Leadership Styles in Modern Work

Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.

  • View profile for Justin Wright

    Your success, my mission | 3x founder & CEO | Former CIO $4B company | DEIB ally | Sharing 24 years of hard-earned leadership & self-mastery wisdom

    648,101 followers

    I made a huge mistake in my first leadership role. I treated every team member exactly the same way. What worked for my more senior employees completely frustrated the younger ones. And what motivated my Millennial teammates made the Boomers uncomfortable. Here's what I learned: Great leaders don't use a one-size-fits-all approach. Some team members crave daily feedback. Others prefer monthly check-ins. Some want detailed instructions. Others need creative freedom. Some love collaborative brainstorming. Others do their best thinking alone. The secret? Get to know each person as an individual. Ask them: • When they do their best work • How they prefer to communicate • What support they need to succeed • What kind of feedback helps them grow Because leadership isn't about your style. It's about adapting your style to help each person thrive. The best teams aren't built on treating everyone equally. They're built on treating everyone individually. That's when magic happens. And that's when everyone wins. What's your best tip for leading different generations? ♻️ Find this valuable? Repost to help other leaders. 🔖 Follow Justin Wright for more on leadership. Want a PDF of this and my 70 best cheat sheets? Get them here for free: BrillianceBrief.com

  • View profile for April Little

    Former HR Exec Helping Women Leaders ($150k–$500k) get VP Ready: Comms, Power Dynamics & Influence | Speaker | ✨2025 Time 100 Creator✨| Obvious Choice Interviewer 🚀 Dec 25 | Careers, AI & Tech Creator

    276,234 followers

    When I started leading a high-powered recruiting team, I had the traits of the TYRANT leaders I now call out. Here's why: Despite my degrees, certificates, and ongoing professional development, nothing prepared me to transition into leading. I still had an individual contributor (IC) mindset, which unintentionally led me to compete with my very capable team. At the time, I engaged in behaviors like: Taking over projects instead of developing my team. Working long hours, thinking it showed commitment. Making unilateral decisions vs collaborating. Giving orders instead of providing clarity and context. Hoarding information instead of communicating transparently. Prioritizing my metrics over team goals. A month in, my boss at the time sat down with me and told me to own my transition and to stop taking over work when someone asked for help. (she's one of the best Leader's I've ever had) To transform my mindset, I sought out a few internal sponsors and observed how they managed their teams. I also asked my team for feedback on where I could do better. Once I made the changes: mindset and action, I began demonstrating new leadership behaviors: Coaching my team and developing their problem-solving skills. ↳Created an authorization matrix to empower them to make decisions. Promoting work-life balance through prioritization and delegation. ↳I stopped working on vacation to set a better example. Making collaborative decisions to increase buy-in. ↳They worked on the reqs, so I asked for their ideas and where I could implement them. Painting a vision and equipping the team to get there themselves. ↳I translated the organization's vision down to how it affected our team goals. Openly communicating to build trust and transparency. ↳I promoted democratic decision-making and explained when it needed to be autocratic. Aligning on and championing team goals over my individual metrics. ↳I held weekly reviews where I celebrated their success because it was OUR success. Here's what I want you to take from this: 1. Develop your team's skills rather than trying to be the expert. 2. Delegate decisions to increase buy-in and leverage diverse perspectives. 3. Openly share information rather than hoarding knowledge and insight. 4. Recognize and elevate your team's contributions rather than taking individual credit. #aLITTLEadvice #leadership

  • View profile for Ethan Evans
    Ethan Evans Ethan Evans is an Influencer

    Former Amazon VP, sharing High Performance and Career Growth insights. Outperform, out-compete, and still get time off for yourself.

