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Leadership Compression: Why High-Performing Australian Organisations Are Losing Trust Without Knowing It

The board agenda is full and running over. 

The executive team moves from one meeting to the next. 

Results are being delivered.

These are all hallmarks of a high-performing organisation on paper… or are they?

Beneath that performance, something insidious threatens to remove the organisation’s ability to grow, and it’s the loss of trust. 

It’s not a total collapse, but a slow constriction. Which is precisely why it so often goes unrecognised until the cost of repair is far greater than the cost of early intervention.

This is the defining feature of a problem I’ve mentioned in a few recent articles: leadership compression. Organisations continue to perform, but the relational and collaborative foundations that sustain that performance begin to narrow. These are high-functioning teams operating under conditions that erode trust over time, which is why it doesn’t lead to catastrophic failures, but eventual disengagement, and wavering leadership succession pipelines.

What Does Leadership Compression Look Like In Practice?

If I were to summarise this challenge in one sentence, leadership compression occurs when organisational demand outpaces the leadership bandwidth available to meet it with intention. 

Some of the symptoms of leadership compression are meetings that generate discussion but not genuine decision-making. Constructive challenge becomes rare, as agreement is reached from a place of necessity rather than informed, debated, and tested decision-making. Functional leaders retreat, they guard their resources, prioritise their teams, and begin to view peers through a competitive lens.  Urgency becomes the default rhythm; everything feels critical, and often priority lists extend past the number of tasks able to be prioritised. 

Over time, this sustained pace consumes leadership capacity faster than it can be replenished. The organisation continues to deliver. Which is why the pattern remains largely invisible, even as it is widely felt.

What is Missing From Board Governance

For Australian boards, this presents a structural challenge. Non-executive directors are not embedded in the daily dynamics of the organisation. This distance is necessary for governance, but it limits visibility into relational signals.

Boards rely on reports from the CEO, engagement surveys, performance metrics, and management summaries that arrive after layers of interpretation. By the time trust deterioration appears in these measures, it has often been present for some time.

Insights from the Australian Institute of Company Directors, drawing on Heidrick & Struggles research, indicate that a significant proportion of Australian board agendas remain focused on traditional oversight areas. Financial performance, risk, and compliance rightly demand attention; however, this leaves limited space for examining the quality of leadership culture and trust dynamics in real time.

In addition to this, there is another dynamic that we need to take into account. The way a board interacts, the balance of voices, the willingness to engage in constructive challenge, often mirrors the culture experienced throughout the organisation. Governance does not simply observe culture. It shapes it. It’s worth asking how the board is shaping the organisation in ways that exacerbate leadership compression, or ways that instil trust. 

What CEOs Know

For CEOs, leadership compression is often recognised instinctively before it is articulated. Now that you are aware of what leadership compression looks like, you may have the realisation that some of these patterns have been allowed to persist because performance has remained strong. 

Naming them can feel like introducing a problem rather than addressing one, which is why leadership compression can often sit beneath the surface until it begins to affect performance, staff retention or other metrics that cannot be ignored.

Why trust is critical for executive alignment

When trust erodes at the executive level, the impact extends quickly. Front-line leaders implement decisions they do not fully understand. Workarounds increase. The hidden cost of delivery rises through inefficiency and misalignment.

Innovation slows. In environments where challenge carries risk, fewer ideas are brought forward. The organisation defaults to what is known. The leadership pipeline weakens. Future leaders develop in conditions where collaboration is constrained and trust is limited. Executive succession becomes a risk, not because talent is absent, but because the environment has not supported its development.

Research from Culture Amp describes this as “quiet cracking”, a gradual erosion of energy, motivation, and connection. Similarly, findings from SEEK highlight that a significant portion of the workforce remains disengaged, not leaving, but withdrawing.

This is not a performance issue, but a leadership alignment issue that, left unaddressed, becomes a trust and succession challenge.

