How to Develop Emerging Leaders Who Actually Lead (Not Just Manage)

The meeting room was silent. Tense.

Rachel, a newly promoted team lead, had just presented her quarterly results. The numbers were fine—not great, not terrible. But something felt off.

“Rachel,” her director asked, “where’s your team in all this?”

Rachel looked confused. “What do you mean? I hit my goals.”

“Yes, YOU hit YOUR goals. But did your team grow? Are they more capable now than 90 days ago?”

Rachel’s face fell. She’d been so focused on hitting metrics that she’d missed the entire point of leadership: developing people.


Why Most Leadership Development Programs Fail

Failure #1: All Theory, No Practice — Leadership is learned by doing, not by discussing case studies.

Failure #2: Generic One-Size-Fits-All — Leadership development must be personalized to be effective.

Failure #3: Development Without Accountability — Without accountability, development is just entertainment.


The 4 Stages of Leadership Development

Stage 1: Individual Contributor with Leadership Potential

Strong performer who shows initiative. Focus: Self-awareness and building influence without authority.

Stage 2: New Leader (0-2 Years)

Recently promoted, learning to lead while doing. Focus: Delegation, giving feedback, making tough decisions.

Stage 3: Developing Leader (2-5 Years)

Competent in basics, developing own style. Focus: Strategic thinking, developing other leaders, cross-functional leadership.

Stage 4: Established Leader (5+ Years)

Confident, has developed others. Focus: Organizational impact, leading through others, executive presence.


The 7 Core Competencies Every Emerging Leader Needs

  1. Self-Awareness — Understanding your strengths, weaknesses, and impact
  2. Communication — Clarity, inspiration, listening, adapting to audience
  3. Decision-Making — Gathering input, analyzing options, owning outcomes
  4. Building Relationships — Trust-building, collaboration, influence
  5. Developing Others — Coaching, delegating, creating growth opportunities
  6. Strategic Thinking — Seeing big picture, connecting dots, anticipating future
  7. Resilience and Adaptability — Bouncing back, navigating change, staying composed

The 70-20-10 Development Model

  • 70% challenging experiences — Stretch assignments, new responsibilities
  • 20% relationships — Coaching, mentoring, feedback
  • 10% formal training — Courses, workshops, reading

Applying the 70%: Effective Stretch Assignments

Leading cross-functional projects, turning around underperforming teams, launching new initiatives, managing crises, presenting to senior leadership.

Applying the 20%: Developmental Relationships

Regular coaching conversations (bi-weekly minimum), real-time feedback, formal mentors, peer learning groups, executive sponsors.

Applying the 10%: Making Training Stick

Apply learning immediately, discuss in coaching sessions, share insights with team, teach concepts to others.


Your 12-Month Development Plan

Months 1-3 (Foundation): 360 feedback, leadership fundamentals, read 2 books, weekly coaching, first small initiative.

Months 4-6 (Application): Cross-functional project, begin mentoring, present to senior leaders, attend conference.

Months 7-9 (Expansion): Strategic planning participation, larger team responsibility, shadow senior leader.

Months 10-12 (Integration): Lead significant initiative, present development journey, create own leadership philosophy.


How to Give Feedback That Develops Leaders

The SBI Model:

  • S — Situation: Describe when and where
  • B — Behavior: State what you observed
  • I — Impact: Explain the effect

Frequency: Real-time after leadership moments. Weekly quick check-ins. Monthly deeper coaching. Quarterly formal reviews.

Rule: Praise publicly, coach privately, never surprise them in reviews.


Conclusion: Leadership Development Is Your Legacy

The leaders you develop are your greatest contribution.

Every emerging leader you invest in multiplies your impact. They lead teams. Those teams serve customers. That impact ripples endlessly.

Rachel gets it now. Her last quarterly review focused less on her metrics and more on her team’s growth.

“Three of my team members are ready for bigger roles,” she reported proudly.

That’s leadership. Start today. Pick one emerging leader. Commit to their development.

Your leadership legacy is being written in the leaders you develop. Make it count.