The invisible work of real leaders (and the visible nonsense of bad ones)
Not all leaders are created equal.
Some inspire movements. Others inspire mass resignations.
This article is for anyone who’s ever sat in a meeting, stared at their boss, and thought, “How did this person get here?”
Let’s break down the different species of leaders, what makes a great one, why interviews fail to reveal them, and how to spot the bad apples before they rot the whole org chart.

Leadership is not a figma file.
You can’t show it in an interview.
Types of leaders
Leadership styles aren’t one-size-fits-all, but here’s a handy (and slightly snarky) breakdown of the most common types:
| Leader Type | Traits | When It Works | When It Fails |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Visionary | Big ideas, big decks, no idea how to implement | Startups, reinvention moments | When the team needs actual direction |
| The Servant | Empathetic, team-first, humble | High-performing, self-motivated teams | Can be overrun by stronger personalities |
| The Authoritarian | Clear, direct, often dictatorial | Crisis situations or rigid hierarchies | Anywhere that values creativity |
| The Micromanager | Wants to know what font you’re using in your doc | Never | Always |
| The Absentee | “Great at delegation” a.k.a. never around | Sales conferences in the Maldives | Literally every other situation |
| The Buddy | Too friendly to lead, allergic to accountability | Team morale events, karaoke nights | Performance management, hard decisions |
Poll time
I’m definitely the servant type, but early in my career I was the buddy.
Quick Apology:
To all those I managed early in my career, I’m sorry, I wish I did better. But, we sure had a great time.
Leadership Poll
What makes a great leader?
Forget the LinkedIn posts with stock photos of mountain climbers. Here’s what really matters:
1. Self-awareness
They know their strengths, their gaps, and when to get out of the way.
Fact Check:
According to Harvard Business Review, 95% of people think they’re self-aware. Only 10 to 15% actually are. So chances are your boss isn’t.
2. Empathy
Not the fake “I see you” kind. Actual, let-me-understand-what-you-need-to-thrive empathy. Good leaders coach individuals, not just teams.
3. Clarity
Great leaders know how to take messy goals and turn them into simple, clear direction. Vague missions like “Drive innovation” mean nothing without this.
4. Accountability
They own the wins and the losses. They don’t throw their team under the bus because they’re usually the one driving it.
5. Consistency
Your team shouldn’t have to guess which version of you is walking into the meeting. Emotional consistency builds trust.
Why interviews can’t spot a great leader
Let’s be honest. Leadership interviews are broken. Why?
1. It’s All Theater
Candidates have rehearsed their “Tell me about a time…” answers like a high school monologue. You’re seeing performance, not pattern.
2. The Charm Trap
Some of the worst leaders are amazing in interviews. Charisma isn’t capability. Being persuasive isn’t the same as being effective.
3. No Context
Better Idea:
Look at patterns. Ask for actual examples of team impact.
Do 360 reviews. And maybe stop judging based on how confidently they talk about “transformation.”
Interviews don’t show how someone leads under pressure, in a conflict, or after three back-to-back Slack pings that say “quick question.”
Leadership can’t be shown in a portfolio (and barely fits in a resume)
Let’s get real. Leadership isn’t something you can slap into a case study or sum up in a slide deck.
Portfolios Show Work. Leadership Happens Between the Work.
You can’t wireframe trust. You can’t prototype influence. And your best leadership moments probably didn’t involve a Figma file. They happened in a quiet 1:1 conversation that helped someone grow, a tough call that protected your team, or a late-night fire drill you handled without turning it into a trauma bond.
Those moments don’t fit on a portfolio page.
Interviews Want “Impact,” But Miss the Real Stuff
Hiring managers ask, “Tell me about a time you led a team through change.” Great. But they don’t see the ten quiet adjustments you made to keep that team steady, the late-night check-ins, or the internal politics you navigated without turning into a full-time diplomat.
And if you try to explain that? You sound vague. Or worse, like every other LinkedIn leadership post quoting someone they’ve never actually read.
What You Don’t See in a Portfolio:
- The junior designer who stayed because they felt safe
- The sprint you de-scoped to prevent burnout
- The meeting you skipped so others could speak up
- The toxic exec you challenged to protect your team
These things are invisible but essential.
They are the difference between someone who leads and someone who just manages the work.
What you see vs. What matters
| Visible on Resume or Portfolio | Invisible but Impactful Leadership |
|---|---|
| Big redesign project | Quietly retained your entire team during chaos |
| Stakeholder presentation skills | Coached a struggling teammate back to confidence |
| Metrics on feature delivery | Protected your team’s focus by deflecting chaos |
| Awards and certifications | Created a culture where feedback is safe and real |
| “Led cross-functional team” | Earned trust from people who didn’t have to follow you |
What makes a bad leader?
Here’s your checklist. If they hit three or more, you may be in a motivational poster factory, not a functioning organization.
1. Blame Shifting
Never their fault. Ever. Even when it is.
2. Hoarding Credit
You did the work, they did the presentation. Guess whose name was on the slide? Not yours.
3. Insecurity in Disguise
They say things like “I’m just playing devil’s advocate” when they’re just scared of being wrong.
4. Chaos as a Strategy
They thrive in dysfunction. Clarity makes them nervous. If their favorite phrase is “Let’s keep things fluid,” it’s time to start planning your exit.
5. Feedback-phobic
They want “open communication,” but mysteriously ghost whenever someone has constructive feedback.
How do we promote better leaders?
Just because you’ve been in a position for a while or your leader left, doesn’t make you an instant leader.
Not everyone can lead, and honestly, most shouldn’t.
Here’s a radical idea.
Measure leadership the same way we measure user experience, by its impact on humans.
Good vs. Bad Leadership Outcomes
| Metric | Good Leadership | Bad Leadership |
|---|---|---|
| Team Retention | High | Revolving door |
| Employee Engagement | Energized, focused | Cynical, burned out |
| Cross-functional Collaboration | Seamless and strategic | Passive-aggressive email threads |
| Innovation | Safe to explore, test, and fail | Everyone plays it safe |
| Culture | Inclusive, resilient | Turf wars and gossip |
One last thing.
Great leaders don’t need to say, “I’m a great leader.”
They are too busy making space for others to thrive.
Bad leaders? They usually have a podcast, a TEDx talk, and a firm opinion about Slack etiquette.