Ask Sanyin: What Does Vulnerability Really Mean for Leaders?

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Ask Sanyin: What Does Vulnerability Really Mean for Leaders?

By Sanyin Siang | MIT Sloan Management Review | June 03, 2025

Extractive Summary of the Article | Listen

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. It’s easy to equate vulnerability with sharing your own anxieties. But for leaders, the point of vulnerability is to meet your people where they are and let them see that you can relate to how they are feeling. They won’t trust you to lead them if they don’t think you understand them.
  2. Consider how you are trying to boost morale. If you are a relentlessly positive “rock” who hides your own worries, you may invalidate your team members’ feelings about difficult realities — and also lose credibility with overly optimistic reassurances. But being vulnerable enough to admit that you, too, are anxious, and acknowledging concerns, sets you up to rally others. The kind of optimism they need is your confidence that by coming together as a team, you can collectively solve problems.
  3. You can also be a steadying influence by remembering to call out the good things you see. No matter how strong the headwinds in your business, there will be small wins and moments to celebrate.

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Topics:  Vulnerability, Resilience, Leadership, Teams’ Performance

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