Key Highlights
- 60% of new managers fail within their first 24 months due to inadequate preparation and unrealistic expectations
- Only 23% of organizations provide formal leadership development for first-time managers, leaving most to figure it out alone
- Teams with engaged leaders see 23% higher profitability and 18% higher productivity compared to disengaged leadership
- New leaders who actively seek mentorship are 5x more likely to be promoted within two years
The Reed Hastings Lesson
In 2001, Netflix CEO Reed Hastings made a near-fatal leadership mistake that almost destroyed the company. Fresh from rapid growth, he implemented a complex spin-off strategy without properly communicating with his team or customers. The backlash was swift—Netflix lost 800,000 subscribers in three months.
Hastings later reflected: “I moved too fast, communicated poorly, and ignored the voices of my team.” Instead of doubling down, he did something remarkable—he publicly admitted his mistakes, reversed course, and established new communication protocols. This humility and course-correction ability transformed Netflix into the streaming giant we know today.
The lesson? Even brilliant leaders stumble when they skip the fundamentals of communication, humility, and team engagement.
1. Don’t Try to Be Everyone’s Friend
When new leaders avoid difficult conversations to maintain popularity, they create confusion about expectations and accountability.
The transition from peer to leader requires establishing new boundaries while maintaining positive relationships. This doesn’t mean becoming cold or distant—it means being consistently fair, transparent about decisions, and comfortable with the reality that leadership sometimes requires unpopular choices.
“Leadership is not about being popular. It’s about being effective and helping others succeed.” — Sheryl Sandberg, COO of Meta
Easy Win: Schedule one-on-ones with each team member this week. Ask: “What do you need from me as your leader?” and “How do you prefer to receive feedback?” This establishes your role while showing you care about their success.
Pitfall to Avoid: Don’t make exceptions to rules for people you’re closer to—it undermines your credibility with the entire team.
2. Stop Micromanaging and Start Delegating Strategically
Gallup research shows that managers who cannot effectively delegate are 50% more likely to be overwhelmed and 35% more likely to experience burnout. Moreover, employees who feel micromanaged are twice as likely to consider leaving their jobs.
Effective delegation isn’t about dumping tasks—it’s about matching responsibilities to people’s strengths and growth goals. New leaders often struggle with this because they fear losing control or believe they can do everything faster themselves. However, strategic delegation builds team capacity and frees you to focus on higher-level responsibilities.
“The best executive is one who has sense enough to pick good people to do what he wants done, and self-restraint enough to keep from meddling with them while they do it.” — Theodore Roosevelt
Easy Win: Choose one recurring task you do weekly and delegate it to a team member along with clear success criteria. Check in once midweek, then let them own the outcome.
Pitfall to Avoid: Don’t delegate tasks you haven’t clearly defined or that you’re not willing to let go of completely.
3. Build Your Network Before You Need It
Networking isn’t about collecting business cards or adding connections on social media. It’s about building genuine relationships across departments, industries, and levels of seniority. These relationships become invaluable for problem-solving, career advancement, and learning from others’ experiences.
“Your network is your net worth, but more importantly, your network is your access to opportunities, ideas, and insights.” — Porter Gale, Marketing Executive
Easy Win: Reach out to one person in your organization outside your department this week. Ask for a 15-minute coffee chat to learn about their role and challenges.
Pitfall to Avoid: Don’t network only upward—peers and junior colleagues often become valuable connections as careers evolve.
4. Learn to Communicate Bad News Effectively
New leaders often avoid delivering bad news, hoping situations will improve or someone else will handle it. This approach backfires because delayed communication amplifies problems and erodes trust. Learning to communicate challenges while maintaining confidence and focus on solutions is a critical leadership skill.
“The way we communicate with others and with ourselves ultimately determines the quality of our lives.” — Tony Robbins
Easy Win: Practice the “SBI-I” model: State the Situation, describe the Behavior/impact, share the Impact, and state your Intent going forward. Use this framework in your next difficult conversation.
Pitfall to Avoid: Don’t deliver bad news without having thought through potential solutions or next steps—it creates panic rather than problem-solving focus.
5. Invest in Your Own Development Consistently
PwC’s CEO Survey reveals that 77% of CEOs struggle to find leaders with the skills they need, yet only 34% of mid-level managers actively pursue leadership development. Leaders who spend at least 5 hours per month on skill development advance 50% faster than those who don’t.
Many new leaders get so focused on their team’s development that they neglect their own growth. However, your effectiveness as a leader directly impacts your team’s success. This means consistently reading, seeking feedback, attending training, and finding mentors who can accelerate your learning curve.
“Leadership and learning are indispensable to each other.” — John F. Kennedy
Easy Win: Block 30 minutes in your calendar this week to read one article about leadership, listen to a leadership podcast episode, or schedule time with a mentor.
Pitfall to Avoid: Don’t assume that being promoted means you’ve learned everything you need to know—leadership skills require continuous refinement.
Resources for Your Leadership Journey
📚 Book Recommendation: The First 90 Days by Michael Watkins Key Takeaway: Provides a systematic approach for transitioning into new leadership roles, with frameworks for understanding your situation, building credibility, and achieving early wins.
🔧 Tool Recommendation: Calendly for Leadership Specific Use Case: Set up recurring availability for team one-on-ones, mentorship meetings, and networking conversations. This removes friction from relationship-building and ensures consistency in your leadership touchpoints.
Your Weekly Challenge
This week, complete the “Leadership Foundation Audit”:
Choose one area from this newsletter where you identified a gap in your approach. Schedule 30 minutes before Friday to implement one Easy Win from that section. Then, book a 15-minute conversation with a trusted colleague or mentor to discuss what you learned and get feedback on your next steps.
Remember: Great leaders aren’t born—they’re built through consistent actions and learning from early mistakes before they become major setbacks.
What leadership challenge will you tackle first this week?
How to Confidently Lead Your Team Through Crisis
If you’ve ever felt like you’re stuck in meetings that go nowhere, facing pushback from stakeholders, or trying to lead a team through uncertainty without clear direction — this is for you.
I’m hosting a free session called The Crisis Clarity Blueprint, designed specifically for healthcare executives who need to lead under pressure without second-guessing, over-talking, or watching progress stall.
You’ll walk away with: ✅ A step-by-step decision-making framework for high-stress situations ✅ A clear communication method to get people aligned — fast ✅ A guide to shift from reacting to leading when things get intense
That’s why I’m inviting you to a free LinkedIn Live session:
- Date: September 18, 2025
- Time: 12 PM EST
REGISTER HERE —> https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/a0h_1RQCQcurkiks-9Yd-w
It’s practical, not preachy — and it’s built to help you lead with calm, clarity, and confidence when the stakes are high.
Hope to see you there!





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