By Nadia Leita, Director at Leverage Leadership
Leadership in South Africa has never demanded more of us than it does today. We are leading teams through economic instability, social uncertainty, burnout, hybrid work dynamics, cultural tension, generational divergence, and the relentless pressure to deliver more with less. The pace of change is unyielding, the expectations on leaders are expanding, and the margin for emotional disconnection is shrinking.
And yet, despite the strain, the complexity and the internal battles most leaders never voice, there remains one defining skill that sets meaningful leadership apart: The art of showing up.Not perfectly. Not powerfully. Not fearlessly. But consistently, intentionally and truthfully.
This idea sits at the heart of our leadership development philosophy. Leaders are not made through theory, titles, or technical competence alone. They are made in the moment-to-moment decisions to show up.
Leadership in the New South African Workplace: A Different Kind of Hard
The modern South African workplace is a tapestry of contradictions: extraordinary resilience woven through deep fatigue, optimism layered over instability, innovation underpinned by chronic resource strain. Leaders today manage not only delivery, but psychological safety. They carry the responsibility of keeping teams aligned, motivated and connected, even when they themselves feel stretched thin.
Traditional leadership narratives have not caught up to this reality. The glossy versions of leadership – calm, unwavering, certain – feel increasingly out of sync with lived experience.
Showing Up While Shaking: Courage Without the Costume
The idea that real leaders feel no fear or uncertainty is outdated and unsustainable. In truth, leadership continues through personal crises, stress, illness, grief and burnout. And still, leaders show up.
But here’s the shift: they show up without needing to hide the cracks.
This form of leadership is not about emotional spill-out. It is about emotional honesty, a willingness to bring your full self into the room without apology and without performance. It’s a rebellion, a refusal to pretend that leadership requires perfection. In today’s workplace, this authenticity is not indulgent; it is essential.
Employees follow leaders who are faithful, not flawless. Leaders who move forward while navigating their own shadows. Leaders who show up with humanity, not armour. This is adaptive leadership at its core, the ability to respond from presence, not pretence.
The cost of leaders who fail to show up with presence and humanity is not theoretical; it manifests in attrition, disengagement, and lost organisational trust. Research from DDI and LinkedIn highlights the severity of this issue, stating that 57% of employees report leaving their jobs because of their manager, emphasising that poor leadership remains one of the strongest predictors of turnover.
Intention as a Leadership Practice
Intention is the anchor of meaningful leadership. In a context of uncertainty, where plans change overnight and leaders cannot rely on predictability, intention becomes the new form of control.
Leaders who show up intentionally:
hold space for others instead of rushing to solutions
acknowledge their internal anxieties instead of suppressing them
listen with clarity instead of reacting from fear
choose grounded responses instead of emotional reactivity
offer steadiness through their presence, not their certainty
This is especially relevant in South Africa, where teams often work under constant pressure and require environments that buffer anxiety rather than amplify it. Intention signals safety. Safety builds trust. And trust accelerates performance. In a complex workplace landscape, intention becomes a strategic advantage.
The Essence of Presence: You Cannot Lead What You Cannot Embody
Adaptive leadership requires more than new behaviours, it requires a deep alignment between what leaders believe, how they show up and who they are becoming.
Leaders who have not done this inner work often become inconsistent, not because they are unreliable, but because they are unanchored.
True presence is felt, not performed. It does not fluctuate under pressure or change according to who is watching. It becomes a quiet, steady force in the room, one that others instinctively trust.
This is the ripple effect of authentic presence: impact without imposition.
Adaptive Leadership: The South African Imperative
Adaptive leadership is widely discussed globally, but its relevance in South Africa is uniquely critical. We are leading through:
economic uncertainty
energy instability
high levels of stress, anxiety and burnout
a widening leadership skills gap
generational workplace conflict
cultural diversity requiring intentional inclusion
ongoing change and organisational restructuring
In this context, technical expertise alone cannot sustain leadership effectiveness. What matters is the leader’s ability to:
stay present in ambiguity
regulate themselves under pressure
make values-driven decisions
hold space for others
communicate truthfully without collapsing trust
navigate emotional complexity with clarity
embody steadiness even when internally unsettled
This is not leadership theory. It is leadership lived.
And it begins with the simplest, hardest discipline: showing up consistently, courageously, intentionally.
Why This Matters for Organisations Right Now
In a workplace defined by complexity, the leaders who thrive are not the ones who know the most. They are the ones who are most grounded in who they are, what they stand for and how they choose to show up. Leadership today is not the mastery of control. It is the mastery of presence.
And that, in today’s South African workplace, is what differentiates leaders who manage teams from leaders who transform them.
END.
About Leverage Leadership:
Leverage Leadership is a South African leadership development and coaching organisation that focuses on cultivating emotionally intelligent, values-driven leaders. The company’s approach integrates Humanistic and Systems Theory principles to support both individual and organisational growth. This dual focus helps clients strengthen self-awareness, communication, and adaptability while understanding the broader dynamics that influence workplace culture.
Leverage Leadership works closely with organisations to design tailored development experiences that align leadership behaviour with purpose and integrity. By emphasising authenticity, relational depth, and sustainable learning, Leverage Leadership enables leaders to navigate complexity effectively and contribute meaningfully to the environments they lead.
For further information, please contact:
Monica Braganca van der Spuy
M: 071 685 6476
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