Howling isn’t leadership.
Talented people need clarity and space to act.
Seek to release, not control. Set guardrails. Trust the judgment of competent people.
Howling Monkeys
Verbosity creates stress. People tune out just to survive.
Root: Incompetence seeks control.
Remedy: Skillful leaders use quiet trust to release talent.
Seduction
It’s tempting to howl, “Get out there and get it done.”
Howling gives weak leaders the illusion of power. Power inspires compliance, not commitment.
Releasing
If you want people to bleed for you, bleed for them.
- “Pour in” if you expect people to “pour out.”
- Know what energizes people.
- Define success. Then step back.
Most engagement strategies are “more for less” in disguise. Don’t treat people like tools and expect them to act like owners.
A Challenge
Less noise gets more done.
Release is respect in action. Anchored in shared values. Fueled by trust.
How can you build a platform instead of a cage?
What’s one way leaders could howl less?
If Words Had Calories – Suggestions for Bloviators
Read: Beyond the Hammer
