When your strength becomes your blind spot
Every senior leader has a strength that built their career
The thing people rely on them for. The thing that feels effortless for them. The thing that becomes part of their professional identity. For some, it’s clarity. For others it’s decisiveness, calm under pressure, strategic thinking, relationship building, or delivery excellence
These strengths are real. They are earned and they are valuable. But if you’re not careful, your greatest strength can quietly become your most limiting blind spot over time as you move through your career
Not because your strength stops being useful. But because the environment around you changes faster than your concept of self does
The strength that once differentiated you can start to distort your leadership, narrow your perspective, or create patterns that no longer serve you or the organisation. The irony is that the more you are praised for your strength, the more you double down on it, and the more narrow your perspective becomes
Let’s unpack how this happens, why it’s especially common amongst product and transformation leaders, and how high impact leaders evolve before their strengths turn into liabilities
The strength blind spot paradox
A strength becomes a blind spot when:
You rely on it automatically
You use it in situations where it doesn’t fit
You overuse it under pressure
You assume it’s always the right tool
You stop noticing its unintended consequences
Others see the downside long before you do
This is not a character flaw. It’s a developmental inevitability
The higher you go, the more your strengths need to evolve. Not because they’re wrong, but because the context has changed
Why this shows up so strongly in product and transformation leaders
Your roles sit at the intersection of:
Ambiguity
Complexity
Cross functional frictions
Competing incentives
Technical constraints
Organisational fatigue
Executive pressure
To survive in this environment, you’ve built strengths that help you navigate chaos. But those same strengths can become rigid patterns when:
The stakes rise
The visibility increases
The politics intensify
The organisation grows
The role expands
The expectations shift
Let’s look at the most common patterns
Six strengths that quietly become blind spots
Clarity becomes control
You’re known for bringing structure to chaos. But under pressure, clarity can morph into:
Over directing
Over specifying
Collapsing ambiguity too quickly
Not giving others space to think
Solving instead of facilitating
The intention is good, but the impact is constraining
Decisiveness becomes impatience
You move fast, you cut through noise, and you don’t get stuck. But decisiveness can become:
Rushing alignment
Making calls without enough context
Overriding quieter voices
Mistaking speed for progress
The organisation feels pushed and not led in this scenario
Calmness becomes emotional distance
You’re steady, you’re composed, and you’re unshakeable. But calmness can become:
Hard to read
Hard to connect with
Hard for others to escalate to
Interpreted as disengagement
Your steadiness becomes a wall instead of an anchor
Strategic thinking becomes detachment from reality
You see patterns others miss, you think long term, and you elevate conversations. But strategy can become:
Too abstract
Too conceptual
Too far from operational constraints
Hard for teams to translate into action
People admire your thinking but struggle to execute it
Relationship building becomes avoidance of hard calls
You’re trusted, you’re collaborative, and you’re great with stakeholders. But relational strength can become:
Over accommodation
Soft boundaries
Delayed decisions
Avoiding conflict
Protecting harmony over progress
You become the glue, but at the cost of momentum
Delivery excellence becomes over functioning
You get things done, you’re reliable, and you’re the person people turn to. But delivery strength can become:
Taking on too much
Becoming the fixer
Operating at the wrong altitude
Shielding others from accountability
Burning out quietly
You become indispensable and trapped
How to know when a strength is becoming a blind spot
Blind spots don’t announce themselves or give you warning that they’re coming. They show up as subtle patterns:
You feel stretched but can’t articulate why
You’re praised for the same thing repeatedly but you’re not promoted
You’re relied on heavily but not included early
You’re respected but not fully understood
You’re delivering but not scaling
You’re influencing but not shaping
You’re exhausted in ways that don’t match your workload
These are signals, not failures. They’re telling you that your leadership identity needs to expand
The leadership shift from strengths driven to context driven
High impact leaders don’t abandon their strengths. They simply rebalance them. They ask:
“When is this strength useful?”
“When is it limiting?”
“What does this situation actually require?”
“What’s the cost of using this strength here?”
“What’s the alternative leadership move?”
This is the shift from automatic to intentional, from habitual to contextual, and from comfortable to effective
How high impact leaders evolve their strengths
They build the opposite muscle
If your strength is clarity, build comfort with ambiguity
If your strength is calmness, build emotional expression
If your strength is decisiveness, build patience
If your strength is strategy, build operational empathy
If your strength is relationships, build boundaries
If your strength is delivery, build delegation
The opposite muscle doesn’t replace your strength, it completes it
They get curious about impact, not intent
They ask:
“How is this landing?”
“What’s the unintended consequence?”
“What patterns do others see that I don’t?”
Impact is the real measure of leadership maturity
They let go of the identity that no longer fits
This is the hardest part. You have to release:
Being the fixer
Being the smartest
Being the calmest
Being the fastest
Being the most reliable
Being the one who always knows
These identities served you well, but they don’t scale
They expand their leadership repertoire
Senior leadership is not about having one dominant strength. It’s about having range. Range is what allows your leadership to travel across functions, personalities, power structures, levels of ambiguity, and organisational maturity
Range is what makes you enterprise ready
If you’re noticing your strength becoming a blind spot, you’re not behind, you’re evolving
This is the natural inflection point of senior leadership. It’s the moment where:
Your role expands
Your identity stretches
Your patterns get exposed
Your strengths need recalibration
Your leadership becomes more nuanced
It’s not a sign of weakness, it’s a sign of readiness. You’re outgrowing the version of leadership that got you here and stepping into the version that will take you further
If you want to evolve your strengths into enterprise level leadership range, let’s work on this together. Here are three ways:
Interim Executive Leadership/Consulting - when the transformation needs someone inside the system stabilising, steering, and delivering,
Capability Building - when leaders and teams need the capability everyone expects but no one teaches: how to navigate the people, politics, and performance expectations that come with their jobs, and
Executive Coaching - when senior leaders need a confidential, strategic partner to think clearly, make decisions, and lead through complexity.