FAQs
What happens if I do not invest enough effort or time in developing my Thought Leadership?
Thought Leadership determines how effectively you interpret complexity, influence stakeholders and guide your team through uncertainty. When this capability is not developed, leaders tend to become reactive, lose clarity in fast-paced environments and struggle to set direction. Over time, this weakens credibility and slows decision-making, especially in organisations dealing with transformation, rising customer demands or regulatory pressure.
Developing thought leadership skills helps you anticipate challenges, connect information to decisions and shape priorities confidently. It also supports balanced leadership across Thought, People and Results Leadership, a core Influence Solutions principle that prevents over-reliance on one dimension at the expense of others.
In our work with clients, we begin by clarifying the business problem such as slow decision cycles, repeated escalations or unclear priorities then co-define success indicators and design a learning journey that strengthens the leadership behaviours needed to improve outcomes.
What happens if I do not invest enough effort or time in developing my People Leadership?
People Leadership drives engagement, trust and performance, particularly in teams facing high turnover, siloed communication or change fatigue. When leaders underinvest in this capability, teams experience conflict, low accountability, slow decision-making and inconsistent service. Even technically strong managers stall in their careers when they struggle to influence, motivate or communicate across diverse stakeholders.
Strengthening People Leadership capabilities such as the ability to build trust and engagement, coach others and support healthy accountability, directly contributes to solving business problems like employee turnover, slow execution and repeated escalations. These behaviours are also essential for creating high-performing teams.
At Influence Solutions, we clarify your people challenge, co-define measurable success indicators (e.g., faster response time, improved morale) and design a learning journey that builds the leadership mindset and behaviours needed for sustainable culture improvement.
What happens if I do not invest enough effort or time in developing my Results Leadership?
Results Leadership is your ability to turn skills, knowledge and effort into measurable outcomes. When this capability is weak, teams may be busy but not effective – deadlines slip, priorities conflict and accountability drops. Organisations feel this as slow execution, inconsistent customer experience or low activation of strategic initiatives.
Leaders with strong Results Leadership clarify expectations, track progress, make timely decisions and help teams focus on what truly matters. This strengthens performance and enhances leadership credibility even for those not seeking promotion.
In our work with clients, strengthening leadership accountability reduces rework, speeds up decisions and improves customer and commercial outcomes. When leaders consistently deliver results, the organisation gains stability and individuals gain recognition, influence and career opportunities.
What happens if I do not have the right balance between Thought, People and Results Leadership?
Balanced leadership ensures you can think clearly, connect with people and deliver results consistently. When one dimension dominates, performance and engagement suffer. Too much Thought Leadership results in ideas without execution. Too much People Leadership creates harmony without progress. Too much Results Leadership may deliver short-term wins but leads to burnout, turnover and weakened trust.
This balance becomes especially important during periods of transformation, increased workload or customer pressure. Leaders who integrate all three dimensions create psychological safety, clear direction and disciplined follow-through.
At Influence Solutions, we begin by clarifying the business problem such as slow decisions, low engagement or inconsistent execution, then co-define success indicators and design a learning journey that strengthens the specific behaviours needed. Balanced leadership is at the heart of high-performing teams.
How can I communicate decisions so my team implements them wholeheartedly and my boss supports them?
Effective decision communication begins with clarity and context. When people understand the “why” behind a decision, they are far more likely to commit and execute confidently. Start by explaining the problem you are solving and the outcome needed. This reduces uncertainty and aligns everyone around priorities.
Next, share the key considerations – the data, constraints or risks you evaluated. You do not need the full analysis, just the reasoning behind your choice. Then clarify expectations: what success looks like, who is responsible for what and timelines. This prevents misunderstandings and strengthens accountability.
Finally, invite perspectives. This improves ownership, reduces escalation cycles and builds stronger cross-functional collaboration, especially during periods of rapid change.
Leaders who use a clear decision-making process (such as frameworks in our leadership development programmes) communicate with greater confidence and influence.
I don’t have time for people to develop ideas. Isn’t it faster to just tell them what to do?
Telling people what to do may feel faster in the moment, but it increases dependency and keeps you in constant firefighting. When team members do not think for themselves, issues escalate, initiative drops and decision cycles slow, all of which create business bottlenecks.
