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The Hidden Cost of Leadership Misalignment (And How CEOs Miss It)

Most CEOs don’t realize it at first.
Your leadership team seems smart. Everyone’s busy. There’s no major conflict.

But something still feels off.

Execution is slower than it should be.
Decisions stall or get revisited.
Your calendar is full of meetings that don’t seem to move the needle.
And when you dig into problems, you hear different stories from different people  none of them wrong, but none of them aligned.

This is leadership misalignment.
It’s rarely loud. It’s almost never intentional.
But left alone, it becomes one of the biggest hidden costs in growing companies.

How CEOs Miss the Warning Signs

Most CEOs assume misalignment looks like conflict.
Arguing. Tension. Power struggles.

But in mid-market companies, misalignment is quieter. It looks like:

  • Too many meetings with unclear outcomes
  • Leaders solving problems in isolation
  • Strategy that sounds different depending on who explains it
  • Departmental goals that don’t reinforce each other
  • Issues that get discussed, then surface again weeks later

The reason it gets missed is because everyone’s still working hard. The business is still moving forward. But the effort isn’t translating into consistent execution  and the CEO can feel it, even if they can’t name it.

The Real Cost: Execution Drag and Cultural Erosion

Misalignment isn’t just a leadership issue. It creates ripple effects across the company.

Here’s what it costs over time:

1. Execution Drag

When the leadership team isn’t on the same page, decisions slow down. Priorities shift without warning. People waste time debating instead of doing. And no one’s quite sure what’s most important.

Even a 10% drop in clarity at the top can create 30% execution drag in the business.

2. Cultural Erosion

Misalignment at the top breeds confusion below. Teams start second-guessing. Middle managers struggle to defend or explain strategic choices. Accountability slips.
Eventually, high performers get frustrated  not because of the work, but because of the noise around the work.

Why Alignment Gets Harder as You Grow

In smaller companies, alignment happens naturally. Everyone’s in the same meetings. Strategy changes can be shared in a hallway conversation.

But once you cross $10M and especially as you build a true leadership team, that organic alignment disappears.

The leadership team needs intentional structure to stay aligned, or each person starts leading their own version of the business.

This is often the moment when CEOs feel like they’re working harder than ever, but the company feels heavier and less responsive than it used to.

If that’s where you are, this article might hit home:


👉 The CEO’s Real Job Once Your Company Passes $10M

How to Spot (and Fix) Misalignment

The good news: this is solvable. But it takes more than a team retreat or a strategy offsite.
Fixing misalignment starts with a few hard questions:

  • Is your leadership team aligned on the real priorities  or just the calendar?
  • Do your team’s goals reinforce each other or conflict in practice?
  • Are you making decisions with shared context  or based on who’s in the room?
  • Can every person on the team explain the strategy the same way?
  • Are you revisiting the same issues repeatedly without resolution?

Once you’ve asked these questions honestly, the next step is structure:

  • Shared planning rhythms that align execution across departments
  • Crisp ownership and decision rights to reduce backchanneling
  • Clarity on metrics, roles, and expectations, without silos
  • Real conversations on tension, tradeoffs, and team behavior

Frameworks like EOS, Scaling Up or Lencioni’s 5 Dysfunctions can help guide these conversations, but the real work is in the commitment to align at the top and stay aligned over time.

Final Thought

If execution feels slower than it should…
If your team is talented but not operating as one…
If you’re constantly the one reconnecting dots or translating priorities…

It’s worth stepping back and asking:
Where are we misaligned and what’s it costing us?

Leadership misalignment isn’t loud. But the results are.

A short conversation often brings clarity.
Reach out to Newlogiq if you’d like to talk through where your leadership structure might be holding you back.

The CEO’s Real Job Once Your Company Passes $10M

Why designing and developing matters more than doing

There’s a moment in every CEO’s journey when the business gets too big to run the way it used to.
Usually, it’s somewhere around the $10M mark.

You’ve built the company through grit, instinct, and getting involved in everything. But now, things are moving faster. The leadership team is growing. Accountability is getting blurry. And your time is getting pulled in too many directions.

This is when the CEO’s job starts to shift and most don’t see it coming.

The problem isn’t you. It’s that your role hasn’t evolved as fast as the business has.

What Got You Here Won’t Get You There

Most CEOs at this stage are still doing too much themselves. They’re solving day-to-day problems, jumping into meetings that don’t require them, and carrying key relationships that no one else has full context on.

It’s not because they’re controlling. It’s because that’s what built the business in the first place.

