Leadership is practiced not so much in words as in attitude and in actions. Harold S. — Geneen
Leadership is practiced not so much in words as in attitude and in actions. Harold S.
Author: Geneen
Insight: People often think leadership means giving great speeches or sending inspiring emails. But if you've ever worked for someone who talks a good game while treating people poorly, or someone quiet who just consistently shows up and does the right thing, you know the disconnect. Leadership lives in the small, unglamorous moments—how you handle frustration, whether you admit mistakes, if you follow through on what you say matters. The real power is that your attitude is contagious in ways words aren't. When a leader stays calm during chaos, people notice. When they take on the hard task themselves instead of dumping it on someone else, that registers deeper than any team motto. Actions prove what you actually believe, whereas words can be performance. You can inspire people with a rousing speech once, but you earn their trust and followership through repeated, consistent behavior that matches your stated values. This is why authentic leadership is exhausting but effective. You can't fake it for long. Everyone around you is constantly reading whether you mean what you say, and the verdict comes down to what you do when it's inconvenient or uncomfortable. That's where real influence lives.