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The 10 brutally honest questions all good leaders should ask themselves

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Leadership isn’t just about making decisions, driving results, or inspiring teams. It’s about the willingness to confront uncomfortable truths: about your business, your team, and yourself. The leaders who thrive aren’t the ones who avoid hard questions; they’re the ones who seek them out and act on the answers.

“The pace at which we’re all working today doesn’t naturally lend itself to being reflective,“ notes Peter Winick, founder and CEO of Thought Leadership Leverage. “As a leader, you don’t get enough quiet time. The thought leaders and business leaders I work with figure out how to make it part of their routine. For some, it’s during a commute, a workout, a shower, or a walk. For others, it’s a more involved practice where they shut down their devices and spend scheduled time reflecting. I’d suggest that you experiment and find what works for you. The important thing is to be a leader who is deliberately reflective, not serendipitously so.”

Consider this: research by Tasha Eurich found that 95% of people believe they’re self-aware, but only about 10–15% truly are. If you’re ready to become a better leader, start by asking yourself these 10 tough, even shocking questions. The answers might sting, but they could also set you on a dramatic path of self-improvement, as well as team improvement as a result:

  1. Where am I making excuses for people’s failures instead of holding them accountable?
    Accountability is the foundation of a high-performing team. But too many leaders shield underperformers from consequences. Why? Maybe you’re rationalizing missed deadlines, justifying poor performance, or shouldering extra work to compensate for others. Research shows that organizations with strong accountability systems see significantly higher engagement and performance.
    Solution: Stop protecting people from their actions. Set clear expectations, enforce consequences, and watch your team rise to meet higher standards.
    The Result: A culture of great agency and responsibility where excellence is the norm, not the exception.
  2. What am I tolerating in my life and work that I would never accept from someone I respect?
    If you expect accountability, efficiency, and bold decision-making from your team, do you demand the same from yourself? Or are you making excuses for inefficiencies, procrastination, or weak leadership moments?
    Solution: Write down a list of behaviors you would never accept from a top performer, then hold yourself to that same standard.
    The Result: Greater self-respect, stronger leadership presence, and an organization that mirrors your high standards.
  3. If my company failed tomorrow, what brutal truths would I have to admit about my leadership?
    Failures can reveal our deepest flaws. What habits, blind spots, or leadership weaknesses would be exposed if your company collapsed?
    Solution: Conduct an honest self-audit today, before reality forces one upon you.
    The Result: A proactive approach to leadership development, making you more resilient in times of crisis.
  4. Where am I giving more than I’m getting, and why am I allowing that imbalance?
    Strong leaders are generous, but they don’t allow themselves to be drained. Are you over-extending yourself for people who don’t reciprocate? Are you carrying emotional or operational burdens that should be shared? Are you letting entitled employees take advantage of you unfairly?
    Solution: Demand reciprocity. If someone isn’t meeting you halfway, stop over-investing.
    The Result: More energy, more time for high-value relationships, and a team that pulls its weight.
  5. What’s one belief about leadership I refuse to let go of, even if it’s holding me back?
    Maybe you think leaders must always have the answers. Maybe you believe loyalty The Presidents performance. Or that hard work alone guarantees success. What outdated belief is keeping you stuck?
    Solution: Challenge your leadership dogma. If something isn’t working, experiment with new approaches.

The Result: A more adaptable, forward-thinking leadership style that keeps pace with change.

  1. How often do I lower my expectations to avoid conflict, discomfort, or disappointment?
    Do you let things slide because confrontation feels exhausting? Do you accept ‘good enough’ to maintain harmony? Do you let negative employee behaviors persist that drag others down? Research shows teams where leaders avoid conflict or lower expectations tend to see meaningful performance drops.
    Solution: Raise your standards and hold the line, even when it’s uncomfortable.
    The Result: A stronger, sharper, and more disciplined organization.
  2. What hard decision am I avoiding because I don’t want to deal with the consequences?
    Every leader has that one decision they keep postponing: the tough conversation, the termination, the pivot. What’s yours?
    Solution: Make the call. The longer you delay, the worse the fallout.
    The Result: Relief, regained control, and the momentum to move forward.
  3. If I were an employee at my own company, what would I be frustrated with?
    Would you feel heard? Valued? If you were on the receiving end of your leadership, what would you change? Research shows that employees who feel heard and valued are far more likely to stay and perform.
    Solution: Walk through your company from an employee’s perspective and address the pain points.
    The Result: A workplace where top talent wants to stay and thrive.
  4. Where do I let loyalty blind me to underperformance?
    Are you holding onto strategies, employees, or habits that no longer serve you? Studies show that underperformers staying too long drain resources, morale, and momentum.
    Solution: Separate emotions from performance. Prioritize results over history.
    The Result: A leaner, more effective team where everyone is contributing at their highest level.
  5. What’s the worst habit I have that no one calls me out on?
    Do you interrupt? Avoid difficult conversations? Over-promise and under-deliver? What’s your blind spot that people see but never tell you about? Eurich’s research on self-awareness shows most leaders have such blind spots.
    Solution: Ask a trusted peer or mentor to be brutally honest. Then fix it.
    The Result: A higher level of self-awareness, stronger credibility, and sharper leadership instincts.

Real Honesty Drives Growth

These aren’t easy questions but they’re necessary. To be a great leader, you don’t just manage your team: you hone their style and then elevate the people that are aligned. If you have the courage to answer these questions honestly, you’ll not only transform your leadership but also elevate the entire organization around you.

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