A Career Path for Strategic Leadership

Art Kleiner
11 min readOct 11, 2022

How to build the mental habits that enable you to make a living while making a better world.

By Art Kleiner, Jeffrey Schwartz, MD, and Josie Thomson

People at work these days tend to be ambitious. They want a lot from work: Money, recognition, a challenging (but not too challenging) career path, and a sense that they belong. Having lived during a time of pandemic, they also want to accomplish something significant: to make a contribution and be recognized for it. They want to become strategic leaders.

Strategic leadership is the ability to move an organization or group toward long-term plans and goals. It’s the kind of leadership where you face complex problems — in which the stakes are high, there are no obvious easy solutions, and you can’t get results by simple command. You have to influence and iterate your way to success. In our research on neuroscience and leadership, we have found that some people become more skilled at this over the course of their careers.

If you’re a strategic leader yourself, then you have probably developed the habits of mind through challenges at work. The twists and turns of an organizational career are like a roller-coaster of leadership skill-building; each new climb exposes you to greater, more complex…

--

--

Art Kleiner

Writer, consulting editor w KleinerPowell.com. Books: The AI Dilemma, Wise Advocate, Age of Heretics, Who Really Matters, 5th Discipline Fieldbook.