Every leader eventually discovers that the hardest person to hold accountable is the one staring back in the mirror. It’s a reckoning that strips away the comforting illusion that leaders are somehow exempt from error. They aren’t. They’re human — and sometimes, they are the problem.
When you make a mistake, the best response is simple: own it immediately, take clear steps to fix it, and learn from the root cause so it doesn’t happen again. The goal is to move from panic to resolution quickly while maintaining trust. That’s personal responsibility in action.
In today’s information age, knowledge is universal and excuses are impossible to sustain. Best practices are straightforward:
· Act immediately — no denial, no hiding.
· Take full ownership — be open, clear, and offer a meaningful apology.
· Propose a solution — analyze what happened and outline your plan.
· Adjust and learn — identify the root cause, put safeguards in place, and ask for forgiveness.
From personal experience, I know this is the best approach — and sometimes the hardest. Mistakes can’t be hidden, so addressing them quickly and openly is the surest way to maintain trust and respect. Employees (and constituents) know right from wrong, and they expect their leaders to know it too. As your mother probably told you: ‘honesty is the best policy’ and ‘when you’re wrong, take your medicine’. No one can fault you for responding that way.
And because leaders are responsible for helping employees own and correct their mistakes, a little role modeling goes a long way. Done poorly, word spreads and your ability to attract and retain talent suffers. Done well, you reinforce the strength of your culture and the integrity of your leadership.
Back when I broke into the casino business in New Jersey, they would call this a no‑brainer. It still is today.
Theodore Roosevelt Jr. (1858 – 1919): American politician who served as Vice President and was elevated to be the 26th president of the United States after President McKinley's assassination in 1901. He was 42 years old upon his first inauguration, making him the youngest person to hold the office.






