Earlier this week, I spoke at the She Leads Poland gala in Warsaw—a room full of women shaping businesses, communities, and futures in ways that rarely make the headlines.
It was one of those evenings that felt both hopeful and confronting. Hopeful, because the energy in that room was electric—ambitious, collaborative, fearless. Confronting, because it reminded me how much of what we still call ‘leadership’ belongs to an era that no longer exists.
We’ve built entire systems that reward performance over depth. Predictability over perspective. Visibility over vision. We tell people to show up more, speak louder, own the room. But what if leadership isn’t about occupying space, but creating it?
The women I met this week weren’t performing leadership—they were practising it. Quietly, deliberately, without the polish of personal branding. And that difference matters. Because visibility can draw attention, but it doesn’t build trust. Leadership, the kind that lasts, comes from coherence—when what you do aligns with what you believe. And that’s where the real shift is happening.
In a world obsessed with growth, the next frontier of leadership might actually be restraint. The courage to listen before responding. The confidence to say, I don’t know, but I’m willing to find out. The discipline to build slow when everything around you demands speed. That’s not weakness; it’s evolution.
Underpinning reinvention
At the gala, I spoke about the five mindset shifts that underpin reinvention—moving from control to curiosity, from achievement to growth, from planning to experimentation, from identity to evolution, and from comfort to courage. They sound like simple ideas, but each one challenges how we’ve been taught to lead.
Take the first: from control to curiosity. Traditional leadership was built on certainty — the leader as the one who knows. But certainty is brittle. It can’t stretch or absorb change. Curiosity, on the other hand, makes space for surprise. It says: What else could be true? And that single question changes everything.
Or the shift from achievement to growth. For years, achievement has been the currency of success—the measurable, the promotable, the postable. But achievement has a hidden cost. It freezes us in identity. It traps us in the image of who we were when we last succeeded. Growth, by contrast, is uncomfortable. It asks us to move before we’re ready. But it’s also the only way to stay alive to what’s next.
And perhaps the hardest of all: from comfort to courage. Courage isn’t dramatic. It’s not quitting your job or starting a company overnight. It’s the small daily act of refusing to shrink — to speak up when silence would be easier, to question the meeting agenda that doesn’t make sense, to take the feedback that stings but teaches. That kind of courage doesn’t trend. It transforms.
Impact, not titles
It also redefines what power looks like. Because power without empathy is brittle. And influence without reflection is shallow. The next generation of leaders—and I saw many of them in that room—aren’t asking how to become visible. They’re asking how to become useful. They care less about titles and more about impact. Less about status, more about meaning. And maybe that’s the quiet revolution already underway.
As I left the gala, I thought about how Poland—and Europe more broadly—stands at a crossroads. Economically, politically, socially, we’re still chasing models of success defined decades ago.
But perhaps leadership in this new era isn’t about catching up to old definitions. It’s about daring to write new ones. Leadership that doesn’t need a stage. That doesn’t demand applause. Leadership that builds trust in rooms no one photographs.
Because when visibility fades—and it always does—what remains is integrity. And that’s what the women I met in Warsaw reminded me of: that the future of leadership isn’t louder. It’s truer. And truth, once it takes root, doesn’t need the spotlight. It creates its own light.
Photo: Dreamstime.







