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Karin Peschl ist Managing Partner bei Signium am Standort München. Seit 2010 ist sie bei Signium aktiv. Ihre Schwerpunkte im Executive Search liegen in den Branchen Automotive, Industrie, Technologie und Medizintechnik. Executive Search Beraterin mi...
Authenticity has become a leadership buzzword, but it’s often used to justify unfiltered self-expression. In complex organizations, understanding how you are received is what truly influences outcomes.
Authenticity is often positioned as a cornerstone of effective leadership. Leaders are encouraged to be open, transparent, and true to themselves – essentially, to “bring their whole selves to work.” Yet in practice, leadership rarely operates in such simple terms.
In the book Don’t Be Yourself, organizational psychologist Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic challenges this idea directly, arguing that career success depends less on expressing who you are and more on understanding how others perceive you, and adapting accordingly.
This is a subtle, but critical, distinction. Karin Peschl, Managing Partner at Signium in Munich, elaborates:
“In leadership roles, where decisions affect organizations, teams, and livelihoods, the ability to interpret context and adapt behavior matters more than the impulse to express one’s authentic self. Authenticity still has a place, but on its own, it’s not enough. On its own, unrestrained authenticity can be dangerous.”
Over the past decade, authenticity has become a corporate buzzword associated with trust, relatability, and psychological safety. These are all qualities that modern organizations value, yet at times, the idea is taken too literally.
Organizations are not neutral spaces. Leaders operate within diverse realities and are often required to navigate situations in which full transparency or unfiltered honesty is neither appropriate nor constructive.
Leaders are accountable for outcomes. Targets must be met, decisions made, and teams kept aligned. Doubt and frustration will naturally arise. The question is not whether these are felt, but whether expressing them without a filter serves the team or the task.
Boards, employees, customers, and partners often have conflicting expectations. A message that reassures one group may unsettle another. Leaders must balance these perspectives and adapt their communication accordingly.
What feels natural to one leader may not translate across cultures. Directness, tone, and communication style vary widely. Effective leaders recognize this and adjust their approach to ensure their message lands as intended.
There are clear limits to what can be shared. Employment law, data protection, and regulation often restrict transparency, particularly in sensitive situations. Leaders must work within these boundaries.
In these moments, a rigid commitment to “being yourself” can become limiting. It assumes that intention alone defines success when, in reality, leadership is judged by impact.
Peschl adds, “If you are totally transparent and authentic in every situation, you can create problems. It’s not about saying everything you think and feel. It’s about understanding what is helpful, what supports people, and what serves the organization.”
Authenticity assumes a level of self-understanding that not everyone practices. While many leaders believe they’re acting authentically, they may not fully understand their own motives, emotional patterns, communication styles, or the impact they have on those around them.
Without reflection, authenticity can become misleading. A leader may see themselves as confident, while others experience them as intimidating. Another may believe they’re calm and measured, while their team perceives them as emotionally distant or disengaged.
Self-knowledge becomes a touchstone for self-awareness – a point of reference leaders can return to when assessing not only what they intend to communicate, but how their presence, behavior, and decisions are experienced by others.
As Peschl suggests, authenticity without self-reflection can limit growth: “Leaders who are unaware of ‘who they are’ are unlikely to question themselves. This can become a serious blind spot when different situations call for a different response.”
While authenticity begins with self-expression, self-awareness extends beyond the self. In a leadership context, it’s not only about understanding one’s values, preferences, or personality. It is about recognizing how others interpret words, decisions, and behaviors, and how these interpretations shape outcomes in different contexts.
In many situations, expressing thoughts or feelings without adjustment can do more harm than good. For example:
Leaders are required to balance honesty with timing, responsibility, and care. A difficult message can either escalate tension or build understanding, depending on how it’s communicated.
This shift from self-expression to self-awareness asks leaders to step back from their immediate reactions – and, at times, from their own ego. This doesn’t always mean withholding the truth; rather, it means recognizing that how something is communicated is as important as what is communicated.
As Stephen Covey observed, “Seek first to understand, then to be understood.”
One common concern in this discussion is the fear of losing oneself. If leaders are constantly adapting, where does authenticity fit?
The answer lies in distinguishing between adaptability and inconsistency. Adaptability doesn’t mean abandoning personal values or identity to suit every situation. It’s about applying judgment: understanding when to be direct, when to be measured, when to lead from the front, and when to step back. The ability to recognize and respond to these differences is not a compromise of personal authenticity, but rather a reflection of awareness of others.
“At the same time, adaptability shouldn’t mean saying whatever works in the moment,” adds Peschl. “Leaders who try to please everyone or avoid difficult positions quickly lose credibility. Where adaptation is guided by purpose, it can still be considered authentic. Simply pursuing convenience is where adaptation becomes inauthentic.”
At Netflix, Inc., openness and direct feedback are often seen as hallmarks of the company’s culture. Its widely discussed culture principles, referenced in Harvard Business Review, encourage employees to speak candidly and address performance openly.
Yet this candor is not left to instinct. Feedback is expected to be
Employees are guided to consider how their input will be received and whether it contributes to the team’s broader success.
This reflects a more disciplined form of authenticity, shaped by awareness and purpose. At Netflix, openness doesn’t mean expressing every emotion that arises, but communicating in a way that strengthens outcomes.
Reframing authenticity: From self-expression to self-management
Authenticity remains an important element of leadership. People respond to leaders who are genuine, consistent, and trustworthy.
However, what people perceive as raw authenticity – unfiltered, constant, and absolute – is less effective in complex organizational environments. A more useful approach is to view authenticity as something applied with judgment.
This means:
Peschl shares: “Not every thought needs to be expressed, and not every aspect of the self belongs in the workplace. Authenticity becomes less about self-expression and more about self-management. It means aligning behavior with purpose, context, and the needs of others.”
This requires a shift in focus from “Am I being true to myself?” to a more nuanced consideration: “Am I responding in a way that serves the situation, the organization, and the people involved?”
Leaders who master self-awareness alongside authenticity don’t simply act on impulse. Despite how they may feel in the moment, they pause, consider, and choose how to show up – not for themselves, but for the situation and the people in front of them.