The Strategic Leader

5.02 Why Executive Teams Struggle Without Behavioural Awareness


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If you have ever left an exec meeting feeling frustrated by how people behaved rather than what was decided, this episode will change how you see senior teams.

Being strategic at the top table is not only about functional expertise or enterprise thinking. It also depends on how you show up behaviourally and how your behaviour interacts with others in the room. This episode explores why behavioural roles matter so much in executive and senior leadership teams, especially when dealing with complex problems.

Using frameworks such as Belbin team roles and Core Strengths, the focus is on understanding your default lens, what happens when you are on autopilot, and how different behavioural styles can either unlock better decisions or quietly undermine progress. The conversation highlights why teams often gravitate towards people who think like them, and why that comfort can become a strategic weakness.

Through practical examples from real leadership teams, the episode explores common gaps such as too many ideas with not enough follow through, or strong delivery without enough creative thinking. It also looks at how leaders can dial certain behaviours up when needed, when that is realistic, and when it makes more sense to bring others into the room, including facilitators or specialists.

Key Points Discussed:

  • Why behavioural dynamics shape what really happens at the top table
  • How we naturally gravitate towards people who think like us (and why that’s risky)
  • The concept of behavioural “default lenses” and what happens when we operate on autopilot
  • An introduction to Belbin team roles and why most exec teams are missing at least one critical role
  • How over-indexing on certain behaviours (e.g. too many ideas, not enough follow through) quietly undermines progress
  • Why irritation between leaders is often a clash of roles, not competence
  • The difference between dialling a behaviour up intentionally versus expecting it to become a strength
  • How shared language around behaviour depersonalises conflict
  • When to stretch yourself and when to bring others into the room
  • Why awareness of how you work together is a strategic capability, not a “soft” extra

Key Takeway

Ultimately, this is about building awareness, shared language and intention so behavioural differences become a strength rather than a source of friction.

Thank you for tuning into this episode of The Strategic Leader podcast.

If you enjoyed the show, please give is 5 stars! It will help others find the show.Check out our previous episodes and remember to subscribe so you don’t miss our future shows.

If you have any questions or want to discuss anything, we’d love to hear from you:

www.gemmabullivant.co.uk (for Gemma)

www.wearegoodthinking.co.uk (for Fi)

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The Strategic LeaderBy Gemma Bullivant and Fiona Craig


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