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Leadership is not just confidence, charisma, capability or ambition. People may initially follow a leader because they look powerful, sound impressive or have the right credentials, but long-term followship comes from trust, character and values. In post-pandemic workplaces, especially in Japan, the United States and across Asia-Pacific, employees are watching leaders more closely than ever. They want to know: who are you when the title, office, awards and "power wall" are stripped away?
Why do people really follow leaders?
People follow leaders because they trust their values, not simply because they admire their confidence, position or achievements. Confidence, drive and competence matter, but they are entry tickets rather than the full leadership contract.
In Japan, Australia, the United States and Europe, professionals have become more alert to gaps between what executives say and what they actually do. A CEO may speak fluently about purpose, psychological safety, diversity or employee engagement, but the team checks the daily evidence. Do they protect people when pressure rises? Do they take accountability? Do they use employees as stepping stones for their own glorious career?
Do now: Leaders should audit whether their daily behaviour proves their stated values. Trust is built in small, repeated moments.
Are confidence and ambition enough for leadership?
No, confidence and ambition may get someone into a leadership role, but they do not guarantee followship. They can even become dangerous when they are disconnected from humility, service and ethical decision-making.
Many ambitious managers in multinationals, SMEs and startups are excellent at climbing the greasy pole. They know how to impress senior executives, speak the acronyms, tell the stories and project authority. Yet followers quickly detect whether the leader is building the organisation or merely building their own résumé. In industries from finance and consulting to technology, manufacturing and professional services, capability without character produces compliance, not commitment.
Do now: Executives should ask: "Would my team follow me if I had no title?" The answer reveals the real strength of their leadership.
Why do impressive credentials fail to create lasting trust?
Credentials, awards, degrees and powerful networks can create credibility, but they cannot replace values. A wall of certificates or photos with famous people may impress at first, but it does not answer the deeper question: can I trust you?
In corporate life, the "power wall" still exists in many forms: LinkedIn titles, elite university degrees, luxury watches, high-status offices and carefully curated executive branding. These signals may matter in conservative markets such as Japan, where hierarchy and status have cultural weight. But followers eventually look past the packaging. They judge whether the leader is fair, consistent, courageous and honest when the pressure is on.
Do now: Use credentials to establish competence, not superiority. Let values, not status symbols, carry your leadership authority.
Does physical presence make someone a better leader?
Physical presence may influence first impressions, but it does not make someone a better leader. Height, appearance, voice and style can command attention, but they cannot compensate for weak judgement or self-centred values.
Research and everyday business experience both suggest that tall, polished, articulate leaders often enjoy an early advantage. They look the part. They sound the part. They may even get promoted because they fit an executive image. Yet the daily grind exposes the truth. A leader who talks well but serves only themselves soon loses moral authority. The team sees the gap between altitude and aptitude.
Do now: Leaders should develop presence, but never mistake presence for substance. Real authority comes from consistency, competence and trust.
How do followers detect a leader's real values?
Followers detect values by watching behaviour, especially under stress, conflict and pressure. They are not listening only to speeches; they are scanning for contradictions between words and actions.
Employees are ninja-level boss watchers. They notice tone, mood, fairness, favouritism, silence and sudden changes in priorities. In Japan's relationship-driven business culture, people may not openly challenge a leader, but they still observe everything. In Western markets, employees may be more direct, but the judgement process is similar. If leaders proclaim teamwork but reward political games, or speak about integrity while sacrificing people for personal advancement, trust collapses quickly.
Do now: Treat every meeting, decision and crisis as a values test. Your team is always collecting evidence.
What values create real followship?
Real followship grows when leaders show integrity, fairness, courage, service and accountability over time. People want to know that the leader's values are not decorative slogans but operational principles.
Leadership values must survive pressure. It is easy to sound noble at town halls, off-sites and strategy sessions. It is harder to defend people, admit mistakes, share credit, make ethical calls and resist the temptation to use others as pawns. Leaders at firms like Toyota, Rakuten, Microsoft and Salesforce are often judged not only by commercial outcomes but also by how they build culture, trust and long-term capability.
Do now: Define your non-negotiable values, communicate them clearly and defend them when doing so costs you something.
Final summary
People may admire leaders for what they have, what they know or what they have achieved. They may be impressed by the big title, the expensive watch, the elite degree, the height, the storytelling or the confident executive presence. But sustainable leadership does not rest on image.