A better approach is to ask simple, guiding questions that build ownership, such as: “What options do you see?” or “What outcome are we trying to achieve?” This strengthens thinking skills, reduces repeated escalations and frees you to focus on higher-value work.
If psychological safety is low, people may hesitate to share ideas. In these cases, leaders must first build trust and signal that ideas are welcome. Over time, this creates a culture of accountability, innovation readiness and independent problem-solving, essential capabilities in high-performing teams.
What is the best way to develop my decision-making skills?
Strong decision-making comes from using a clear, repeatable process rather than relying on speed or intuition alone. Leaders often make decisions quickly, but improving quality requires slowing down long enough to think systematically. Start by defining the real issue – many poor decisions occur because leaders solve the wrong problem.
Next, gather only the data that directly affects the decision. Too much information creates noise and delays. Evaluate a few meaningful options and consider pros, cons and feasibility. Finally, assess risks, consequences and certainty levels. This strengthens judgment and reduces escalation cycles.
Practising this structure across daily decisions builds confidence, consistency and influence. It also helps you present recommendations clearly to stakeholders, a capability developed in our decision-making and influence programmes.
I do not aim to be a senior leader. Why must I still develop my leadership?
Leadership is not about hierarchy, it is a life and career capability that strengthens your ability to communicate, influence and solve problems. Even if you do not aspire to senior leadership, you will still need to lead conversations, manage expectations, collaborate across functions and support others through change. These moments require Thought, People and Results Leadership, not a formal title.
When leaders underinvest in these capabilities, they experience more conflict, miscommunication, stress and rework. Developing core leadership behaviours improves clarity, trust and effectiveness in any role, whether you are leading projects, customers or peers.
At Influence Solutions, we begin by clarifying your real workplace challenge, then co-define what effective leadership looks like for your current role. From there, we design a learning journey focused on building the mindset and behaviours that increase confidence, resilience and impact.
I have several direct reports and limited time. How can I give them equal development opportunities?
Providing equal development opportunities does not require long sessions, it requires consistency and clarity. Begin by scheduling short, purposeful career conversations throughout the year. Even two conversations per person annually significantly improve engagement, clarity and retention.
Avoid focusing only on high-performing or proactive employees. This creates perception gaps and weakens trust. Instead, help each team member identify their aspirations, strengths and development goals. For those who are not yet proactive, use regular 1-to-1s to explore what support they need and whether timing in their personal life affects readiness.
Small, structured actions such as delegating stretch tasks, aligning expectations and giving feedback – build capability without overwhelming you. This approach strengthens succession pipelines and reduces turnover, key business outcomes in many of our client engagements.
Coaching & Mentoring, Team Culture
What is the difference between coaching and mentoring?
Coaching and mentoring are both essential leadership capabilities, but they support development in different ways. Mentoring involves sharing your experience, knowledge and lessons learned. It is useful when someone needs context, guidance or insights that help them avoid common mistakes. Too much mentoring, however, can limit innovation if people rely only on “tried and tested” approaches.
Coaching, on the other hand, strengthens a person’s ability to think, solve problems and take ownership. Instead of giving answers, leaders use simple questions to help team members gain clarity and build confidence. This approach is especially powerful for strengthening accountability, decision-making and psychological safety.
Effective leaders use both skills, depending on the person and situation. In our programmes, we help leaders clarify their business challenge, co-define success indicators and practise using coaching questions to accelerate team capability.
How do I know when to coach and when to direct?
The key to knowing when to coach and when to direct is understanding the situation and the person’s readiness. When tasks are time-critical, high-risk or highly sensitive, directing is appropriate because clarity and speed matter most. In these cases, leaders should provide specific guidance to ensure accuracy and safety.
Coaching is most useful when your goal is to build capability, confidence and independent thinking. Look for “teachable moments” in daily interactions: situations where asking a few questions can help someone gain clarity, explore options and take ownership. Over time, this reduces escalations and strengthens performance.
In our work with clients, we use the Influence Solutions’ Transformation Approach to clarify the business problem first, such as repeated escalations or slow execution then design learning experiences that build the right mix of direction and coaching behaviours.
Coaching feels slow and time consuming. What if I don't have the time or skills?
Coaching does not require long, formal sessions. The most effective leaders integrate coaching into everyday conversations. Start by helping the person clarify what they want to achieve or what problem they need to solve. Clarity alone often reduces the need for escalation and speeds up decision-making.
