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Leadership Happens Through Conversation

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The quality of a leader’s conversations determines the quality of their leadership. Not their strategy, not their vision, not their technical expertise, their conversations. Leaders are expected to make complex decisions, navigate conflict, solve problems, and inspire others.

Every single one of these outcomes requires conversation. And yet conversational skill remains, in most organisations, an afterthought — assumed rather than taught, hoped for rather than built.

Between every leader and their people stands a conversation — the only bridge that truly connects them.

The pattern that emerges most consistently in leadership development work is not one of lack of capability, bad intentions, or weak leadership. It is one of conversational underdevelopment.

Leaders who genuinely want to engage their people but do not have the skills to hold complex conversations. Leaders who recognise that something is wrong but do not know how to open the conversation that would address it. The problem, in almost every case, is not what leaders know. It is what they have never been taught to do.

When we look at what breaks down in teams, it is almost never a strategy failure at its root. It is a conversation that did not happen, or one that happened without the skill to hold it well. Trust does not erode because of policy. It erodes because something important was never said, or was said in a way that could not be heard. The root of the problem is conversational, and so is the solution.

What you most likely need is not an introduction to coaching as a discipline. What you need is to understand that the skills at the heart of great coaching are the same skills that make you an effective leader. Precision listening, supporting, quality questioning, the ability to give and receive feedback, the capacity to influence through shared meaning rather than positional authority — these are not coaching tools that happen to be useful for leaders. They are the core conversational competencies of leadership itself.

“Courage is what it takes to stand up and speak. Courage is also what it takes to sit down and listen.” ~ Winston Churchill

When I was certified as a Meta-Coach, we were benchmarked against 7 core coaching skills. The more I work with leaders navigating conflict, team breakdown, and organisational complexity, the more convinced I am that every leader should be benchmarked on these same skills.

  1. Listening  — for what is said, and for what is left unsaid
  2. Supporting  — building rapport and creating emotional safety
  3. Questioning for Precision  — clarifying assumptions and sharpening shared understanding
  4. Questioning for Meaning  — evoking insight, reflection, and self-awareness
  5. Giving Feedback  — with clarity, structure, and emotional maturity
  6. Receiving Feedback  — with openness, presence, and genuine curiosity
  7. Influencing  — through authentic intention and meaningful meaning-making

A single conversation, held with skill and intention, can change the direction of a life.

A leader who listens well creates psychological safety. A leader who questions well gives better feedback. A leader who influences through shared meaning builds the kind of trust that holds teams together through difficulty and inspires people to unleash their potential. These are not qualities that some leaders are born with and others are not. They are skills that can be learned, structured, and practised.

What you say, and how you say it, does not simply inform the people around you — it shapes their sense of what is possible, what is valued, and who they are permitted to be within your organisation. The frames you set through conversation are the frames your team lives inside. That is precisely why conversational development belongs at the centre of your leadership, not at its edges.

We do not just have conversations. We are shaped by them — and so is everyone we lead.

When leaders develop these competencies, their conversations change — and those conversations change everything around them. Culture does not shift through a new values statement. It shifts through the repeated quality of the conversations leaders are willing and able to have. The communication style of an individual leader becomes the silent architect of the culture.

Consider for a moment the conversations you have had this week. The ones that created clarity, and the ones that left confusion in their wake. The feedback you gave — or chose not to give. The difficult conversation you opened, or the one you are still postponing. Each of those moments was a choice about the kind of leader you are, and the kind of culture you are building. Leadership does not announce itself through strategy documents or vision statements. It reveals itself, quietly and consistently, through conversation — in how you show up when it matters, what you are willing to say, and how well you are able to hear what comes back.

The most important question a leader can ask is not “What is my strategy?” It is “What conversations am I not having — and what is that silence costing the people I lead?”

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