Followers eventually ask one central question: "Can I really trust you?" If the answer is yes, they will follow through uncertainty, pressure and change. If the answer is no, the cars, credentials, power walls and polished speeches all collapse.
The practical leadership challenge is simple but uncomfortable: strip away the title and ask what remains. If what remains is character, service and values, people will follow.
FAQs
Why do employees lose trust in leaders?
Employees lose trust when a leader's words and actions do not match. If leaders talk about values but act selfishly, politically or unfairly, followers quickly withdraw commitment.
Is competence enough to be a strong leader?
Competence is essential, but it is not enough. Teams respect skill, experience and intelligence, but they follow leaders they believe are trustworthy and values-driven.
What is the difference between authority and followship?
Authority comes from position; followship comes from trust. A title may force compliance, but values, consistency and character create voluntary commitment.
How can leaders prove their values?
Leaders prove values through repeated behaviour under pressure. Fair decisions, accountability, humility and courage matter more than speeches or slogans.
Quick actions for leaders
Author bio
Dr. Greg Story, Ph.D. in Japanese Decision-Making, is President of Dale Carnegie Tokyo Training and Adjunct Professor at Griffith University. He is a two-time winner of the Dale Carnegie "One Carnegie Award" and recipient of the Griffith University Business School Outstanding Alumnus Award. As a Dale Carnegie Master Trainer, Greg is certified to deliver globally across leadership, communication, sales and presentation programs, including Leadership Training for Results.
He has written several books, including three best-sellers: Japan Business Mastery, Japan Sales Mastery and Japan Presentations Mastery, along with Japan Leadership Mastery and How to Stop Wasting Money on Training. His works have also been translated into Japanese, including Za Eigyō, Purezen no Tatsujin, Torēningu de Okane o Muda ni Suru no wa Yamemashō and Gendaiban "Hito o Ugokasu" Rīdā.
Greg also publishes daily business insights on LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter, and hosts six weekly podcasts. On YouTube, he produces The Cutting Edge Japan Business Show, Japan Business Mastery and Japan's Top Business Interviews, followed by executives seeking success strategies in Japan.
By Dale Carnegie Japan5
33 ratings
Leadership is not just confidence, charisma, capability or ambition. People may initially follow a leader because they look powerful, sound impressive or have the right credentials, but long-term followship comes from trust, character and values. In post-pandemic workplaces, especially in Japan, the United States and across Asia-Pacific, employees are watching leaders more closely than ever. They want to know: who are you when the title, office, awards and "power wall" are stripped away?
Why do people really follow leaders?
People follow leaders because they trust their values, not simply because they admire their confidence, position or achievements. Confidence, drive and competence matter, but they are entry tickets rather than the full leadership contract.
In Japan, Australia, the United States and Europe, professionals have become more alert to gaps between what executives say and what they actually do. A CEO may speak fluently about purpose, psychological safety, diversity or employee engagement, but the team checks the daily evidence. Do they protect people when pressure rises? Do they take accountability? Do they use employees as stepping stones for their own glorious career?
Do now: Leaders should audit whether their daily behaviour proves their stated values. Trust is built in small, repeated moments.
Are confidence and ambition enough for leadership?
No, confidence and ambition may get someone into a leadership role, but they do not guarantee followship. They can even become dangerous when they are disconnected from humility, service and ethical decision-making.
Many ambitious managers in multinationals, SMEs and startups are excellent at climbing the greasy pole. They know how to impress senior executives, speak the acronyms, tell the stories and project authority. Yet followers quickly detect whether the leader is building the organisation or merely building their own résumé. In industries from finance and consulting to technology, manufacturing and professional services, capability without character produces compliance, not commitment.
Do now: Executives should ask: "Would my team follow me if I had no title?" The answer reveals the real strength of their leadership.
Why do impressive credentials fail to create lasting trust?
Credentials, awards, degrees and powerful networks can create credibility, but they cannot replace values. A wall of certificates or photos with famous people may impress at first, but it does not answer the deeper question: can I trust you?
In corporate life, the "power wall" still exists in many forms: LinkedIn titles, elite university degrees, luxury watches, high-status offices and carefully curated executive branding. These signals may matter in conservative markets such as Japan, where hierarchy and status have cultural weight. But followers eventually look past the packaging. They judge whether the leader is fair, consistent, courageous and honest when the pressure is on.