Next, ask simple questions to help them break the issue into smaller parts. Even supporting them to solve one part of the problem builds confidence and reduces their reliance on you. Finally, end the conversation by checking that they have clarity or a specific next step. This structure keeps interactions focused and efficient.
In our leadership programmes, we show managers how structured coaching conversations actually save time by increasing ownership, accountability and independent problem-solving.
What should I do when a team member shows resistance or reluctance to take action?
Resistance usually signals uncertainty, low confidence or a lack of psychological safety, not unwillingness. Instead of pushing harder, pause and explore what is holding the person back. Ask questions such as: “What concerns you?” or “What is the smallest change you want to see?” This shifts the conversation from excuses to ownership.
Help them break the problem into smaller, manageable steps. Even identifying one small action builds momentum and reduces escalation cycles. Avoid immediately solving the problem for them; this creates dependency and weakens accountability.
In our coaching and leadership programmes, we clarify the business impact of resistance, such as slow execution, rework or repeated escalations and help leaders use coaching conversations to strengthen confidence, clarity and follow-through.
What should I do if the person I am coaching cannot come up with a solution?
When someone cannot generate solutions, it is often due to fear of judgment, lack of confidence or limited experience. Creating psychological safety is the first step. Instead of offering answers immediately, help them break the issue into smaller parts so they can tackle one aspect at a time. Ask guiding questions such as: “What have you tried before?” or “What might happen if we experimented with this option?”
If they still need help, offer one or two suggestions, but frame them as options rather than instructions: “Would any of these work for you?” This encourages thinking while still supporting progress. Over time, this approach strengthens independent problem-solving and reduces reliance on you.
Our coaching programmes build leaders’ ability to facilitate clarity, confidence and judgment – capabilities that directly reduce escalations and improve execution.
Do I need a formal coaching methodology to coach effectively?
You do not need a complex methodology to coach effectively. Most powerful coaching conversations follow a simple structure: clarify the goal, explore options, and identify next steps. This makes coaching faster, more natural and easier to integrate into daily interactions.
Start by asking what the person wants clarity on. Then use questions to help them examine the issue from different angles. Finally, check that they have a clear action or decision. This approach builds independent thinking, strengthens accountability and reduces repeated escalations – key business outcomes for busy leaders.
Formal models like GROW can be helpful, but the essence of coaching lies in structured, intentional conversations that build confidence and ownership. Many leaders quickly see improvements when they apply this simple rhythm consistently.
Personal Development & Career Planning
Do I need a Personal Development Plan?
A Personal Development Plan (PDP) is not mandatory, but it is one of the most effective ways to take ownership of your growth. Without a PDP, development becomes reactive – driven by immediate job demands rather than your long-term goals. Over time, this often leads to disengagement, stalled progression or skills that no longer match organisational needs.
A PDP helps you clarify your aspirations, identify priority skills and stay focused on meaningful development. Reviewing it regularly, ideally quarterly, keeps your growth aligned with business needs and strengthens your leadership readiness.
In our leadership programmes, we begin by clarifying the business problem or career challenge you want to address, co-defining success indicators and designing development actions that support both your goals and organisational outcomes. A PDP ensures your effort is distributed across the right areas: capability, behaviour and contribution.
Should all my direct reports have a PDP?
Ideally, everyone should have the opportunity to create a PDP but readiness may vary. Some team members may have personal commitments, lack clarity about their goals or feel overwhelmed by workload. That’s okay. Your role is not to force development but to make growth accessible and fair.
Provide each direct report with regular opportunities to discuss their aspirations, strengths and development goals. Even two structured conversations per year significantly improve engagement and retention. For those who are not ready, use ongoing 1-to-1s to check in, offer support and revisit the topic when timing allows.
A consistent development approach strengthens the succession pipeline, reduces turnover and helps you build a more capable team. Our leadership programmes equip managers with tools to create meaningful PDP conversations and link development to business outcomes.
How can I support a team member whose career aspiration is to eventually take over my role?
A team member wanting to grow into your role is a positive sign, it shows ambition, capability and a healthy learning culture. The best approach is to support their development while continuing to progress your own.