    158,142 followers

    In 2011, the Amazon Appstore failed on launch and Jeff Bezos was furious. It was my fault, and I handled one aspect of recovery so poorly that one of my engineers quit. I still regret it 14 years later. Please learn from my mistake. The main lesson is that when you are leading through a crisis, it can feel like it is all about you. It isn’t. It is about: 1) Solving the problem 2) Guiding your team through it The product issue was that there were some pretty simple bugs, and we solved those problem well enough that I was eventually promoted. Where I failed was in guiding my team through the crisis. My leadership miss was that I neglected to encourage and support the engineer who had written the bad code. He did a great job stepping up and supporting the effort to fix the problem, but shortly afterward, he resigned. During the crisis, I failed to make clear to him that we did not blame him for the launch failure despite the bugs. I imagine that left room for him to think we blamed him or that he didn’t belong. It is also possible that others did blame him directly and that I was too caught up in the crisis to realize it. Both instances were my responsibility as the leader of the team. His resignation taught me a valuable lesson about leading through a crisis: No matter how bad the situation is, your team must be your first priority. If you make them feel safe, they will move heaven and earth to fix the problem. If you don’t, they may still fix the problem, but the team itself will never be the same. As a leader, here is how you can give them what they need: 1) Take the blame and do not allow others to be blamed. In some bug cases after this we did not release the name of the engineer outside the team in order to protect them from judgment or blame. 2) Separate fixing the problem from figuring out why it happened. Once the problem is fixed, you can focus on root-causing. This lowers the risk of searching for answers getting confused with searching for someone to blame. 3) Realize that anyone involved in the problem already feels bad. High performers know when they have fallen short and let their team down. As a leader you have to show them the path to growth and success after the crisis. They do not need to be beaten up on- they have taken care of that themselves. 4) See crises and problems as growth opportunities, not personal flaws. Your team comes with you in a crisis whether you like it or not, so you might as well come out stronger on the other side. As a leader, the responsibility for a crisis is yours in two ways: The problem itself and the effect it has on the future of the team. Don’t get too caught up in the first to think about the second. Readers- Has your team survived a crisis? How did you handle it?

  • View profile for Pascal BORNET

    Award-winning AI & Automation Expert, 20+ years | Agentic AI Pioneer | Keynote Speaker, Influencer & Best-Selling Author | Forbes Tech Council | 2 Million+ followers | Thrive in the age of AI and become IRREPLACEABLE ✔️

    1,494,297 followers

    “We are the last generation of leaders who will only lead people. The next generation will lead people and agents.” That sentence stopped me in my tracks at IBM Think 2025. It’s bold. It's provocative. And it's true! For decades, leadership meant inspiring, managing, and guiding teams of people. Now, we’re entering a new era—one where AI agents become an integral part of every team, process, and decision. At #Think2025, I saw the future unfold live: 🌀 PepsiCo is orchestrating 1,500+ agents across sales, HR, and operations. 🌀 Slack automated over 650,000 customer service interactions. 🌀 And IBM? They’ve built a platform where anyone—developer or not—can build and personalize their own AI agents in minutes. Read more here: https://lnkd.in/eYHBhKVh And here’s the real shift: Leadership is no longer just human-centric. It’s hybrid. You’ll lead people—with empathy, vision, and inspiration. And you’ll lead agents—with precision, strategy, and code. This isn’t science fiction. This is now. In the coming months, this ability could be a key factor in distinguishing good leaders from great ones. How to build this? Start here: 3 Skills future-ready leaders need to build ➡️ Trust-Building in Hybrid Teams: Develop strategies to build trust between humans and AI—including transparency, clear handoffs, and progressive autonomy ➡️ Workflow Thinking: Learn to design human+agent workflows, not just manage tasks. Think orchestration and delegation ➡️ Change Leadership: Guide people through fear and uncertainty toward curiosity and capability. The mindset shift is half the battle 👉 So here’s my question to fellow leaders: Have you started preparing to lead both people and AI agents? #IBMpartner #AI #Leadership #Transformation #AgenticAI #Innovation #Changemanagement

  • View profile for Omar Halabieh
    Omar Halabieh Omar Halabieh is an Influencer

    Tech Director @ Amazon | I help professionals lead with impact and fast-track their careers through the power of mentorship

