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Executive leadership expertise for decision-making, change management, crisis management, stakeholder management, team building, and organizational leadership. Use when leading teams, managing change, navigating crises, or developing leadership skills.

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SKILL.md

name leadership
description Executive leadership expertise for decision-making, change management, crisis management, stakeholder management, team building, and organizational leadership. Use when leading teams, managing change, navigating crises, or developing leadership skills.

Leadership Expert

Comprehensive leadership frameworks for decision-making, change management, and organizational effectiveness.

Executive Decision-Making

Decision-Making Frameworks

OODA LOOP (Fast Decisions):
Observe → Orient → Decide → Act

DECIDE FRAMEWORK (Complex Decisions):
D - Define the problem
E - Establish criteria
C - Consider alternatives
I - Identify best alternative
D - Develop action plan
E - Evaluate and monitor

WRAP FRAMEWORK (Avoiding Bias):
W - Widen your options
R - Reality-test assumptions
A - Attain distance before deciding
P - Prepare to be wrong

Decision Quality Checklist

Factor Questions to Ask
Frame Are we solving the right problem?
Alternatives Have we considered enough options?
Information Do we have reliable data?
Values Are we clear on what matters?
Reasoning Is our logic sound?
Commitment Will people execute?

Delegation Matrix

Importance Urgency Decision By
High High Executive (fast)
High Low Executive (thoughtful)
Low High Delegate with check-in
Low Low Delegate fully

Change Management

Kotter's 8-Step Model

1. Create Urgency - Compelling reasons, threats/opportunities
2. Build Guiding Coalition - Influential cross-functional team
3. Form Strategic Vision - Clear future state and strategy
4. Communicate Vision - Repeat across channels, model behaviors
5. Enable Action - Remove barriers, encourage risk-taking
6. Generate Short-term Wins - Plan victories, build momentum
7. Sustain Acceleration - Hire change agents, new projects
8. Institute Change - Anchor in culture, ensure continuity

ADKAR Model (Individual Change)

Element Definition Key Actions
Awareness Understanding why Communicate business drivers
Desire Want to participate Address WIIFM, reduce resistance
Knowledge How to change Training, education
Ability Skills to execute Practice, coaching
Reinforcement Sustain the change Recognition, measurement

Change Resistance Management

SOURCES OF RESISTANCE:
- Fear of unknown
- Loss of control
- Surprise / timing
- Concerns about competence
- Past change failures
- Threat to status
- Peer pressure
- Mistrust of leadership

RESPONSE STRATEGIES:
| Type | Approach |
|------|----------|
| Information deficit | Education, communication |
| Skill deficit | Training, coaching |
| Incentive deficit | Align rewards |
| Resource deficit | Provide support |
| Values conflict | Dialogue, involvement |
| Politics | Negotiation, coalition |

Crisis Management

Crisis Response Framework

PRE-CRISIS: Risk ID, crisis team, templates, exercises
RESPONSE (Hour 1-4): Activate team, assess, secure safety, communicate
RESPONSE (Hour 4-24): Detailed assessment, stakeholder/media comms
RESPONSE (Day 2-7): Root cause, remediation, ongoing comms
POST-CRISIS: After-action review, improvements, reputation repair

Crisis Communication

COMMUNICATION PRINCIPLES:
- Acknowledge quickly
- Show empathy
- Take responsibility (where appropriate)
- Explain actions being taken
- Commit to updates
- Be honest about unknowns

STAKEHOLDER PRIORITIES:
1. Affected individuals (safety)
2. Employees
3. Regulators
4. Media
5. Investors
6. Customers
7. Partners
8. General public

MESSAGE FRAMEWORK:
1. What happened (facts known)
2. What we're doing (actions)
3. What it means for stakeholders
4. What to expect next

Business Continuity Planning

Element Description
Risk Assessment Identify potential disruptions
Business Impact Analysis Critical processes, RTOs, RPOs
Recovery Strategies Alternate facilities, IT, people
Plan Development Documented procedures
Testing & Exercises Regular drills, tabletops
Maintenance Annual updates, post-incident

Stakeholder Management

Stakeholder Analysis Matrix

STAKEHOLDER MAPPING:

         Power/Influence
         High            Low
Interest
High     MANAGE CLOSELY  KEEP INFORMED
         (Board, major   (Employees,
         investors)      community)

Low      KEEP SATISFIED  MONITOR
         (Regulators,    (Low priority
         lenders)        groups)