But when you cross $10M, hustle turns into friction. The leadership team needs space to lead. Decisions take longer when everything passes through one person. And you start to feel stuck, working harder than ever, with less impact than before.

That’s the signal. The job has changed.

The Real Work Starts to Shift

The shift looks like this:

  1. From Doing to Designing
    You stop being the problem-solver and start being the system designer.
    Your value comes from building the structure that allows others to lead. That means defining roles, decision rights, and communication rhythms,  not just stepping in when things go sideways.
  2. From Designing to Developing Leaders
    Once structure is in place, you start building real leadership depth. That means coaching, accountability, and succession planning. You don’t just delegate tasks,  you develop people who can think, decide, and act without you in the room.
  3. From Rescuing to Releasing
    This might be the hardest part. As the CEO, you’re used to having the answers. But now, your job is to let others own the results, even if they get it wrong before they get it right.

What This Looks Like in Practice

We’ve seen this shift play out in dozens of companies, and the patterns are consistent:

  • The CEO is still the bottleneck for decisions that should live in the team
  • Meetings are crowded with updates instead of forward-looking decisions
  • The org chart looks clean on paper, but in practice, people still escalate everything up
  • Strategy gets stuck because the leadership team doesn’t fully own execution
  • Performance issues go unaddressed because accountability isn’t clear

This isn’t bad leadership. It’s a normal growth ceiling. The way through it isn’t to do more,  it’s to lead differently.

Use Frameworks to Support the Shift

This is where frameworks like EOS, Scaling Up, or Lencioni’s team models come in. They give CEOs and leadership teams language, structure, and systems to support scale.

  • EOS helps clarify roles and meeting rhythms early in the journey
  • Scaling Up goes deeper into team accountability, strategy, and cash
  • Lencioni’s Five Dysfunctions can help surface team dynamics that slow progress

These tools don’t replace leadership, but they do help create the foundation for a CEO to step into a higher-leverage role.

If some of these patterns sound familiar,  like slow decisions, shallow accountability, or friction on the leadership team,  here’s a deeper look at why many companies between $10M and $50M stall, and what to do about it:

Why Most $10–50M Companies Stall at the Same Growth Ceiling

What the CEO’s Role Looks Like Now

Past $10M, the CEO’s real job sounds more like this:

  • Design the structure, not manage the work
  • Develop leaders who take full ownership
  • Protect alignment between vision, team, and execution
  • Drive clarity across the leadership table
  • Model calm, focused leadership in the face of growth pressure

This is the shift from founder energy to CEO focus. And it’s the difference between companies that keep growing and those that stall under their own complexity.

Final Thought

If you’re spending your days in back-to-back meetings, solving problems that others should own, and wondering why it all feels heavier than it should,  it might be time to reframe your role.

This is a pattern we see in nearly every company that crosses the $10M mark.

And like most ceilings, it’s more solvable than it feels.

A short conversation often brings clarity.
Reach out to Newlogiq if you’d like to talk through where you are, where you’re stuck, and what the next chapter of your role might look like.

EOS vs Scaling Up vs Business Made Simple: Which One Fits Your Business?

Choosing a business framework can feel like choosing a playbook before you know the rules of the game.

Business Made Simple. EOS. Scaling Up..

They all offer structure, focus, and momentum. And the truth is, all three can work. But they’re not one-size-fits-all. Each is built for a different kind of company and a different stage of growth.

At Newlogiq, we don’t push a favorite. We don’t believe there’s a “best” system. We focus on outcomes. The right system is the one that helps your leadership team move faster, align better, and lead with more clarity.

Let’s take a look at each and help you decide which one might actually fit your business.

Why Use a Framework at All?

As your company grows, things start to shift. Communication gets harder. People step on each other’s toes. Meetings feel less productive. Decisions get stuck. And you start to realize that what used to work isn’t working anymore.

This is usually when a CEO starts looking for structure. Not because the business is broken, but because it’s getting more complex. And informal systems don’t hold up as you scale.

A good framework helps you bring order to that chaos. The trick is picking the one that actually matches where you are right now.

1. Business Made Simple

Best For: Early-stage or smaller companies that need help with messaging, clarity, and basic leadership systems.

Business Made Simple is simple by design. It’s focused on storytelling, clear communication, and leadership development. It helps founders lead better, clarify their message, and build healthy internal communication.

