Don’t underestimate the importance of self‑awareness — the most important relationship in your career is the one you have with yourself.
Your self‑respect and inner character matter more than public opinion. Authenticity means following your own moral compass instead of reshaping yourself to please or impress others. But authenticity isn’t always easy. In the workplace, people often temper their voice, defer to stronger personalities, or try to meet expectations that conflict with what they know is right. Leaders must be attuned to these dynamics and skilled at mitigating them.
That means making sure everyone participates. Ensuring no one is silenced or overshadowed. Asking questions that draw quieter voices into the conversation. Preventing dominant personalities from steering discussions away from balanced, thoughtful dialogue. Effective leaders move people from the sidelines to the center — giving them confidence, competence, and pride in their contributions.
These things don’t happen on their own. Inclusion, teamwork, and effectiveness must be intentionally fostered by leaders who understand their own strengths and their employees’ needs. Leaders who use emotional intelligence, servant leadership, coaching skills, and clear communication to bring out the best in others.
These aren’t “nice to have” skills. They’re foundational to building pride, confidence, and meaningful performance today.
Michel de Montaigne (1533 – 1592): French statesman and author who was one of the most significant writers of the French Renaissance. He is known for popularizing the essay as a literary genre.






