, physical ailments, and reduced performance. 2. Understand and Address Root Causes: Long hours might seem to cause burnout, but they're often just a symptom of deeper issues. Common root causes include feeling undervalued, working in a toxic team environment, lack of autonomy in how you work, perceived unfairness, and a mismatch between job requirements and your values. Addressing these core issues is essential. 3. Engage in Activities: Find an activity that energizes you and helps you disconnect from your work. Aim for at least 15 minutes on most days. Anything you enjoy will be beneficial: walk, exercise, creative hobbies, dancing to favorite songs, gardening, meditation, etc. 4. Incorporate Meaningful Tasks in Your Work: All jobs have less enjoyable tasks. Research shows that you are less likely to burn out if at least 20% of your work is meaningful. An example is mentoring or coaching someone, developing new ideas or developing a training course for others. Everyone finds meaning in different tasks - reflect and find yours. 5. Ask for help: You are never alone. Reach out to a friend or professional. Your company might have employee assistance programs, or point you to available help in your country. Looking for additional insights on the topic? Follow Dora here on LinkedIn. She posts daily on the topics of burnout, careers, mindset, coaching, and leadership.
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If you want to become a better manager overnight, I would teach you this one skill: Setting Clear Expectations Why? It is the single highest leverage activity you can do. And nearly everyone leading a team does it poorly. Or not at all. 📌 If you're the Manager: Setting expectations is your number 1 job. Your team will never meet your secret expectations. Despite their effort, they're always falling short. The vicious cycle builds massive frustration. 💡 The Solution: Make Expectations Explicit - Agree on the What & When (SMART goals or OKRs work) - Agree on How (process, tech, budget, culture all matter) - Agree on KPIs or Metrics (how you'll measure results) Have them send you an email summarizing. Two more tips for managers: ✅ Co-author - Give them the pen on the first draft. - They're more likely to stick to the script they wrote. - You'll also learn how they see their role and can coach better. ✅ Consistency - Expectations are imperfect, so give feedback. - Agree upfront on how and when this will happen. - Use your 1:1 check-ins to review expectation monthly. ----- 📌 If you're the Employee: Why try and guess what your boss wants you to do? If the expectations map above makes sense... 💡 Write them down yourself. - If you're right, you have a written contract. - If you're wrong, you gain clarity when they fix them. Either way, you gain clarity on how to win. Two more tips for employees: ✅ Synthesize - Focus on the big picture, not every detail - You create more value if you can connect the dots ✅ Empathize - Your manager will not have every answer - You can help them by surfacing the right questions ----- I've seen plenty of employees "win the second half." But to win, you must understand the game's rules. And clear expectations create the scoreboard. Want my template to set clear employee expectations? Join 45,000 leaders getting my free newsletter: https://lnkd.in/eCvpr7RY And before you go... - Please repost ♻️ if you think this is a better way to work - Follow me at Dave Kline for more practical leadership posts
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🤐 "Dead Air" on Zoom? It’s Not Disengagement — It’s Cultural. 🌏 Your global team is brilliant, but meetings are met with silence. You ask for input, and… nothing. It’s not that they don’t care. It’s cultural. In many cultures, challenging a leader publicly can feel disrespectful. Speaking up might risk "losing face." So, instead of collaboration, you get cautious nods, and critical ideas die quietly. 💥 The cost? Missed feedback, hidden conflicts, derailed timelines, and talent feeling unseen and unheard. But it doesn’t have to be this way. 🚀 Here’s how to encourage real participation and build trust across cultures — starting today. 1️⃣ Invite opinions privately first. Many cultures value privacy and may hesitate to disagree publicly. Before the meeting, send out an agenda and ask for input by email or private chat. This gives team members time to reflect and feel safer sharing. 2️⃣ Create "round robin" sharing moments. During the call, explicitly invite each person to share, one by one. Use phrases like: "I’d love to hear a quick insight from everyone, no wrong answers." This reduces the fear of interrupting or "stepping out of line." 3️⃣ Model vulnerability as a leader. Share your own uncertainties or challenges first. For example: "I’m not sure this is the best approach — I’d really value your perspective." When you show it’s safe to be open, your team will follow. 4️⃣ Acknowledge and validate contributions publicly. After someone shares, affirm them clearly. For example: "Thank you for that perspective — it really helps us see this from a new angle." This builds psychological safety and encourages future participation. 5️⃣ Use cultural "mirroring" techniques. Mirror verbal and non-verbal cues appropriate to different cultures (e.g., nodding, using supportive phrases). Show respect for varying communication styles instead of forcing a "one-size-fits-all" dynamic. ✨Imagine meetings where every voice is heard and your team’s full potential is unlocked. Ready to stop the silence and turn diversity into your superpower? #CulturalCompetence #GlobalLeadership #InclusiveTeams #PsychologicalSafety #CrossCulturalCommunication