Staying current is a core leadership responsibility, not an afterthought. Wrike's CMO treats external learning—reading articles, listening to podcasts, attending events—as a scheduled, non-negotiable part of her job. She blocks her calendar weeks in advance to ensure this strategic time isn't consumed by daily tasks.
Goldcast's CMO structures her week to serve her team: a strategic leadership sync, 1-on-1s framed as "how can I help remove blockers?", and no-agenda skip-level meetings to gather unfiltered feedback. This leadership model prioritizes enabling the team over top-down status updates.
Average performers avoid learning new technologies by claiming their customers don't use them. High achievers operate with the discipline of proactive learning, assuming that mastering new tools is essential for future success, regardless of immediate application. Their mindset is, "I don't know this and I need to, therefore I'm going to learn it."
Treat strategic thinking as a formal, scheduled activity, not a passive one. By blocking time on your calendar for specific thinking formats—like a walking meeting with yourself or a dedicated commute session—you create the space for your subconscious to solve problems and generate novel insights.
When starting a senior role at a complex company, a new leader should formally contract a 'learning agenda' as part of their onboarding. Prioritize a listening tour focused on frontline operations and culture, rather than headquarters, to understand the business before implementing changes.
Committing to a small, recurring public task (like a Friday Slack update) creates a positive deadline. This forces you to trade passive, low-value scrolling for active, high-value information consumption, directly fueling your professional growth and visibility within your organization.
Relying on second-hand information like surveys is not enough to stay innovative. Cvent's Head of Events realized that to bring the latest trends to her own events, she had to stop just producing and start actively attending others'. This first-hand experience is critical for genuine innovation and escaping a creative echo chamber.
Dedicate a recurring 'Customer Day' not only for user interviews but for the team to step back from tactical work. Use this time to synthesize existing data, analyze market trends, and refocus on the core 'why' behind the product, preventing the team from getting lost in the weeds of feature development.
To stay current, the marketing team dedicates two hours on 30 Tuesdays a year to a learning forum. Each director owns a theme for the year (e.g., AI, competitive intelligence) and is responsible for programming several sessions, ensuring a constant influx of external ideas and internal cross-pollination.
Leaders often try to "squeeze in" critical strategic work around a flood of meetings and daily demands. This approach is backward. To make meaningful progress, strategic priorities must be the first items blocked out on the calendar. All other, less critical tasks must then be fit into the remaining time, ensuring your schedule reflects your strategy.
Establish a consistent, public commitment (e.g., team newsletter) primarily to hold yourself accountable for learning. The audience is secondary; the process of preparing the content is the true career accelerator, forcing you to stay current and synthesize information.