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The Forward Thinking Podcast, Powered by FCCSAuthor: FCCS
The Forward Thinking podcast, powered by FCCS is to inform and inspire in the areas of leadership, employee engagement, governance, risk management & insurance, training, and strategic talent management. We feature industry experts and thought leaders with forward-thinking interviews and discussions. Language: en Genres: Business, Careers, Management Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it Trailer: |
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Navigating Leadership Transitions
Episode 84
Thursday, 7 May, 2026
For leaders, growth often means change. Throughout a career, many leaders step into a new role, expand their responsibilities, and have a larger scope of influence. Moving into a new role doesn't always mean that leadership evolves in the way it needs to. This episode of the Forward Thinking Podcast features FCCS SVP of Marketing and Communications Stephanie Barton and Nicole Brusewitz, FCCS VP of Leadership Development, Learning and Consulting Services. Together, they discuss navigating the growth and change that comes with leadership responsibilities, including how leaders show up, how they influence others, and how their leadership must evolve as their scope expands. Episode Insights Include: The challenging part of leadership transitions There is more to effective leadership transition than simply stepping into the role. Leadership transitions are often treated as structural shifts. The most critical shift happens internally – not what you are doing but who you are being. Many leaders fail to transform how they lead. Transformation is about identity, not just responsibilities. Why do transitions feel so hard? When leaders move into bigger roles, they often focus on responsibilities instead of visibility. Recognition that your every day behaviors are shaping the system is essential. The higher you go in an organization, the more your leadership is defined by what you enforce, not what you intend. Leadership skills are not the same as technical skills. Visibility in today's remote workforce Your team doesn't experience your intent, they experience their interpretation of your behavior. Silence easily creates susption and storytelling about leadership intention. Fast moving leaders may be trying to create intention while the team views it as being left behind. The unseen interpretation of leadership behavior creates a wide and fast gap in times of transition. Unintentional culture shaping Culture is shaped by a leadership interpretation gap. Both in-person and remote workers need to clearly know what their leaders are trying to enforce. Communication about work styles is essential in effective leadership. Name what you are doing to reinforce what you are enforcing. Leaders who let go Leaders may need to let go of old habits that are no longer serving their new role. Redefine what 'being helpful' means – solving every problem creates dependency and being an expert limits others. Set expectations, create clarity, and let others think and own their decisions. Effective leaders allow others to develop their own expertise. Shaping environment instead of managing work Effective leaders don't simply manage tasks, they shape conditions. Strategies include reinforce standards, modeling accountability, and ensuring trust. Leaders who only transition roles stay busy, while leaders who transform stop doing the work and start enabling it. Consider how you can coach rather how you can play. Leadership transformation is an identity shift Competence is not the issue with effective leaders. You can transition your title in a day, but transforming how you lead takes time and intention. What got you here won't get you there. Being the expert is not all that matters, leveling up means your team doesn't need you for every answer. Effective leaders build a team who can perform without you. This podcast is powered by FCCS. Resources Connect with Nicole Brusewitz – Nicole Brusewitz Leadership Journeys Get in touch – info@fccsconsulting.com "Transformation is about identity, not just responsibilities." — Nicole Brusewitz "The higher you go in an organization, the more your leadership is defined by what you enforce, not what you intend." — Nicole Brusewitz "As leaders we have intention, but our teams only see our behavior." — Nicole Brusewitz "You can transition your title in a day, but transforming how you lead takes time and intention." — Nicole Brusewitz