    88,990 followers

    Conflict gets a bad rap in the workplace. Early in my career, I believed conflict had no place in a healthy workplace. As I progressed, I realized that it was quite the contrary. The lack of conflict isn't a sign of a healthy work culture, rather it is an indication that important debates, discussions and differing viewpoints are being disregarded or suppressed. This insight revealed another key aspect: high-performing teams do not shy away from conflict. They embrace it, leveraging diverse opinions to drive optimal outcomes for customers. What sets these teams apart is their ability to handle conflict constructively. So how can this be achieved? I reached out to my friend Andrea Stone, Leadership Coach and Founder of Stone Leadership, for some tips on effectively managing conflict in the workplace. Here's the valuable guidance she provided: 1. Pause: Take a moment to assess your feelings in the heat of the moment. Be curious about your emotions, resist immediate reactions, and take the time to understand the why behind your feelings. 2. Seek the Other Perspective: Engage genuinely, listen intently, show real interest, and ask pertinent questions. Remember to leave your preconceived judgments at the door. 3. Acknowledge Their Perspective: Express your understanding of their viewpoint. If their arguments have altered your perspective, don't hesitate to share this with them. 4. Express Your Viewpoint: If your opinion remains unswayed, seek permission to explain your perspective and experiences. Remember to speak from your viewpoint using "I" statements. 5. Discuss the Bigger Objective: Identify common grounds and goals. Understand that each person might have a different, bigger picture in mind. This process can be taxing, so prepare beforehand. In prolonged conflict situations, don't hesitate to suggest breaks to refresh and refuel mentally, physically, and emotionally. 6. Know Your Limits: If the issue is of significant importance to you, be aware of your boundaries. For those familiar with negotiation tactics, know your BATNA (Best Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement). 7. Finalize Agreements: Once an agreement has been reached, continue the engagement to agree on responsibilities and timeframes. This ensures clarity on the outcome and commitments made. PS: Approach such situations with curiosity and assume others are trying to do the right thing. 🔁 Useful? I would appreciate a repost. Image Credit: Hari Haralambiev ----- Follow me, tap the (🔔) Omar Halabieh for daily Leadership and Career posts.

  • View profile for Brian Elliott
    Brian Elliott Brian Elliott is an Influencer

    Exec @ Charter, CEO @ Work Forward, Publisher @ Flex Index | Advisor, speaker & bestselling author | Startup CEO, Google, Slack | Forbes’ Future of Work 50

    30,604 followers

    Is your leadership's management philosophy stuck in the 1960s? Let's redefine it: Leadership by Being Engaged. The concept of "management by walking around" came from Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard (HP founders) in the 1960s, popularized by Tom Peters in 1982, and gets used today to describe what's missing in #remote work. "The expected benefit: by random sampling of events or employee discussions, managers are more likely to facilitate improvements to the morale, sense of purpose, productivity and and quality... compared to remaining in a specific office area, or the delivery of status reports." The literal concept doesn't work if your managers have people who are working in multiple locations, now the majority case. 60 to 80% of all "enterprise" company managers now have #distributed teams. 100% of Fortune 500 Execs have teams that are #distributed today, according to Atlassian (kudos Molly Sands, PhD). #RTO mandates rooted in this philosophy are trying to return to a world that no longer exists. Leaders need a both/and approach. Get employees together to jump-start #belonging, and build better #culture and #performance by being involved in the digital #collaboration tools that your teams use every day. Let's redefine a philosophy rooted in co-location into one for the #digital age. Four starting points for leaders looking to get digitally engaged: 🔸 Increase transparency. Internal transparency around clear goals and realistic progress against them drives focus on outcomes, and builds trust. 🔸 Get engaged in the work. Execs need to stop saying "Teams/Slack etc are for the kids; you'll find me in email" and get into the tools people use every day to work through account issues, project updates, and problem solving. 🔸 Participate in digital communities. Social forums at work build belonging. That cuts across everything from an Abilities ERG to Sneakerheads. Finding community at work boosts retention; even leaders need to find that. 🔸 Get a reverse mentor. Being available and engaged digitally can feel foreign as a leader, and initially scary to a team. Find a digital native in your organization who can coach you! What's your take? Retire the phrase, or revive an important concept?