Where to intervene:

  1. For boards. The opportunity lies in expanding how culture is governed. This includes examining how the board itself operates, the quality of challenge within the room, and the signals it receives about trust and leadership dynamics.
  2. For executive teams. The work begins with naming the pattern. Creating space for genuine deliberation, enterprise thinking, and constructive challenge is essential to restoring alignment and trust.
  3. For HR and leadership development leaders. The focus must shift toward leading indicators. Measuring the quality of relationships, psychological safety at senior levels, and the conditions for effective challenge allows earlier intervention.

 

The question is not whether the organisation is delivering against its current objectives. It is whether, in doing so, it is strengthening or eroding the trust required to sustain that performance over time. Organisations that navigate this well are those where leadership compression is recognised early and addressed with intention. They understand that trust is not a by-product of performance, but a condition that must be actively maintained.

If you’ve noticed that leadership compression aligns with some of the challenges your organisation is currently facing, then I encourage you to reach out and have a conversation with me. Continuing to ignore leadership compression doesn’t make it disappear, it just makes the roll-on effects harder to lead through in the future.

The Leadership Capability Gap Inside High-Performing Executive Teams: What Australian CEOs Are Noticing First

Executive leaders are trained to deliver. 

Technical excellence and a consistent track record of results are often what elevate them into senior roles. Yet many CEOs reach a point where the numbers remain strong, while something less visible begins to shift within the leadership team. 

Alignment becomes harder to sustain, and pressure starts to surface in subtle ways. This is not a performance failure. It is leadership compression. And while it may not yet be visible in your results, its impact is already unfolding.

What Is Leadership Compression?

Leadership compression occurs when the volume and velocity of organisational demand exceed the leadership capacity available to respond with intention. It does not arrive as a crisis, but it shows up through behaviour and everyday patterns.

This is not a broken leadership team, but it is one with a narrowing capacity. Leaders default to their functional lanes, becoming protective of resources and less oriented toward the whole, causing silos to form. Executive team performance may remain strong, but executive team alignment begins to erode. The organisation continues to move, yet the depth required to move forward with intention is being gradually squeezed out.

This is where the leadership capability gap begins to form. It’s not from a lack of intelligence or experience, but from sustained pressure without the space to think, challenge, and recalibrate.

The Symptoms

Most CEOs do not begin with a diagnostic framework for leadership compression, after all, this is a relatively new concept for many, but they do begin with a sense that something is off.

This could look like:

  • Execution remaining high, but strategic thinking thinning. 
  • Decisions made quickly, yet real deliberation is absent. (Speed has started to replace depth)
  • Meetings running efficiently, but no longer generating new ideas. The productive friction is missing.
  • Functional excellence is strong across the team, but enterprise thinking is weak. Each executive leads their domain well, but few are holding the organisation as a whole. 
  • Disagreement becomes expensive, leading to less positive risk-taking.
  • High performers carry more than they reveal, leading to reduced curiosity and a lack of patience.
  • Urgency becoming the default operating rhythm. 
  • Values being visible but not incorporated into day-to-day behaviour, creating a point of friction between decision-making and shared principles.

With all of this added pressure, consensus begins to look like alignment, but it is not. And this is often a signal that executive team alignment is being maintained at the surface rather than strengthened at depth.

Perhaps most tellingly, the leadership pipeline begins to thin. Executive succession feels uncertain. Two layers down, capability is not developing at the pace required. The organisation is delivering today, but future leadership strength is not keeping up.

And for many CEOs, there is a sense of isolation at the top. Not personal isolation, but a lack of grounded, peer-level dialogue within the executive team. The conversations that would sharpen thinking and share the load are not happening.

Why This Matters

Leadership compression is not new, but over the last 12 months it has been accelerating in response to global pressures. Australian boards and executive teams are operating within a unique amalgamation of geopolitical instability, economic volatility, AI accountability, and evolving expectations around board governance.

