Twenty years into my career as a Fortune 100 CIO, I found myself staring at my office window at 9 PM on a Friday. Another missed family dinner.
In that moment, I realized something profound: the corner office view wasn’t worth the personal cost.
Let me share what I’ve learned about building a leadership career you won’t regret – one where success doesn’t demand sacrifice of everything else that matters.
The High Price of “Always On” Leadership
Early in my career, I believed being available 24/7 and pushing my teams relentlessly was the path to success. I measured my worth by my calendar’s density and my team’s output.
But here’s what I discovered: when you lead this way, you’re not just burning yourself out – you’re teaching your entire organization that burnout is the price of success.
That’s a legacy none of us should want to leave.
Three Principles That Changed Everything
After that Friday night wake-up call, I completely transformed my approach to leadership. Here are the three most powerful shifts that made all the difference:
Relationships Over Results
- Start every interaction by asking about the person, not the project
- Schedule regular non-work conversations with team members
- Remember that your people are someone’s parent, child, or partner first
- Create space for genuine connection during meetings
Boundaries Create Better Leaders
- Block 6-7 PM daily for family dinner – no exceptions
- Turn off notifications after 8 PM
- Schedule thinking time between meetings
- Take all your vacation days and encourage others to do the same
Model the Balance You Want to See
- Share openly about attending your kid’s soccer game
- Talk about your morning workout routine
- Leave visibly for personal appointments
- Celebrate team members who maintain healthy boundaries
The Real ROI of Mindful Leadership
Here’s what surprised me most: when I started leading this way, our results actually improved. Teams became more innovative, retention increased, and we hit our targets more consistently.
Why? Because people perform better when they’re well-rested, feel valued, and trust their leader cares about them as humans.
Your Legacy Starts Now
The truth is, no one at the end of their career wishes they’d spent more late nights at the office. They wish they’d:
- Built deeper relationships
- Created more meaningful impact
- Lived more authentically
- Trusted their teams more fully
- Made time for what truly matters
The Path Forward
You don’t have to wait 20 years to learn these lessons. Start small:
- Choose one evening a week that’s completely work-free
- Have a real conversation with someone on your team
- Share something personal in your next meeting
- Set one boundary you’ll honor no matter what
The relationships you build, the examples you set, and the lives you impact – that’s the legacy that matters. Not the extra hours you logged or the emails you answered at midnight.
Remember: Success without regrets isn’t just possible – it’s the only kind of success worth having.