The Leadership Team Alignment Test: How Does Yours Score?
Most CEOs can feel it before they can explain it.
The leadership team is smart.
Everyone’s busy.
The business is growing.
And yet… execution feels heavier than it should.
Decisions take longer.
Priorities get reinterpreted.
You find yourself repeating the same conversations.
That’s usually not a talent problem.
It’s an alignment problem.
And alignment is one of those things that’s easy to assume and hard to measure.
So here’s a simple way to test it.
The Leadership Team Alignment Test
Score each statement from 1 to 5:
1 = Not true
3 = Sometimes true
5 = Consistently true
Be honest. This is for you.
1. We are clear on our top 3 priorities and they don’t change weekly.
If you asked each member of your leadership team what matters most right now, would you get the same answer?
2. Everyone knows who owns the final decision in each major area of the business.
No floating decisions. No quiet veto power. No back-channel overrides.
3. Meetings result in clear decisions and assigned ownership, not just discussion.
When you leave a leadership meeting, is it obvious who is doing what by when?
4. We resolve conflict directly and quickly.
Hard conversations happen in the room, not in the hallway afterward.
5. Our leaders think like owners of the business, not just heads of their function.
Sales doesn’t blame operations. Operations doesn’t blame finance. The team wins and loses together.
6. We revisit strategy regularly and connect it to weekly execution.
There’s a clear rhythm between long-term direction and day-to-day decisions.
7. I, as CEO, do not have to re-align the team after every major conversation.
You’re leading, not constantly translating.
How Did You Score?
30–35: Your alignment is strong. Execution should feel relatively smooth, even during stress.
20–29: You’re functional, but friction is costing you speed and energy. This is where most $5M to $50M companies sit.
Below 20: Your team may be working hard, but not truly together. That misalignment will eventually slow growth or strain culture.
Why Alignment Slips As You Grow
In early stages, alignment happens naturally.
Everyone’s close to the founder. Decisions are fast. Context is shared.
But once complexity increases, more leaders, more departments, more moving parts alignment requires structure.
Without:
- Clear decision rights
- Defined roles
- Consistent operating rhythm
- Real ownership
Execution starts to drag.
That’s when CEOs feel like they’re carrying too much context and spending too much time reconnecting dots.
What High-Performing Teams Do Differently
Strong leadership teams don’t leave alignment to chance.
They:
- Clarify roles and decision ownership
- Use structured cadences for strategic and weekly conversations
- Address friction early
- Document and reinforce key decisions
- Align incentives around shared outcomes
Alignment is not a personality trait.
It’s a discipline.
And one of the clearest signs of misalignment is when teams try to solve execution problems by adding more meetings instead of fixing decision clarity and cadence.
We break that down here:
👉 Why “More Meetings” Isn’t the Answer to Execution Problems
https://newlogiq.com/why_more_meetings_isnt_the_answer_to_execution_problems/
Final Thought
If your score was lower than you expected, don’t panic.
Most growing companies hit this stage.
It’s not a sign of failure, it’s a signal that your leadership system needs to evolve.
The real question isn’t whether you have smart people. It’s whether they’re aligned around how the business actually runs.
If this resonates, it’s worth paying attention.
A short conversation often brings surprising clarity.
👉 Visit www.newlogiq.com
coaching, executive coaching, Leadership, Leadership Development, Strategic Planning, strategy