Website Cookies

We use cookies to make your experience better. Learn more on how here

Accept

Building confidence in demonstrating vulnerability

In their 2022 article in Harvard Business Review, Dan Cable explores how leaders can build confidence in showing vulnerability, an area that continues to challenge many who feel pressure to always project certainty.

Cable highlights that vulnerability, when modelled skilfully, can strengthen psychological safety and adaptability in teams. Rather than undermining credibility, leaders who share their learning experiences and constructive feedback often become more approachable and trustworthy.

Three practices stand out.

First, normalising learning through the language we use, with ourselves and others, helps frame setbacks as part of growth. Leaders who model this self-talk create space for teams to experiment and innovate.

Second, sharing personal developmental moments – times when feedback or mistakes led to growth – fosters long-term improvements in psychological safety. Importantly, studies show this does not reduce perceptions of competence.

Finally, showing moral humility by acknowledging mistakes in addressing ethical challenges and inviting others’ input reduces the risk of being perceived as morally superior, and encourages prosocial behaviour among followers.

The evidence is clear: vulnerability is not weakness, but a catalyst for trust, adaptability, and ethical behaviour. Leaders who embrace and share their own moments of uncertainty create teams that are more willing to learn, collaborate, and act with integrity.

You can read the original article here.

Blogs

Rethinking meetings as spaces for inclusion

A 2026 review by Rogelberg and colleagues, synthesises thirty years of research on meeting science and offers a compelling insight. Meetings are not simply operational necessities, they are one of the most influential, and often overlooked, mechanisms through which inclusion is experienced at work....
READ POST
Blogs

Not all expertise is what it seems

A recent paper by Mergen and colleagues (2026), published in Organization, introduces a powerful and timely concept: toxic experts. These are individuals who, despite appearing credible, use their perceived expertise to promote misleading or harmful claims, often for personal or commercial gain....
READ POST
Blogs

How everyday interactions shape dignity at work

Dignity is not only lost in dramatic moments. It can also be eroded quietly, in everyday interactions that signal who is valued, and who is not. A recent study by Gatwiri and Kim (2026), published in the Australian Journal of Social Issues, offers a powerful lens on this....
READ POST

Copyright © 2024 Inclusive Leadership

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply

Web Design by Yellowball