Stakeholder Engagement Plan

Stakeholder Interest Influence Strategy Frequency
Board High High Partner Monthly
Investors High High Inform & consult Quarterly
Employees High Medium Engage Weekly
Customers High Medium Listen & respond Ongoing
Regulators Medium High Comply & inform As needed
Media Variable High Proactive comms As needed

Influence Without Authority

RECIPROCITY: Give first - help others, share resources, build credit
SOCIAL PROOF: Reference peers/competitors, share success stories
AUTHORITY: Demonstrate competence, use data and evidence
LIKING: Find common ground, show genuine interest
SCARCITY: Create urgency with limited opportunity/time
COMMITMENT: Start small, get incremental yes, build agreements

Board Relations

Board Communication Best Practices

BOARD MEETING PREPARATION:
- Pre-read materials 1 week ahead
- Executive summary on page 1
- Clear recommendation/ask
- Supporting data in appendix
- Anticipate questions

BOARD PRESENTATION STRUCTURE:
1. Context (2 min)
2. Key issue/opportunity (3 min)
3. Options considered (5 min)
4. Recommendation (3 min)
5. Discussion (remaining time)

BOARD REPORTING CADENCE:
| Topic | Frequency |
|-------|-----------|
| Financial results | Monthly/Quarterly |
| Strategic initiatives | Quarterly |
| Risk dashboard | Quarterly |
| Talent/succession | Semi-annually |
| Strategy refresh | Annually |
| Competitive landscape | Annually |

Governance Best Practices

Practice Description
Independent Chair Separate from CEO for oversight
Executive Sessions Independent director meetings
Board Evaluation Annual self-assessment
Succession Planning CEO and board renewal
Risk Oversight Dedicated committee or process
Shareholder Engagement Investor dialogue program

Executive Communication

Communication Principles

EXECUTIVE PRESENCE:
- Clarity: Simple, direct messages
- Confidence: Conviction without arrogance
- Credibility: Expertise and authenticity
- Connection: Empathy and engagement
- Composure: Calm under pressure

MESSAGE DEVELOPMENT:
What? → So what? → Now what?
(Facts)  (Impact)  (Action)

Town Hall / All-Hands Framework

STRUCTURE:
1. Opening (5 min)
   - Connect personally
   - Set context and agenda

2. Business Update (15 min)
   - Performance highlights
   - Key wins and learnings
   - Challenges and plans

3. Strategic Focus (10 min)
   - Priority initiatives
   - Progress and next steps
   - Resource allocation

4. Recognition (5 min)
   - Celebrate successes
   - Acknowledge teams

5. Q&A (20 min)
   - Prepared questions
   - Open forum
   - Honest responses

6. Close (5 min)
   - Summarize key points
   - Call to action
   - Express appreciation

Difficult Conversations Framework

PREPARE:
- Clarify your objective
- Gather facts
- Anticipate reactions
- Plan key messages

CONDUCT:
1. State purpose directly
2. Share facts, not judgments
3. Listen for understanding
4. Acknowledge emotions
5. Explore solutions together
6. Agree on next steps

FOLLOW UP:
- Document agreements
- Monitor progress
- Provide support
- Address issues promptly

Leadership Development

Leadership Competency Model

Competency Behaviors
Vision Sets direction, inspires others
Strategic Thinking Systems perspective, anticipates trends
Driving Results Accountability, execution focus
Leading People Develops talent, builds teams
Collaboration Influence, partnerships
Innovation Curiosity, courage to experiment
Integrity Ethics, transparency, trust
Resilience Adaptability, learning from setbacks

70-20-10 Development Model

Source % of Development Examples
Experience 70% Stretch assignments, job rotations, projects
Relationships 20% Mentoring, coaching, feedback, networking
Education 10% Training, courses, reading, conferences

Executive Coaching Approach

GROW MODEL:
Goal - Specific objective, timeline, success criteria
Reality - Current situation, obstacles, resources
Options - Brainstorm possibilities, evaluate pros/cons
Will - Action steps, accountability, commitment

Organizational Culture Shaping

Culture Change Levers

Lever Impact
What leaders pay attention to Highest
How leaders react to crises High
How resources are allocated High
Role modeling and teaching Medium-High
Who gets rewarded/promoted High
Who gets hired/fired High
Organizational design Medium
Systems and processes Medium
Physical space Low-Medium
Stories and symbols Medium

Values Activation

1. DEFINE - Specific language, observable behaviors
2. COMMUNICATE - Stories, visual reinforcement, leader modeling
3. INTEGRATE - Hiring, performance, recognition, decisions
4. HOLD ACCOUNTABLE - Consequences for violations, celebrate exemplars

See Also