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Many professionals advance to senior roles through sheer "hustle" and diving into execution. However, this same approach becomes a liability at higher levels where strategic thinking is required. The inability to shift from "doing" to "leading" causes frustration, self-doubt, and burnout.
The internal pressure to prove oneself can be a powerful motivator, leading to intense drive and early achievements. However, this same mindset can foster a lack of empathy, rushed decisions, and an unsustainable drive that eventually becomes detrimental to one's well-being and leadership potential.
Leaders in investment organizations are often promoted for their exceptional technical skills—analysis, presentations—not for their management abilities. This creates a leadership deficit that requires deliberate focus and coaching to overcome.
The higher you climb in an organization, the more your role becomes about solving problems. Effective leaders reframe these challenges as rewarding opportunities for great solutions. Without this mindset shift, the job becomes unsustainable and draining.
High-performers must shift their identity from "I'm valuable because I work hard" to "I'm valuable because I make good decisions." A calendar packed with execution tasks is a liability, not a badge of honor. True leverage comes from creating space for strategic thinking, which compounds faster than mere hustle.
The transition from a hands-on contributor to a leader is one of the hardest professional shifts. It requires consciously moving away from execution by learning to trust and delegate. This is achieved by hiring talented people and then empowering them to operate, even if it means simply getting out of their way.
Traits like extreme responsiveness, which earn praise early in a career, can lead to burnout and poor prioritization at senior levels. Leaders must recognize when a once-beneficial belief no longer serves their new, scaled responsibilities and becomes a limiting factor.
As a first-time manager, you can cover for your team's mistakes by doing their work on weekends. When you manage other managers, this 'cheating' is no longer possible. Success requires a fundamental shift from being a 'doer' to being a 'teacher' who develops talent.
The skills that make a great individual contributor or team lead in a specific discipline, like product management, are not the same skills needed for more senior leadership roles. Career progression requires a conscious effort to let go of beloved hands-on tasks and adopt a broader, more strategic perspective.
What made you a great PM will not make you a great director. The journey into leadership is a process of being humbled, recognizing your worldview is incomplete, and adapting your thinking. If you are not humble enough to change your mind, you will struggle to grow in your career.
When leaders get stuck, their instinct is to work harder or learn new tactics. However, lasting growth comes from examining the underlying beliefs that drive their actions. This internal 'operating system' must be updated, because the beliefs that led to initial success often become the very blockers that prevent advancement to the next level.