Experience Isn't the Teacher.
Most supervisors have plenty of experience. That’s not the problem.
The real issue? They’re not evaluating it.
Experience without reflection doesn’t produce wisdom—it produces repetition. In this article, I unpack the lesson I had to relearn while writing my book and the one question every supervisor needs to ask to avoid running on autopilot.
5 Minutes That Will Save You 5 Hours
Supervisors often believe relationship building slows down execution. In reality, intentional connection reduces miscommunication, conflict, and turnover. This article explains how five minutes of conversation can save hours of supervision every week.
What Happens to Your Team When You Admit You Were Wrong?
Most supervisors are terrified to say four words: “I was wrong about that.”
They worry it will undermine their authority or make their team question their leadership. But research and real-world experience show the opposite is often true.
When supervisors openly acknowledge a mistake, trust increases, psychological safety grows, and teams learn faster.
In this article, John D Harney explains why admitting mistakes actually strengthens credibility and shares a simple four-step framework supervisors can use to turn mistakes into powerful moments.
The Uncomfortable Truth About Being Nice
Supervisors often avoid difficult conversations in the name of being “nice.” But silence erodes trust and performance. This quick read explores the difference between niceness and kindness, and how situational fluency helps leaders know when to manage the issue and when to develop the person.
Why “Enlightened Leadership” Often Leads to Inaction
Modern leadership culture often elevates vision while quietly dismissing management. But when leaders abandon execution in the name of enlightenment, teams stall. Meet the “Leader Guru” and why situational fluency is the real competitive edge.
The Missing Muscle Every Supervisor Needs
Most supervisors are told to “be leaders,” but few are taught how to read the moment. Situational fluency, the ability to know when to manage and when to lead, is the missing skill that separates burned-out supervisors from those who build strong, resilient teams.