Y12W43WR The invisible leader
Examine effective leaders in your own life whose leadership was largely invisible — and reflect on what you learned about leadership that Lao Tzu’s framework captures but ordinary accounts miss.
1Retrieval check
Q1.What’s Lao Tzu’s observation that this week’s article builds on?
- ALeaders should be feared
- BWhen the best leader’s work is done, the people say, we did it ourselves’ — substantially supported by modern organisational research
- CLeaders should be loved
- DLeaders should be invisible always
Q2.What’s the article’s key caveat about invisible leadership?
- AIt always works
- BIt fails in crises, new organisations, turnarounds, and cultures expecting visible authority — it’s not universal
- CIt’s only effective with highly-skilled teams
- DIt’s a myth
Show answer key
Q1 → B. When the best leader’s work is done, the people say, we did it ourselves’ — substantially supported by modern organisational research.Cohen-Lawler self-managing teams, Graen-Uhl-Bien LMX, and Kelley’s followership research all support a version of this.
Q2 → B. It fails in crises, new organisations, turnarounds, and cultures expecting visible authority — it’s not universal.The framework is real and context-bounded.
2Prompt deconstruction
- Stimulus
- Lao Tzu; Cohen-Lawler; Graen-Uhl-Bien; Kelley’s exemplary followers.
- Scope
- Effective leaders in your life whose leadership was largely invisible.
- Method
- Look for capacity-building, environment-structuring, and ‘we did it ourselves’ effects.
- Thinking
- What ordinary accounts of ‘good leadership’ miss when they look for visibility.
- Output
- Your case + what it reveals about leadership you didn’t notice at the time.
3Pick nudge
Which invisible leaders will you examine for what ordinary leadership accounts miss?
4Planner — for each of your picks
5Sentence stems
- I noticed that ___ when ___.
- The specific moment it stood out was ___.
- Before paying attention, I had been assuming ___.
- [Researcher’s] finding that ___ captures what I saw, because ___.
- The pattern across my cases is ___.
- What this tells me about [wider topic] is ___.
6Exemplar paragraph (not about this article)
(1) I noticed in retrospect that my year-9 history teacher built a working habit in me that shaped every essay since — he rarely ‘taught’ argument structure in the way the phrase suggests. He set up classroom routines where we drafted, exchanged, annotated, and rewrote; he asked questions that forced us to articulate our own reasoning; and he said surprisingly little. The specific moment it stood out was this year, when I caught myself using his sequence (claim-then-counter-then-return) automatically — and realised I had attributed the skill to ‘figuring it out myself’. (2) Before paying attention, I had been assuming the teachers who taught me most were the ones whose explanations I remembered. (3) Lao Tzu’s framing captures what I missed: the most formative teaching often gets absorbed as self-discovery because the structural work is invisible. (4) A second case: a swim coach who never centred himself — he arranged sets, asked one good question per session, and let the team evaluate each other. (5) The pattern across my cases is that the invisible leaders built capacities I now have without me being able to point to the session where I learned them. (6) What this tells me about leadership that ordinary accounts miss is that visibility is a poor predictor of impact — the test is whether something persists after they are gone, and for both of these people the answer is clearly yes.
What this paragraph does, move by move
- Names a specific teacher and the specific structural routine.
- Catches the ‘attributed to self-discovery’ mistake.
- Applies Lao Tzu’s framing precisely to what was actually happening.
- Adds a second case in a different domain.
- Identifies the common pattern (capacity without locatable session).
- Ends with an operational test (persists after them).
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