Why it works:

  • Easy to understand and implement
  • Great for newer leaders or teams without formal structure
  • Strong focus on messaging and leadership clarity

Where it may fall short:

  • Doesn’t offer a full operating system
  • Not designed for layered teams or scale-stage businesses
  • Lacks depth in strategic or financial planning

Quick Side-by-Side Comparison

FeatureBusiness Made Simple        EOS     Scaling Up
Best Stage$500K–$5M$2M–$30M$10M–$250M+
Team ComplexitySolopreneurs or small teamsSimple, small teamsMulti-layered orgs
Strategic PlanningLimitedLightStrong
People SystemsPersonal growthRight People, Right SeatsTalent Bench, Accountability Charts
Financial FocusLight touchScorecardsCash tools, margins, profit drivers
Meeting RhythmsSelf-led planningLevel 10 meetingsCustom rhythms
ImplementationDIY and accessibleSimple and structuredModular and deeper

2. EOS (Entrepreneurial Operating System)

Best For: Founder-led companies between $2M and $30M who need focus, accountability, and a common language.

EOS helps leadership teams get aligned and consistent. It’s simple, structured, and brings discipline to the business without overwhelming your team. You get tools like the Vision/Traction Organizer, Level 10 meetings, Rocks, and the People Analyzer.

Why it works:

  • It simplifies decision-making
  • Everyone knows what they’re responsible for
  • Meetings are structured and predictable

Where it falls short:

  • It doesn’t go deep into strategy or scaling
  • Cash flow, pricing, and advanced people systems are barely touched
  • It can start to feel repetitive as your company grows in complexity

3. Scaling Up

Best For: Companies in the $10M to $250M range managing multiple leaders, departments, or locations.

Scaling Up is designed for complexity. It gives you more tools and deeper systems to handle growth. Built around the Four Decisions – People, Strategy, Execution, and Cash – it helps leadership teams work together instead of in silos.

Why it works:

  • It gives CEOs and teams a way to think long-term and act weekly
  • There are tools to align the company across functions
  • It brings financial focus and clarity to leadership

Where it can be a challenge:

  • It takes more effort and buy-in to implement
  • Without strong facilitation, it can overwhelm teams
  • It’s not ideal if your leadership team isn’t ready to stretch

So… Which One Should You Use?

That depends on your business. Your leadership team. Your goals. And your stage.

Business Made Simple is useful when you need clarity and want to lead better.

EOS is great when you need to get aligned and disciplined.

Scaling Up is powerful when you’re scaling fast and need depth.

There’s no trophy for picking the “right” framework.
There is value in picking the one that fits where you are today and helps you get to where you want to go next.

At Newlogiq, we’ve helped companies start with one framework, evolve into another, and blend the parts that actually work for them. We’re not here to sell you on a system. We’re here to help your business scale the right way, with the right structure behind it.

Final Thought

If you’re feeling stuck, scattered, or unsure where to go next, it may not be your people or your effort. It might be that the system under your business just isn’t strong enough anymore.

Frameworks don’t solve everything. But the right one, used the right way, can create the clarity and rhythm your team needs to lead at the next level.

If you’re not sure what fits, that’s completely normal. Most teams just need perspective and a plan that’s built around their real-world challenges.

👉 Reach out to Newlogiq if you’d like to figure out what structure your company actually needs next.

Is EOS Running Out of Steam? What Comes After Year 3

If you’re anything like the hundreds of leadership teams running EOS today, your journey probably started with chaos.

There were too many meetings (or none at all), unclear roles, dropped balls, and a vague sense that your business had potential, but no real structure to unlock it.

Then EOS showed up and it felt like finally someone handed you the manual. The Level 10 Meetings. The Rocks. The V/TO. It all made so much sense. And it worked.

For the first two, maybe three years, EOS helped you get traction. You gained clarity, accountability, and rhythm. People knew their roles. Meetings had structure. The company started to move as one.

But now?

Something’s off.

And you’re not the only one feeling it.

“We Got Traction… Now what?”

We’re hearing this more and more from CEOs and Integrators:

“EOS was great for getting us out of chaos. But now that we’re growing, it’s starting to feel… a little thin.”

If you’ve been running EOS for 3–5 years, and you’re starting to feel like you’re having the same conversations over and over again or your team’s outgrown the tools you’re not crazy.

This is what we call The EOS Plateau.

EOS does a fantastic job of helping small and mid-size businesses clean up their operations, get aligned, and move in the same direction. But when companies cross $10M, start scaling into multiple departments or locations, or are building a serious leadership team, they often find themselves needing more.

More depth. More strategic thinking. More tools to manage complexity.

Why EOS Starts to Lose Steam

To be clear: EOS isn’t broken. It’s just not built for what comes next.