  • View profile for Joshua Miller
    Joshua Miller Joshua Miller is an Influencer

    Master Certified Executive Leadership Coach | Linkedin Top Voice | TEDx Speaker | Linkedin Learning Author ➤ Helping Leaders Thrive in the Age of AI | Emotional Intelligence & Human-Centered Leadership Expert

    380,011 followers

    Why oversimplified images about leadership miss the mark in 2025 We’ve all seen leadership diagrams like this one from Pinterest, which lists integrity, empathy, drive, and respect as the keys to leadership. These are important, but let’s be honest → in 2025, this is just the starting line. According to LinkedIn’s Future of Skills and Skills on the Rise reports, the most in-demand leadership skills now include AI literacy, adaptability, digital agility, and a growth mindset. Korn Ferry’s 2025 leadership trends echo this: leaders today must drive innovation, create psychological safety, and build inclusive, purpose-driven cultures—none of which show up in oversimplified diagrams. How should this diagram be updated? Add... → AI & digital fluency → Adaptability → Curiosity → Inclusivity → Purpose-driven vision Show leadership as a dynamic, social process—LESS about static traits, MORE about creating direction, alignment, and commitment across teams. Leadership in 2025 is about guiding people through uncertainty, leveraging technology, and fostering cultures where innovation and diverse perspectives thrive. It’s not just about being respected—it’s about empowering others to act, adapt, and grow. Your title doesn’t make you a leader. Neither does checking off a list of virtues. Let’s move beyond feel-good graphics and demand more from ourselves and our leaders. Coaching can help; let's chat. | Joshua Miller Sources: LinkedIn Future of Skills Report LinkedIn Skills on the Rise 2025 Korn Ferry Top Leadership Trends 2025 #ExecutiveCoaching #Leadership #FutureOfWork #Skills2025 #AI

  • View profile for Francesca Gino

    I'll Help You Bring Out the Best in Your Teams and Business through Advising, Coaching, and Leadership Training | Ex-Harvard Business School Professor | Best-Selling Author | Speaker | Co-Founder

    98,726 followers

    Too often, I’ve been in a meeting where everyone agreed collaboration was essential—yet when it came to execution, things stalled. Silos persisted, friction rose, and progress felt painfully slow. A recent Harvard Business Review article highlights a frustrating truth: even the best-intentioned leaders struggle to work across functions. Why? Because traditional leadership development focuses on vertical leadership (managing teams) rather than lateral leadership (influencing peers across the business). The best cross-functional leaders operate differently. They don’t just lead their teams—they master LATERAL AGILITY: the ability to move side to side, collaborate effectively, and drive results without authority. The article suggests three strategies on how to do this: (1) Think Enterprise-First. Instead of fighting for their department, top leaders prioritize company-wide success. They ask: “What does the business need from our collaboration?” rather than “How does this benefit my team?” (2) Use "Paradoxical Questions" to Avoid Stalemates. Instead of arguing over priorities, they find a way to win together by asking: “How can we achieve my objective AND help you meet yours?” This shifts the conversation from turf battles to solutions. (3) “Make Purple” Instead of Pushing a Plan. One leader in the article put it best: “I bring red, you bring blue, and together we create purple.” The best collaborators don’t show up with a fully baked plan—they co-create with others to build trust and alignment. In my research, I’ve found that curiosity is so helpful in breaking down silos. Leaders who ask more questions—genuinely, not just performatively—build deeper trust, uncover hidden constraints, and unlock creative solutions. - Instead of assuming resistance, ask: “What constraints are you facing?” - Instead of pushing a plan, ask: “How might we build this together?” - Instead of guarding your function’s priorities, ask: “What’s the bigger picture we’re missing?” Great collaboration isn’t about power—it’s about perspective. And the leaders who master it create workplaces where innovation thrives. Which of these strategies resonates with you most? #collaboration #leadership #learning #skills https://lnkd.in/esC4cfjS

  • View profile for Penny Pritzker
    Penny Pritzker Penny Pritzker is an Influencer

    Entrepreneur. Business builder. Civic leader.

