The Most Overlooked Leadership Skill, and Why It Matters Now

In today’s world, leadership development often focuses on strategy, KPIs, emotional intelligence, communication frameworks, and performance metrics. However, the skill that quietly determines how effective any of these become is the one most leaders overlook: awareness.

Every leader discusses self-improvement, but few understand that true change requires awareness. It’s not about behavioural tweaks, adopting new habits, or reading another book on leadership.

Awareness is the doorway. Everything else follows.

And yet, it is the one thing our ego structure resists the most.

Awareness Isn’t Knowledge; It’s Contact With Yourself

One key insight from Jung, Almaas, and the Enneagram is that awareness is not merely an intellectual exercise. It involves engaging with your inner world, including your motives, fears, blind spots, emotional defences, projections, and habitual patterns.

Many leaders are brilliant thinkers but emotionally disconnected. They understand their strengths and weaknesses in theory, but they have never confronted the uncomfortable aspects within where those patterns originate.

Awareness requires courage because it asks you to see:

  • Why do you react instead of responding
  • Why do certain people trigger you
  • Why do you avoid difficult conversations
  • Why do you overwork, over-give, or over-control
  • Why do you fear failure, judgment, or loss of status

Without this inner contact, leaders operate from reactivity rather than reality

Why Awareness Is So Rare in Leadership

In my coaching work, I see the same pattern repeatedly: leaders are trained to fix, not to feel.

They are rewarded for action, speed, and decisiveness. Slowing down to reflect feels impractical, even indulgent. Yet this constant doing becomes a distraction from the deeper work.

A.H. Almaas describes how the ego structure develops to avoid contact with the more vulnerable aspects of our experience. In leadership, this often shows up as:

  • Perfectionism
  • Hyper-productivity
  • Emotional detachment
  • Approval-driven decision-making
  • Avoidance of discomfort

These defence patterns create the illusion of competence, while disconnecting leaders from themselves and others.

Awareness threatens the ego because it exposes the truth: you cannot lead others until you can lead yourself.

The Enneagram: A Map for Awareness

One reason I love the Enneagram is that it doesn’t focus on personality traits; it reveals the unconscious motivations driving our behaviour.

It explains why:

  • Type 3 leaders equate worth with achievement
  • Type 8 leaders armour themselves against vulnerability
  • Type 9 leaders merge with others to avoid conflict
  • Type 1 leaders grip tightly to control and prevent inner criticism

The moment a leader observes their pattern with awareness, not judgment, something shifts. It is as if they have finally identified the real source of their leadership challenges.

And from that awareness, change becomes possible.

Awareness Makes Leadership More Human

Awareness transforms leadership in three practical ways:

1. It breaks reactive patterns

When leaders recognise their emotional triggers and narratives, they stop reacting from fear, ego, or old conditioning. Instead, they respond with clarity rather than in survival mode.

2. It deepens empathy

Awareness softens the edges of leadership. When you understand your own pain points, you stop assuming everyone else should simply “cope.” You become more compassionate, more attuned, and more patient.

3. It builds an authentic presence

People trust self-aware leaders because they recognise the difference. Self-aware leaders are grounded, open, consistent, and less influenced by unconscious needs. They lead from integrity rather than insecurity.

Awareness Isn’t a Moment, It’s a Practice

No one becomes self-aware in a weekend. It is daily work. Work that includes:

  • Reflection
  • Stillness
  • Inquiry
  • Honest conversation
  • Emotional literacy
  • Owning projections
  • Understanding your Enneagram pattern
  • Meeting the parts of yourself you’d rather avoid

Awareness is not something you learn.
It is something you develop through contact with your real experience.

As Almaas teaches, we develop not by fixing the ego but by seeing it clearly.
Seeing itself is a transformation.

Why Awareness Makes Leaders More Resilient

Self-aware leaders remain centred when faced with challenges because they recognise what is happening within themselves. Instead of succumbing to anxiety or over-identifying with stress, they can observe it.

This inner spaciousness creates real resilience, not the performative resilience we often see in corporate culture.

Leaders who cultivate awareness:

  • Do not personalise challenges
  • Recover faster from setbacks
  • Set healthier boundaries
  • Navigate conflict with more maturity
  • Make cleaner decisions
  • Hold their teams with more compassion
  • Lead with less fear and more authenticity

Awareness is the foundation of inner stability.

Awareness Is the Future of Leadership

The world is changing.
The demands on leaders are changing.
Human needs in the workplace are changing.

Modern leadership is not about titles, authority, or control. It is about emotional maturity, presence, grounded clarity, and the capacity to support both yourself and others through complexity.

Awareness is no longer optional. It is the distinguishing capacity of leaders who can navigate today’s world without losing themselves.

Because authentic leadership begins in the place most leaders avoid: the quiet moment when you turn inward and tell the truth about what’s really happening inside you.

And from that awareness, everything becomes possible.

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