...

Do you control or co-create and collaborate?

by | Sep 23, 2025 | Growth Mindset, Leadership, Personal Development, Relationship Building, Relationships (Self and Others)

Key Steps from intimidating to inspiring.

 

In my twenties, I was often told that I was intimidating. At first, I was quite surprised. I was introverted, ambitious, determined and deeply committed to excellence – qualities I thought were essential to leadership. Yet, I started to notice something: people would hesitate before offering ideas, they would nod in agreement rather than engage in debate, and sometimes they seemed more relieved than inspired when projects were done. It wasn’t that I was unkind but my drive to get things “right” often left little room for others to bring their own brilliance to the table.

 

Over time, I realised that what others experienced as “intimidation” was often my unconscious need for control. I wanted things done well, which in my mind meant done my version of “right”. But control, I’ve learnt, creates distance. It closes rather than opens, and it limits what’s possible because it relies on the power of one rather than the potential of many.

 

The real transformation in my leadership came when I shifted from control to co-creation. When I stopped seeing leadership as carrying the full weight of responsibility and began to see it as holding space for collective intelligence, something remarkable happened: people leaned in. They stopped seeking approval and started contributing from a place of ownership and excitement. And the outcomes? They grew beyond anything I could have created on my own.

 

If you want to move from intimidating to inspiring, here’s simple yet powerful Key Steps that helped me to…

‘be the difference that makes the difference.’

  1. Reframe your intentions
  • Instead of leading with authority, lead with curiosity.
  • Ask, “What do you think?” or “How would you approach this?” to invite others into the process.

 

  1. Share the problem early
  • Don’t wait until you’ve already decided on the solution. Involve your team when the issue first arises.
  • Getting people involved builds ownership and reduces resistance to change.

 

  1. Practice psychological safety
  • People co-create when they feel safe to speak up. One simple and powerful way is to ask people to challenge your views or share different ideas.
  • Replace critique with coaching. Instead of “That won’t work,” try “What might make that idea stronger?”

 

  1. Shift from command to connection
  • Speak last. Invite input before giving direction to build trust and spark collaboration.
  • Co-design outcomes (not just tasks) so everyone feels ownership and aligned to a bigger purpose.

 

  1. Use inclusive language
  • Say “we” more than “I.”
  • Frame goals as shared missions, “Let’s figure this out together.”

 

  1. Be vulnerable
  • Share your uncertainties or past mistakes. It humanises you and opens the door for others to contribute authentically.
  • Be honest about not having all the answers and needing everyone’s skin in the game.

 

  1. Celebrate micro-contributions
  • Acknowledge even small ideas or efforts. It reinforces that every voice matters.
  • Highlight contributions publicly during meetings or team updates so people see that their input makes a difference and is valued.

 

This isn’t about losing your edge — it’s about channelling your strength into influence rather than control. Co-creation doesn’t mean stepping back; it means stepping forward with others. When you make this shift, leadership becomes lighter, richer and infinitely more rewarding.

 

And the best part? You don’t have to carry the weight alone anymore. Because when you co-create, you don’t just lead people… you lift them and take Key Steps together to…

 

‘be the difference that makes the difference.’

ARCHIVE

Namaste,

 

NOTE: The information in my blog may be freely shared and re-used in any online or offline publication, provided it is accompanied by the following credit line: This was written by Dr Sharon King Gabrielides, and originally appeared in her free bi-weekly  ‘Key Steps Food for Thought Blog’ available on the Key Steps website.

Dr Sharon King Gabrielides, EQ Expert, Founder and CEO

Sharon is a dynamic facilitator, speaker and executive coach with over 25 years’ experience in leadership development and organisational transformation. Her PhD thesis contributed a framework for holistic and sustainable leadership development that was published by Rutgers University in the USA. She is faculty of numerous business schools and highly sought-after by leading corporates because she works hand-in-hand with them to create sustainable results and long-term success. In 2020, Sharon was inducted into the Educators Hall of Fame, which is a lifetime achievement award, recognising excellence and her contribution to the field.

Sharon is one of only three women in South Africa to hold the title of Certified Speaking Professional (CSP) – the Oscar of the speaking industry. She is also a COMENSA Master Practitioner (CMP), a qualified Modern Classroom Certified Trainer (MCCT™) and an accredited Global Virtual Speaker. Sharon is also a registered Education, Training and Development Practitioner (ETDP), holds an Honours degree in Psychology and practices as an NLP master practitioner.

Most important to Sharon is that she has become known for her genuinely caring manner, practical and transformational approach, and for providing valuable tools and that allow people to take Key Steps to really… ‘be the difference that makes the difference.’

Seraphinite AcceleratorOptimized by Seraphinite Accelerator
Turns on site high speed to be attractive for people and search engines.