Do now: Use credentials to establish competence, not superiority. Let values, not status symbols, carry your leadership authority.
Does physical presence make someone a better leader?
Physical presence may influence first impressions, but it does not make someone a better leader. Height, appearance, voice and style can command attention, but they cannot compensate for weak judgement or self-centred values.
Research and everyday business experience both suggest that tall, polished, articulate leaders often enjoy an early advantage. They look the part. They sound the part. They may even get promoted because they fit an executive image. Yet the daily grind exposes the truth. A leader who talks well but serves only themselves soon loses moral authority. The team sees the gap between altitude and aptitude.
Do now: Leaders should develop presence, but never mistake presence for substance. Real authority comes from consistency, competence and trust.
How do followers detect a leader's real values?
Followers detect values by watching behaviour, especially under stress, conflict and pressure. They are not listening only to speeches; they are scanning for contradictions between words and actions.
Employees are ninja-level boss watchers. They notice tone, mood, fairness, favouritism, silence and sudden changes in priorities. In Japan's relationship-driven business culture, people may not openly challenge a leader, but they still observe everything. In Western markets, employees may be more direct, but the judgement process is similar. If leaders proclaim teamwork but reward political games, or speak about integrity while sacrificing people for personal advancement, trust collapses quickly.
Do now: Treat every meeting, decision and crisis as a values test. Your team is always collecting evidence.
What values create real followship?
Real followship grows when leaders show integrity, fairness, courage, service and accountability over time. People want to know that the leader's values are not decorative slogans but operational principles.
Leadership values must survive pressure. It is easy to sound noble at town halls, off-sites and strategy sessions. It is harder to defend people, admit mistakes, share credit, make ethical calls and resist the temptation to use others as pawns. Leaders at firms like Toyota, Rakuten, Microsoft and Salesforce are often judged not only by commercial outcomes but also by how they build culture, trust and long-term capability.
Do now: Define your non-negotiable values, communicate them clearly and defend them when doing so costs you something.
Final summary
People may admire leaders for what they have, what they know or what they have achieved. They may be impressed by the big title, the expensive watch, the elite degree, the height, the storytelling or the confident executive presence. But sustainable leadership does not rest on image.
Followers eventually ask one central question: "Can I really trust you?" If the answer is yes, they will follow through uncertainty, pressure and change. If the answer is no, the cars, credentials, power walls and polished speeches all collapse.
The practical leadership challenge is simple but uncomfortable: strip away the title and ask what remains. If what remains is character, service and values, people will follow.
FAQs
Why do employees lose trust in leaders?
Employees lose trust when a leader's words and actions do not match. If leaders talk about values but act selfishly, politically or unfairly, followers quickly withdraw commitment.
Is competence enough to be a strong leader?
Competence is essential, but it is not enough. Teams respect skill, experience and intelligence, but they follow leaders they believe are trustworthy and values-driven.
What is the difference between authority and followship?
Authority comes from position; followship comes from trust. A title may force compliance, but values, consistency and character create voluntary commitment.
How can leaders prove their values?
Leaders prove values through repeated behaviour under pressure. Fair decisions, accountability, humility and courage matter more than speeches or slogans.
Quick actions for leaders
Author bio
Dr. Greg Story, Ph.D. in Japanese Decision-Making, is President of Dale Carnegie Tokyo Training and Adjunct Professor at Griffith University. He is a two-time winner of the Dale Carnegie "One Carnegie Award" and recipient of the Griffith University Business School Outstanding Alumnus Award. As a Dale Carnegie Master Trainer, Greg is certified to deliver globally across leadership, communication, sales and presentation programs, including Leadership Training for Results.
He has written several books, including three best-sellers: Japan Business Mastery, Japan Sales Mastery and Japan Presentations Mastery, along with Japan Leadership Mastery and How to Stop Wasting Money on Training. His works have also been translated into Japanese, including Za Eigyō, Purezen no Tatsujin, Torēningu de Okane o Muda ni Suru no wa Yamemashō and Gendaiban "Hito o Ugokasu" Rīdā.
Greg also publishes daily business insights on LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter, and hosts six weekly podcasts. On YouTube, he produces The Cutting Edge Japan Business Show, Japan Business Mastery and Japan's Top Business Interviews, followed by executives seeking success strategies in Japan.