
I used to think leaders got paid for vision. Now I think we get paid for alignment.
Not just alignment with goals or metrics, but alignment of people. Talented, opinionated, passionate people who care deeply about the work and want to see it done right. Getting everyone moving in the same direction takes focus, patience, and an emotional endurance I didn’t fully understand when I started leading a team.
When I began my career, I thought leadership meant having the answers. You set the vision, make the plan, and execute. But the longer I do this, the more I’ve learned that leadership is about creating the space for debate, listening carefully, and helping a team of strong individuals converge on something better than any of us could have created alone.
There are days when I feel more like a translator, or maybe even a conductor, than a CEO. My job isn’t simply to decide. It’s to help everyone see how their ideas connect, where they overlap, and how they can work together toward something coherent and actionable. Some days that happens naturally. Other days it takes time and a lot of conversation to get there.
Collaboration isn’t always tidy. Sometimes people see the path instantly. Sometimes they need to work through their thinking aloud. Sometimes I’m the one who needs to slow down and let the conversation breathe. I’ve learned that the energy it takes to listen well and synthesize competing ideas is real work. Not a distraction from progress, but the very thing that makes progress possible.
I recently heard Daniel Ek, founder of Spotify, describe how the best ideas often emerge from long, winding discussions. You have to sit through the noise to find the gold. That resonated with me, because real collaboration requires that same patience. You have to stay with the conversation long enough to find what’s true and meaningful, even when it feels like you’re circling the point.
At the same time, I’ve learned that great teams can’t afford to fall into decision-by-committee. Debate is healthy, but indecision is costly. The leader’s job is to know when the conversation has served its purpose: When everyone has been heard, the ideas have been tested, and it’s time to choose a direction. Alignment doesn’t mean unanimous agreement; it means shared commitment once the decision is made.
That’s where the real endurance comes in. Guiding a group through open debate toward focused action takes emotional energy. It requires curiosity, empathy, and conviction, often all at once. But when you finally reach that moment of clarity, when the team understands not just what we’re doing but why, it’s one of the most rewarding feelings there is.
Looking back, the toughest discussions we’ve had as a company are the ones that brought us closest together. The process of wrestling with ideas, challenging assumptions, and finding common ground has strengthened our relationships and our work. Alignment isn’t easy, but it’s the foundation for everything that follows.
I’ve come to see that leadership is less about steering the ship and more about steadying the crew. It’s about making sure we’re all rowing in the same direction, even when the water gets choppy. That’s the real work. And while it can be tiring, it’s also what makes the journey meaningful.
So I’m still learning. Learning to listen longer. Learning to debate harder without losing respect. Learning to know when enough has been said and it’s time to move forward together.
Because in the end, that’s what leadership really is. Not control, not consensus, but the steady pursuit of alignment in service of something bigger than any one person’s idea.
