Self-aware managers recognize that their strengths and weaknesses are two sides of the same coin. For example, being deeply thoughtful (a strength) often means not being quick on your feet in meetings (a weakness). Acknowledging this link is key to personal growth.
Instead of relying solely on internal self-talk, proactively ask trusted colleagues and supervisors to help you articulate your unique strengths and contributions. This external validation makes your value tangible and builds resilience against shame and comparison.
For leaders who are natural empaths, a key growth area is learning to separate deep personal care for team members from the objective needs of the business. This includes recognizing that letting someone go can be the most loving and correct decision for the individual, the team, and the company.
True self-awareness involves publicly admitting your weaknesses. By openly stating what you're bad at (e.g., 'I suck at 99% of things'), you build immense credibility and trust when you then declare your strengths. This approach validates your expertise in your core competencies.
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.
The habit of comparing yourself to others often arises when you are not sufficiently exercising your own unique talents. The more you operate within your strengths and serve through them, the less mental space and time you have for comparison.
Before you can see your flaws, shift behaviors, or sustain new habits, you must navigate your ego. It's the 'gateway obstacle' that prevents you from hearing critical feedback and admitting you need to change. Setting it aside is the non-negotiable first step that gives you permission to grow.
'Hidden blockers' like micromanagement or a need to always be right rarely stem from negative intent. They are often deep-seated, counterproductive strategies to fulfill fundamental human needs for value, safety, or belonging. Identifying the underlying need is the first step toward finding a healthier way to meet it.
Matt Spielman's coaching model focuses on identifying a client's signature strengths and past successes. Instead of smoothing out weaknesses with "sandpaper," he helps clients tap into what already works well to drive performance, viewing this as a more sustainable path to growth.
The self-doubt often felt by high-achievers isn't a debilitating flaw. It can motivate leaders to over-prepare, seek diverse expert opinions, and ultimately make more informed decisions, turning a perceived weakness into a strength.
We often mistake skills for strengths. A more powerful definition of a strength is any activity that energizes and motivates you. To boost morale and performance, individuals and leaders should focus on aligning work with these energy-giving tasks, rather than just focusing on competency.