When Your Presence Changes the Room - Why Leadership Starts Before You Say a Word
Most leaders pay attention to what they're going to say.
The agenda.
The feedback.
The decision.
The update.
What often gets overlooked is what people experience before any of those things happen.
They notice your pace.
Your energy.
Your level of tension.
Whether you seem rushed or grounded.
Whether you're fully there or already thinking about the next meeting.
Earlier in The Human Shift, Culture is What People Carry Home, we explored how culture is shaped by what people carry after interactions. Before people carry anything away, they're already responding to what they experience in your presence.
A Reframe
Presence isn't something you add to leadership.
It is leadership.
One Simple Practice
Before your next meeting, pause for ten seconds before speaking.
Take one slow breath.
Notice your feet on the floor.
Then begin.
What This Looks Like In Practice
A leader enters a meeting feeling rushed after back-to-back conversations.
Instead of immediately jumping into the agenda, she takes a moment to settle herself.
The meeting itself doesn't change dramatically.
The experience does.
People become less reactive.
The conversation slows just enough to become more thoughtful.
Question to Consider
What do people experience when they enter a room with you?
In the shift,
Dr. Nika White
P.S. Think about your last meeting. What do you think people felt from you before you even started speaking?
Read more from The Human Shift on Substack, where I share long-form essays on leadership, culture, and how we work and live.
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