Insights from the Australian Institute of Company Directors highlight that many Australian boards are still weighted toward traditional oversight, rather than forward-looking strategic engagement. This intensifies the pressure placed on executive teams, often without a corresponding increase in leadership capacity.

CEO leadership challenges today are not defined by strategy alone. They are defined by the ability to sustain clarity, alignment, and depth of thinking under continuous pressure.

This is not a performance issue. It is a leadership capability gap combined with a misalignment at the top of the organisation.

What to Do When You Recognise It

The first step is naming it. An unnamed problem goes unresolved, and taking this first step puts you ahead of many other organisations that are currently burying their heads in the sand. 

The next step is creating space. Not more activity, but more deliberate conversation. Space for genuine strategic thinking. Space for challenge that strengthens rather than fractures. Space for executives to step beyond their function and re-engage with the enterprise as a whole.

This is the work that protects executive succession, strengthens the leadership pipeline, and restores depth to executive team performance.

The question is not whether your executive team is delivering. It is whether the leadership required to sustain and evolve that performance is being actively developed, or quietly depleted.

If this pattern feels familiar, it may be time to shift the focus from output to leadership itself. I am currently having conversations with organisations that want to begin their leadership development programs before the end of the financial year. Can you really risk waiting? If not, now is the time to reach out

How To Unlock Your Leadership Potential

The best executive leaders know that authenticity is critical to effective leadership. But what does it mean to lead with authenticity? And how can we cultivate and sustain it over time, especially during difficult and challenging times?

To me, leading with authenticity means aligning your thoughts, actions and behaviours with your values, and your purpose. It means continually evolving as a person, professional and leader while staying grounded in who you truly are or, if you prefer, your uniqueness.

So how do you do this in practice?

Here are some tips for leading with authenticity:

1. Practice self compassion
Self compassion is about showing yourself the same understanding you would a friend. It’s a crucial leadership skill, particularly during difficult times and constant change. We all know that perfection is a myth. Instead of beating yourself up the next time you make a mistake, treat yourself with kindness and understanding, allowing yourself to feel your emotions as they are, without judgement. Then, learn from your mistake in the same way that you would counsel a team member through their learning.

2. Embrace vulnerability
Vulnerability is the courage to be yourself, fully, as a leader. It means acknowledging your strengths and fears but not letting them hold you back from trying new things. The courage to embrace unpredictability, risk and uncertainty by making consciously courageous choices. Being vulnerable (within the framework of leadership) can be scary, but it’s also essential to building authentic trust and connection with your team. When your team sees you being vulnerable and ‘real’, they’ll feel more comfortable doing the same with you and each other.

3. Be compassionately challenging, not critical
If your aim as a leader is professional evolution not stagnation, authentic leadership means you practise this for yourself and your team. By compassionately challenging your team members to be their best selves, you are encouraging growth aligned with their strengths and values, and inspiring them to lead authentically too.

4. Stop problem solving
In a constantly changing environment, tried and tested solutions only get you so far at best, and may not work at worst. Curiously enquiring into what’s possible rather than “what’s the problem we want to fix” leads to very different results.

5. Evolve not revolve
Regularly take time to assess your personal progress towards leading a life aligned with your purpose, and do the same for your team. Without it, you may find that your leadership and life keeps revolving rather than evolving. Consider:

  • How often do you take time and energy to ensure that your purpose and values are closely aligned with who you are now?
  • How have you incorporated recent market, personal and professional changes into your purpose and values?
  • When was the last time you immersed yourself in 2 or 3 days of deep personal reflection, review and rejuvenation to recharge your mind, body and spirit?

Leading with authenticity is, like most other leadership skills, a practice. It is a way of “being” rather than something that you do. It requires ongoing self-reflection, self-awareness, and self compassion. The rewards are immense – greater trust, engagement, and impact for ourselves and our teams. Not to mention immense personal and professional growth.

How are you evolving as a person, professional and leader?

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Discover mindful leadership strategies grounded in neuroscience, and positive psychology to evolve from reactivity to resonance and lead with lasting impact.