Growth is exciting — but it always brings complexity with it.
In every growing organisation, there comes a point when senior leaders can no longer hold everything themselves. The natural next step is to promote strong individual contributors and experts into people-manager roles. However, it is often underestimated that most new leaders struggle — not because they lack talent, but because the system around them has become more complex than they are prepared for.
Across growing organisations, gaps in these three critical areas repeatedly undermine leadership transitions:
✔ Clarity: What exactly is my role? What decisions am I responsible for? What does “good” leadership look like here?
✔ Capability: How do I shift from delivering tasks myself to enabling others to deliver?
✔ Systems Awareness: How do I lead within shifting expectations, competing priorities, evolving culture and rapid change?
Traditional leadership development tends to rely on models, frameworks or generic behavioural tips. But in today’s environments characterised by constant change and uncertainty, leaders need something different.
Effective leadership is not about controlling complexity — it’s about making sense of it.
It is about creating clarity, building trust, and enabling adaptability in environments where things rarely move in a straight line. Linear, overly simplified approaches fail because they overlook the realities leaders work within: context, interconnectedness and emergent dynamics. This aligns closely with the work of leadership scholar David V. Day on leader development, who emphasises that:
Leadership is a developmental, relational and contextual process shaped by interactions, environment and shared meaning.
Understood this way, leadership development must also shift. It is not merely about adding more techniques and tools — it requires strengthening a leader’s capacity to make sense of their environment and act effectively within it. Development approaches, therefore, need to reflect the realities leaders operate in — complexity, interdependence and ongoing change.
The patterns described here reflect a synthesis of leadership development research and repeated observations from practice across growing organisations, rather than a universal or prescriptive model.
Leadership development is most powerful when it is:
✔ Practical: Grounded in real work, real decisions and real organisational dynamics.
✔ Human-centred: Built on trust, clarity, purpose and communication — the essentials of meaningful leadership relationships.
✔ Evidence-informed: Reflecting how leaders actually develop over time, including identity shifts, social learning and sensemaking.
✔ System-aware: Helping leaders understand the underlying structures, patterns, relationships, expectations and cultural assumptions that shape behaviour — and identify where they can influence outcomes.
When these elements come together, leaders grow in ways that create meaningful, sustainable impact.
The capabilities new leaders need most:
✔ Seeing the System Behind the Symptoms: Most recurring challenges — such as friction, misalignment, slow decision-making and communication gaps — are system outputs, not individual failings. Leaders need the ability to step back and ask: “What is the system producing here?”
✔ Identifying the Conditions for Performance: High performance requires clarity, psychological safety, accountability and a shared sense of purpose. These conditions rarely emerge without intentional leadership.
✔ Shifting Behaviours and Interactions: Leadership happens in relationships. A single shift — how expectations are set, how tension is addressed, how decisions are cascaded — can transform the whole environment.
✔ Building an Actionable Path Forward: Leaders don’t need more complexity, they need developmental pathways, deliberate practice and concrete steps they can apply immediately with their team — and the confidence to follow through.
In practice, these capabilities are not developed through new insights alone. They grow through guided reflection on real leadership challenges, deliberate practice in everyday work, and support that helps leaders make sense of their specific organisational context.
Thus, over time, it becomes difficult to ignore that when leadership capability does not scale with organisational growth, the consequences often include stalled decision-making, rising friction, overwhelmed new managers, inconsistent performance, cultural drift and even talent loss.
As organisations continue to grow, leadership capability must evolve at the same pace.
Strengthening leadership capability at this moment is not a nice-to-have — it is a strategic investment in how people and organisations grow together.
Sources:
Day, D. V. (2024). Developing Leaders and Leadership : Principles, Practices, and Processes. Springer Nature Switzerland. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-59068-9
Decock, Ü. (2025). Business Start-Up for Sustainable Organizational Change. College of Arts and Cultural Studies Doctor of Strategic Leadership (DSL) Projects. 7. https://digitalshowcase.oru.edu/coacs_dsl_projects/7