top of page


It's Easy To Criticise...
It's easy to criticise the leader or senior leader - until you're the one in that position. Then suddenly you realise all of the pressures that were on them in the past. But that doesn't excuse the previous leader from having been rotten or managing poorly. Nor does it excuse you. It's a challenge to you: How will you proceed? Will you adopt the same manner and problems or will you change direction and do things differently? You will make mistakes. That comes with the territo

Peter McLean
Oct 231 min read


Lonely At The Top?
The "lonely at the top" feeling great leaders are supposed to have? Entirely self-inflicted. If you're leading people, you actually have no excuse to be lonely, because you should be sharing responsibility, vision, strategy, insight, needs, etc. And one thing you should always be doing is finding that sounding board of one or more trusted advisors with whom you can share and bounce ideas, perspectives, challenges, queries, hopes, dreams, road blocks and frustrations. Unfortun

Peter McLean
Oct 201 min read


The Difficult Conversations
What do you do with difficult conversations? One of the key factors in handling difficult conversations is to first identify two underlying aspects at play by asking yourself these two questions: 1) What is the principle reason for my need to address the person - Constructive or Destructive ? If it's constructive, then I am discussing something that will benefit others and our shared goals or is for the purpose of maintaining a standard or achieving an outcome that is of ben

Peter McLean
Oct 182 min read


I Deal In Real
You've seen the news about how McKinsey is reducing their workforce because AI can do their slide decks. But organisations and leaders don’t need another slide deck. They need clarity. They need traction. They need someone invested in working with them to achieve success.

Peter McLean
Aug 41 min read


Clarity Where It Counts - What the Best Leaders Do When Strategy Starts to Drift
Strategy rarely fails suddenly with fireworks and explosions. It fades. It drifts. It becomes the oh-so eloquent term, “meh.” But great leaders - the kind that recalibrate systems, teams, and themselves - stop and ask a different question:

Peter McLean
Jul 304 min read
bottom of page
