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1. How to make meetings work. Meetings should be engines for progress, yet for many organisations they’ve become the place where energy, momentum and good intentions go to die. Most people don’t complain about having too much to do - they complain about having too many meetings that don’t achieve anything. As leaders, we set the tone. If we allow meetings to sprawl, people assume our thinking does too. If we run them tightly, people rise to our level. READ MORE
2. When work pays less. Last week’s Budget triggered a striking headline: workers squeezed, while some large families on benefits gain significantly. The truth is more nuanced. Freezing income-tax thresholds will reduce take-home pay for many employees over the next few years, particularly those on mid-incomes. Meanwhile, abolishing the two-child limit on Universal Credit from April 2026 will boost support for larger families. Some broadcasters illustrated this with dramatic examples - a worker on £35,000 losing around £1,400, while a benefits family with five or more children gains £10,000–£14,000. These figures are scenarios, not standard outcomes, but the direction of travel is clear: work is being quietly penalised while welfare expands. Leadership lesson: incentives matter. What you reward, you ultimately grow.
3. A refit for leadership. I spent 30 years in the Royal Navy, rising from junior rating to Chief Petty Officer to commissioned navigator on the fleet flagship. So when the First Sea Lord said our leadership-selection system is too subjective, he’s right. Promotion still depends too much on who writes your report and too little on who actually serves under you. Online officer selection hasn’t helped, and the pyramid structure rewards rank over vocation. Most naval leaders are good, some exceptional, but the wrong person in command can be devastating. The solution isn’t radical: introduce honest upward feedback, apply psychological assessment earlier, and fix the flawed Officer Joint Appraisal Report [OJAR]. Good leadership keeps ships afloat; bad leadership sinks them long before the enemy appears.
4. The migration mirage. Net migration fell to 204,000 this year - the lowest since 2021 - and politicians on all sides rushed to claim victory. But look past the headlines and the picture is far less triumphant. The biggest driver wasn’t fewer arrivals; it was a record 693,000 people leaving the UK, the highest proportion since 1923. Crucially, most of those leaving were young, working-age Britons, heading abroad for better prospects. Meanwhile asylum claims hit a record 110,051, meaning irregular migration now makes up over half of net migration. Hardly a solved problem. Leadership lesson: Headlines aren’t strategy. Before setting “targets”, we need to fix the fundamentals - housing, skills, productivity and competitiveness - otherwise we’re just measuring symptoms, not solutions.
5. Labour’s leadership lottery. Speculation is swirling about who might replace Keir Starmer, a man who’s somehow both prime minister and permanently in trouble. Labour hasn’t ousted a sitting leader in office before, but there’s a first time for everything, especially when polling numbers look like a cliff face. Andy Burnham would run if he weren’t busy being King of Manchester. Wes Streeting is touted as “Starmer, but with charisma”, though apparently too right-wing for half the party. Angela Rayner is the Left’s choice and would sell herself as the “clean break” candidate (stamp-duty hiccup notwithstanding). Shabana Mahmood has shown actual leadership, which in Labour can be a mixed blessing. And Ed Miliband is apparently “on manoeuvres” again, proving nostalgia truly is irrational. Leadership lesson: Be careful, your successor is always watching. Who would make the strongest replacement for Keir Starmer? Please share your views in our latest poll. VOTE HERE
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