There’s a quiet but expensive mistake most organizations keep repeating.
They think they’re investing in leadership development. They’re actually promoting performers.
And What’s the cost of this? Disengaged teams. Risk-averse cultures. Leaders who look at the part but collapse under real pressure.
If your leadership training programs aren’t creating confident decision-makers, this might sting a little.
This blog is based on deep insights by Sandra Colhando, the recent guest on The CHRO Mindset Podcast.
In this episode, she called out the conventional way of selecting leaders, that is choosing the one is loudest and most visible in the room, and this is what makes the culture fumble.
Because one wrong manager can trigger an array of resignations.
Listen to the full episode on Spotify now and make sure you don’t repeat the same mistakes in your next appraisal cycle.
Here are 7 mistakes you need to fix before you pick the wrong leaders again.
1. Stop Seeing Visibility as Potential
The loudest voice often wins. The most visible performer gets promoted. And this is where it all gets ruined.
Visibility is not potential; it’s just easier to measure. True leadership skills show up in moments that aren’t always visible:
- Thinking under pressure
- Navigating ambiguity
- Influencing without authority
If your leadership development strategy rewards what’s loud, you’ll miss what actually matters.
2. Stop Overvaluing Confidence
Confidence looks like leadership. It feels like leadership. But it’s often just performance.
Many leadership training programs unintentionally amplify confidence- presentation skills, communication polish, executive presence.
All useful. But incomplete with real elements of leadership.
Because real leadership requires:
- Self-awareness
- Curiosity
- The ability to question oneself
Confidence without depth creates leaders who act fast but not always wisely.
3. Stop Ignoring Decision-Making Under Pressure
Most organizations assess performance in stable conditions. But leadership is often revealed during instability.
Yet, very few leadership development frameworks evaluate:
- Decision-making under stress
- Handling uncertainty
- Emotional regulation
You don’t need better dashboards. You need better signals. If your system doesn’t measure how people think when things fall apart, you’re choosing leaders for comfort, not complexity.
4. Stop Promoting Without Evolving the Role
What you basically do is promote high performers, which eventually creates confusion. Because changing designation doesn’t automatically add skills to a person. Anyone who is intended to
Because the role changes. But the expectations don’t.
Strong individual contributors succeed through execution. Leaders succeed through influence.
That shift demands entirely different leadership skills:
- Letting go of control
- Delegating effectively
- Thinking at scale
Without redefining success post-promotion, your leadership training programs are just patchwork fixes for a deeper structural gap.
5. Stop Treating Leadership Development Like a Workshop
Organizations love workshops.
They invest in leadership training programs, run simulations, bring in coaches and expect transformation.
But back at work?
- Risk-taking is discouraged
- Failure is penalized
- Safe behavior is rewarded
So, leaders adapt. Quickly. They learn to protect themselves, not push boundaries.
Real leadership development doesn’t happen in a workshop.
It happens in a system that rewards the behavior it claims to value.
6. Stop Assuming It’s a Skill Gap, It’s Glitch in Ethics
When leaders struggle, the default fix is obvious: Train them.
But what if the issue isn’t capability, it’s identity?
Many managers know what they are doing. As a matter of fact, many fumble intentionally.
So, they choose to:
- Play safe
- Overthink
- Default to familiar patterns
- Risk others’ image to protect theirs
And no amount of leadership skills training will fix that.
Leadership isn’t about learning new skills; it’s all about doing what you already know is right. And most of the managers are scared to do that… the reason for their failure.
So, what can you do?
Teach them about managerial ethics more than managerial ship.
7. Stop Scaling Bias with AI and Data
AI is entering the leadership space fast.
Used well, it can enhance leadership development. Used poorly, it amplifies mistakes.
If your system already favors:
- Visibility
- Confidence
- Past performance
AI will double down on it.
But if your leadership training programs include deeper evaluation- decision-making, influence, adaptability, AI can actually sharpen your talent strategy.
It’s not about the tool. It’s about your thinking.
What to Do Instead (Without Overcomplicating It)
If you want your leadership development efforts to work, here are some of the takeaways you may want to remember.
1. Redefine Leadership Potential
Move beyond metrics.
Start evaluating how people think, not just what they deliver.
2. Upgrade Your Signals
Look for:
- Behavior under pressure
- Influence across teams
- Ability to navigate uncertainty
That’s where real leadership skills show up.
3. Align Culture with Training
Your leadership training programs should not contradict your workplace reality.
If you want bold leaders:
- Reward smart risks
- Normalize failure
- Back decisions, not just results
4. Focus on Identity, Not Just Skills
Ask leaders:
- What got you here but won’t get you there?
- What version of you needs to evolve?
Because leadership isn’t just taught. It’s transformed.
Let’s Sum It Up!
Most organizations don’t fail at leadership development because they lack effort. They fail because they reward the wrong things.
If you keep promoting visibility, confidence, and past performance, you’ll keep getting leaders who look impressive but lack depth.
So, where does the real opportunity lie?
- Start noticing what’s harder to measure.
- Quieter to observe.
- Easier to ignore.
That’s where your future leaders are hiding!
