Most leadership advice focuses on what to do. Have the conversation. Address the issue. Give the feedback. Improve performance. Useful advice. The problem is that real leadership rarely happens in neat, textbook situations. It happens when someone on your team suddenly goes quiet and you don’t know why.
When performance drops and you’re trying to work out whether it’s motivation, stress, burnout, or something else entirely. When you’ve just responded too sharply in a meeting and now you’re replaying the conversation while unpacking groceries. When you’re trying to support people while simultaneously wondering whether you’re getting any of it right.
This guide is Part 2 of the Leading Humans series and focuses on what happens after you understand the psychology. Because knowing why people behave the way they do is one thing. Using that understanding in real conversations, difficult situations, and everyday leadership decisions is where the real work begins.
What you’ll find inside
This guide explores some of the most common leadership challenges through the lens of psychology, including:
- Why leaders often misread behaviour (and the psychological shortcut behind it)
- How to approach performance concerns with curiosity instead of assumption
- What burnout actually is, and why workplaces often misunderstand it
- The workplace conditions that contribute to burnout long before people realise what’s happening
- Why repairing after mistakes matters more than avoiding mistakes altogether
- How trust is built after difficult conversations
- Practical ways to build psychological safety and create healthier, more sustainable teams
Along the way, you’ll continue following Jamie’s leadership journey, because leadership is usually easier to understand when it looks a little like real life.
Who it’s for
This guide is for:
- Leaders, managers, and team leads
- People responsible for supporting others at work
- New leaders trying to find their feet
- Experienced leaders wanting a deeper understanding of people
- Organisations looking to improve leadership, communication, wellbeing, and team culture
If you’ve ever walked away from a conversation thinking: “That didn’t land the way I thought it would…” You’re probably in the right place.
Why it matters
People don’t leave their stress, life circumstances, nervous systems, or personal challenges at the door when they come to work. They bring all of it with them. Which means leadership is rarely just about managing tasks. It’s about understanding people.
The better leaders understand stress, burnout, communication, trust, psychological safety, and human behaviour, the easier it becomes to create workplaces where people can actually do their best work.
And, perhaps just as importantly, where leaders spend a little less time mentally replaying conversations that happened three days ago.
👉 Leading Humans — Getting It Right (And Wrong, and Right Again)
A practical psychology guide to burnout, difficult conversations, trust, repair, and the everyday reality of leading people.
If this resonated
Leadership can be incredibly rewarding. It can also be surprisingly lonely. Most people are expected to support everyone else while quietly figuring things out themselves. If parts of this guide felt familiar, you might also explore:
You might explore:
A space to think through leadership challenges, strengthen communication, navigate difficult conversations, and lead with greater confidence.
Practical tools, guided support, and evidence-based strategies to help with stress, self-awareness, communication, and psychological wellbeing.
Bringing this into your workplace
These dynamics shape culture, performance, wellbeing, retention, and trust every day. Our workplace programs help organisations build healthier, more psychologically informed ways of working.