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High Performance Doesn’t Have One Look

How often do we unintentionally define performance by what we would do?

Inclusive leaders take a different approach. They don’t manage performance by cloning their own behaviours. Instead, they define outcomes clearly, then give people autonomy to reach them in ways that reflect their strengths.

This is how you promote uniqueness in performance. Not by expecting uniformity, but by trusting individuals to know how they work best.

It also means challenging assumptions:

  • Does effective communication always mean directness?
  • Is leadership always about being visible and vocal?
  • Are behind-the-scenes contributions valued equally?

Inclusive leaders use flexible frameworks, not rigid checklists. They create room for neurodiverse and culturally diverse expressions of leadership, collaboration, and innovation.

One leader profiled in Simplifying Inclusive Leadership pushed their organisation to rethink performance evaluations. They advocated for recognising multiple ways of contributing, not just the loudest.

When we move beyond “my way is best”, we unlock potential we didn’t even know we were missing.

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....
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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....
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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....
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