Start by clarifying the skills, experiences and behaviours required for your role. This sets realistic expectations and creates a clear development path. Next, provide stretch opportunities such as leading meetings, managing stakeholders or driving initiatives. These build readiness and strengthen your succession pipeline.
Engage your own leader early so succession planning is transparent and supported. At the same time, continue developing yourself. Preparing a successor allows you to explore broader opportunities within the organisation.
This approach strengthens capability, increases motivation and demonstrates a mature leadership mindset.
Who are these leadership and coaching resources designed for?
These resources are designed for leaders, managers, HR teams, and individuals who want practical tools to strengthen their influence, communication and decision-making. They support every stage of leadership from emerging leaders building foundational confidence to senior leaders navigating complexity, culture change and organisational transformation.
Our approach begins with your business challenge. We clarify the specific behaviours and outcomes you want to strengthen, then guide you toward resources that help build capability in a focused, practical way. Whether you want to improve team trust, accelerate collaboration, drive performance or strengthen leadership readiness, these resources provide actionable support.
How should I use these resources with my team?
Use these resources as conversation starters and learning tools to strengthen clarity, confidence and capability within your team. Select one question at a time, discuss the insight together and agree on one or two practical actions. Small, consistent conversations build accountability and psychological safety far more effectively than long, infrequent sessions.
You can also integrate these resources into 1-to-1s, team huddles or project reviews to encourage reflection and problem-solving. This creates a shared language for leadership, strengthens collaboration and reduces escalation cycles, key outcomes for high-performing teams.
Our programmes help leaders turn everyday moments into coaching opportunities, ensuring conversations are focused, structured and tied to real business needs.
Why Influence Solutions
What makes Influence Solutions different from other leadership training providers?
Influence Solutions stands out because we begin with your business problem — not a generic curriculum. Training without clear ROI is just activity, so we focus on outcomes that matter. Our 4-step transformation approach ensures clarity and measurable impact:
- Clarify the Problem — Translate your challenge into behavioural and business indicators.
- Co-Define Success — Agree on what success should look like, feel like and measure.
- Design the Learning Journey — Build the solution backwards from the outcomes.
- Demonstrate ROI — Track mindset, behaviour and business movement post-programme.
Our programmes, including F.I.R.S.T.™leadership, The High Trust Team™, and Influence 24/7™, are practical, context-driven and built for real organisational challenges like trust, collaboration, decision-making and performance. We help leaders change behaviour, not just learn concepts.
How do Influence Solutions programmes help leaders become more effective?
Our programmes strengthen leadership effectiveness by focusing on real business problems, not abstract theories. We begin by clarifying the challenge you want to solve: low trust, slow decision-making, weak collaboration, inconsistent customer experience, or lack of accountability. We then co-define success indicators so your leaders know exactly what “better” looks like.
The learning journey is built backwards from these outcomes and includes practical tools, behaviour change techniques and real-world application. Leaders practise making decisions, influencing stakeholders, giving feedback, building trust and driving performance – skills they can use immediately.
Our proprietary framework F.I.R.S.T.™ and signature programmes like High Performing Team™, The High Trust Team™, Influence 24/7™ and Conversations to Culture™ , ensure learning is simple, repeatable and sustainable. This approach develops leaders who can think clearly, communicate confidently and deliver results consistently.
Do you offer virtual, hybrid or in-person workshops?
Yes, all formats are available. We offer fully virtual workshops, hybrid learning journeys and in-person programmes, depending on your organisational needs and team locations. Each format maintains the same focus on engagement, practical tools and real-world application.
Virtual and hybrid formats are especially effective for distributed teams or organisations with regional offices. In-person workshops are ideal when you want deeper interaction, culture building or collaboration across functions. We help you identify the format that best supports your business challenge and learning outcomes.
How do I know which leadership programme is right for my team?
Start with the business problem you want to solve. The right programme depends on the behaviour, culture or performance shifts you need. For example:
- If trust is low → start with The High Trust Team™.
- If decision-making is slow → Influence 24/7™ helps leaders think clearly and act faster.
- If leadership consistency is the issue → F.I.R.S.T.™ Leadership™ builds shared language and behaviour.
We clarify your challenge, co-define measurable success indicators and recommend a programme mapped to your outcomes. This ensures your investment delivers impact, not just activity.
We can also customise a learning journey across leadership levels or functions, ensuring alignment with culture, strategy and business priorities.


