Optimism doesn’t count unless it shows up in the way you treat people. Yesterday was about seeing the glass as half full. Today is about acting like it. As an optimist, I see it as my duty to inject positivity into situations — comments, reactions, tone, and the overall temperature of the environment. Just sayin’…
The voice in my head is always running commentary on what’s happening around me, mostly to help me find the right frame for what I share. It’s like internal practice sessions — massaging a mindset so I can bring the right energy forward. Over the years, I’ve learned that optimism may start as an innate spark, but the behaviors that express it can absolutely be developed — and leaders play a central role in that development. Employees don’t learn optimism from a memo; they learn it from watching you. When leaders model reframing, constructive responses, and forward‑moving energy, others begin to mirror it. Optimism becomes contagious when people see it practiced consistently — and that’s where leadership makes all the difference.
When working with teams — directly or indirectly — leaders must be mindful of their behavior. Employees are always watching, taking their cues from what you say and do, and how you say and do it.
- You want employees to be engaged: show them how and why, then model it.
- You want attention to detail: always dot your I’s and cross your T’s.
- You want clear communication: be clear in yours.
- You want extraordinary customer service: treat employees that way and they’ll mirror it with customers.
- You want them to see the glass as half full: point out why it is and how to sustain it.
- You want optimism to spread: remember, employees don’t learn optimism from a memo — they learn it from watching you.
Having a bad day is human. Making it someone else’s problem is optional. Optimism in leadership is never letting them see you sweat. The more you create a can‑do, optimistic, “let’s work on this together” environment, the more you’ll find yourself surrounded by people who want to do the same. Some may not like what they see in the mirror compared to what surrounds them and opt out. Either way, you end up with a stronger, more focused team pulling in the same direction. And that attracts more people with that outlook — and sometimes even turns others around.
People follow leaders who make them feel hopeful about where they’re going. Loyalty grows in environments where optimism is practiced out loud. Like I said, I’m a natural optimist and want others to be and feel the same. I see it as a leadership imperative. And a responsibility. Share your optimism with everyone you deal with today.
Laurence Allen “Larry” Elder (born 1952): American conservative political commentator and talk radio host.
An interesting guy – learn more here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larry_Elder






