The Most Undervalued
Leadership Skill: Listening
Teams make more meaningful progress when leaders stop talking and start listening.
We hire leaders for their answers. We promote them for their decisiveness. We celebrate their vision and their ability to project confidence in rooms full of people who are looking for direction. And then we wonder why our teams stop bringing us real information.
The causality runs in one direction: leaders who perform certainty create environments where honesty becomes risky. When speaking up might make someone look uninformed, people stop speaking up. The intelligence that should be flowing toward leadership decisions – the early signals, the dissenting view, the thing nobody wants to say in the meeting – gets filtered out before it arrives.
Listening is not passive. It is one of the most disciplined leadership acts there is. It requires setting aside the instinct to reframe, redirect, or respond before the other person has finished. It requires tolerating silence long enough for someone to say the harder thing they were working up to. In healthcare specifically, where frontline staff often see operational and clinical problems before leadership does, the cost of not listening is not just cultural – it shows up in outcomes.
The Culture Lab post that preceded this article generated significant discussion around a simple question: when did you last leave a conversation having genuinely changed your mind because of what someone else said? For most leaders, the honest answer is uncomfortable. That discomfort is worth sitting with.

