Tag servant leadership

Why Didn’t Anyone Tell Me? — Humble Inquiry, Part 1

Humble Inquiry leads to open communication

Once, when a Chief Medical Officer, I rolled out a night call schedule that failed three weeks in. The team had seen what was coming; they just didn't tell me. The reason wasn't a communication failure — it was an asking failure. Drawing on Ed and Peter Schein's Humble Inquiry, this post explores why physicians, trained to be the person in the room with the answer, struggle to ask real questions when they move into leadership. It introduces the Scheins' four types of inquiry — humble, diagnostic, confrontive, and process-oriented — and shows how most physician leaders unknowingly default to confrontive questions that teach their teams to confirm a hypothesis rather than share what they actually see.

The Business Case for Servant Leadership in Healthcare

The effects of servant leadership ripple through the organization

If you're a physician leader who believes in servant leadership, at some point someone in a boardroom will say, "That's nice, but what are the results?" This post gives you the answer. And if you're an executive thinking about physician leadership development, this is why servant leadership isn't a personality trait. It's an operating system you can support or undermine. Which choice you make will determine your organization's culture.

The Servant Leadership Trap — And How to Avoid It

Serving is not the same as rescuing

When many physicians hear "servant leadership," a voice in their head says: I already give everything to my patients. Now I'm supposed to give everything to my team too? That voice isn't wrong to worry. Servant leadership, done poorly, will burn you out faster than any 80-hour clinical week ever did. This post is about that trap and how to avoid it.

What Servant Leadership Actually Means For Physicians

Physicians know how to serve. We've been doing it since the first day of medical school. But serving patients and serving a team are not the same skill. The shift from one to the other is harder than most people expect. And getting it wrong can quietly undermine your leadership before you even realize what's happening. Robert Greenleaf's concept of Servant Leadership can help.