    11,223 followers

    Leading in uncertain times is a hot topic today in business as we face a compounding set of unknowns: tariffs, inflation, volatility in our financial markets, the ongoing climate crisis, supply chain disruptions, global conflicts, and the advent of AI to name just a few. Whether you are an operator, investor or board member, I wanted to share a few of my approaches to dealing with the reality we are facing, and I would love your thoughts in response: 1. First, for me, is to remain consistent and committed to our company values. At PSP Partners, we express ours as IDEALS--Integrity, Diversity, Excellence, Alignment, Leadership and Service. Your teams want to know that during uncertainty you will make hard decisions that are grounded in your core values. 2. Radical honesty is critical. Bringing your leadership team to a point of embracing the reality of the landscape that your organization is facing is an essential foundation to then figuring out the vulnerabilities. 3. Ensuring that your balance sheet is strong to weather the difficult periods as well as to have the opportunity to play offense is more essential than ever. 4. Regular scenario planning and pressure testing various outcomes is essential to manage and mitigate risk; it is all the more important right now. This is also known as “red teaming” and it’s a critical thing to do. 5. Being curious about your blind spots and institutional biases will help create an environment where you and your team can safely challenge assumptions. 6. Overcommunicating with your management team and to your company as a whole have never been more needed. Remember it takes about 7 times for a message to break through. Don’t be afraid to repeat it over and over. 7. Embracing the idea that challenges also create unique and unexpected opportunities is so important. During uncertainty the best companies create extraordinary opportunity and returns for the long term. 8. A strong, innovative and resilient culture is always foundational and especially essential to navigating the current challenges. The CEO and your leadership team have to set the example.  

  • View profile for Andrea Nicholas, MBA
    Andrea Nicholas, MBA Andrea Nicholas, MBA is an Influencer

    Executive Career Strategist | Coachsultant® | Harvard Business Review Advisory Council | Forbes Coaches Council | Former Board Chair

    8,907 followers

    When Structure Meets Ambiguity: How One Executive Adapted and Thrived in a Hands-Off Culture Some leaders walk into a new role and find their footing quickly. Others walk into chaos and ambiguity and have to build the map as they go. One of my clients, a seasoned executive, recently stepped into a senior role at a high-growth organization. On paper, it was a dream: global scale, high-impact responsibilities, and a boss with a reputation for giving his leaders full autonomy. But here’s the rub: her boss didn’t do onboarding. Or direction. Or detail. He was brilliant, fast-paced, and extremely hands-off. His philosophy: “Just handle it. Don’t tell me how. Don’t walk me through it. Just tell me when it’s done.” For a leader who excels with clarity, structure, and context, this felt like being dropped into deep water and expected to swim, sans a life raft. We worked together to help her reframe the situation and adapt her style of leadership. Today, she’s thriving. She’s earned high credibility across the enterprise, has positioned herself as a results-driven, trusted operator, and, most importantly, feels confident about her recently enhanced ability to lead through ambiguity. Here are 3 strategies we used that helped her succeed: 🔹 1. Translate Your Thinking Into Their Language Leaders who don’t value detail don’t want the story, just want the headline. My client learned to shift from explaining how to proving what. She used short, focused updates tied to outcomes: “Here’s what I’m doing, here’s why it matters, and here’s how we’ll measure success.” 🔹 2. Redefine Structure On Your Own Terms When leadership doesn’t provide structure, you build it yourself. My client created internal checklists, decision rubrics, and feedback loops to give herself clarity, even if no one else asked for it. The key? She never made her structure someone else’s burden. It was her tool for managing the chaos, not a tool for managing her boss. 🔹 3. Separate Your Need for Validation from Their Leadership Style Executives often equate silence with disapproval. But some leaders don’t give frequent feedback, not because you’re failing, but because they assume you’re fine unless they say otherwise. We worked on developing self-trust and seeking feedback through outcomes, not affirmations. Leading without a map requires a different kind of strength and an opportunity to grow. Unclear direction or an elusive boss doesn't have to stall success. With the right mindset and strategy, it can accelerate it.

Explore categories