Early in my career, I learned the value of knowing what you don’t know. That simple awareness keeps you humble, curious, open to delegation, and honest about your own development. It reinforces the truth that two heads really are better than one — and people respect leaders who admit it.
· It’s humbling to recognize your limits. It keeps you from speaking just to speak and allows others with deeper expertise to shine.
· It fuels curiosity. When you see the gaps, you naturally want to fill them — and that’s how careers grow.
· It encourages delegation. When everyone contributes their strengths, the whole team moves forward.
· And it keeps you focused on what’s still out there to learn — the fuel of long‑term growth.
This applies everywhere, but especially at work. Collaboration blends backgrounds, experiences, and expertise into something no one person could produce alone.
The Mirage opening was a lesson in admitting what we didn’t know so that we could discover what we needed to know. It was humbling to do that on such a large stage. But it was the only way we could grow enough to succeed. Supported by our leaders. Supported by each other.
As a participant, choose the role that lets your strengths shine without exposing your weaknesses — and learn as you go.
As a leader, orchestrate your team: understanding each person’s knowledge, skills, and abilities so the group performs at its best.
Sports coaches know they need strength at every position, not duplication. Managing people is no different. The goal is to put the right pieces together, so the team performs at its highest level today.