Here’s what we see most often when companies hit the EOS ceiling:

1. It’s Too Simple for Your Complexity

EOS was intentionally designed to be simple. That’s one of its biggest strengths but also a limitation. As your company grows, that simplicity can start to feel restrictive.

2. Strategy is Getting Oversimplified

The Vision/Traction Organizer (V/TO) is great… at the beginning. But it doesn’t go deep enough when you need to craft competitive strategy, think through market positioning, or plan 3–5 years ahead.

3. No Real Cash Strategy

EOS barely touches cash flow or capital strategy. For companies looking to scale, that’s a big gap. Scaling requires a thoughtful financial engine cash, pricing, margins, and profitability levers.

4. The People Tools Don’t Go Deep Enough

“Right people, right seats” is helpful but it doesn’t give you a framework for developing future leaders, creating a true bench, or building talent pipelines. As your org chart grows, so does the need for more advanced people systems.

So… What Comes After EOS?

You don’t need to ditch EOS. You just need to evolve it.

For many mid-market companies especially those in the $10M to $100M range the natural next step is Scaling Up.

Created by Verne Harnish and built on the Rockefeller Habits, Scaling Up is a growth framework designed for companies that are past startup mode and looking to build real scale. It’s not just about traction it’s about building an organization that grows sustainably without burning out the leadership team.

EOS vs. Scaling Up: What’s the Difference?

Let’s break it down side-by-side:

EOSScaling Up
Best For$2M – $50M companies looking for structure$10M – $500M+ companies ready to scale
FocusExecution and alignmentStrategy, cash, people, and execution
ToolsV/TO, L10 Meetings, People AnalyzerOne-Page Strategic Plan, Cash Acceleration, People & Leadership Systems
People SystemsRight People, Right SeatsFunction Accountability Chart, Talent Development, Leadership Pipelines
Financial DepthBasic Scorecards and RocksFull cash strategy, Profit/X, pricing, margins
FlexibilityFixed system and termsModular tools, customizable to your company’s complexity
Coaching EcosystemEOS ImplementersCertified Scaling Up Coaches, Growth Summits, deep toolkits

The Bottom Line: You Didn’t Do Anything Wrong

If you’re starting to feel like EOS has run its course, that’s not a sign of failure.

It’s a sign of growth.

You used EOS to build a solid foundation. You cleaned up your systems. You got aligned. And now, your business is ready for the next level. It’s outgrowing the tools that got it here.

Think of EOS as high school for your company. Scaling Up is college and beyond.

What You Can Expect from Scaling Up

When companies graduate into Scaling Up, here’s what they usually find:

  • Deeper strategy tools to plan 3 – 5 years out, differentiate in the market, and align resources accordingly
  • Serious financial insights to drive profit and cash, not just top-line growth
  • People systems that help you build a real leadership team not just delegate work
  • Execution rhythms that work across multiple business units, locations, or divisions

It’s not about ditching EOS. In fact, many teams continue using Level 10 meetings or the People Analyzer for years. But they layer on Scaling Up to handle what EOS can’t: complexity, scale, and strategic depth.

Wrapping It Up

If you’re starting to feel EOS fatigue… it might not be burnout. It might be growth.

You’ve gotten your company out of chaos. Now it’s time to build something that lasts and grows beyond you.

Scaling Up might be the next chapter your company needs.

Want to Learn More?

This blog is part of a short series we’re doing to help business leaders think through how to scale smarter not harder. If you’re feeling stuck in the “EOS gap,” stay tuned.

There’s more to come.

Turn Economic Challenges Into Opportunities: The Power of Business Coaching

Introduction

Economic downturns and market uncertainties create challenges for businesses of all sizes. Declining consumer confidence, supply chain disruptions, and fluctuating market conditions can force companies to make difficult financial and operational decisions. Leaders often find themselves navigating an unpredictable landscape where traditional strategies may no longer apply. Business coaching has become a critical tool for navigating these turbulent times by providing strategic insights, leadership development, and resilience-building techniques. Through targeted coaching, business leaders gain the ability to reassess their strategies, identify new opportunities for growth, and maintain stability even in the face of adversity.

How Economic Challenges Impact Businesses

During economic instability, businesses face:

  • Declining or Uncertain Revenue: Reduced customer spending affects profitability.
  • Operational Cuts: Budget constraints may lead to layoffs and efficiency reductions.
  • Increased Competition: Companies must find ways to differentiate themselves in a shrinking market.
  • Leadership Stress: Decision-makers face increased pressure to stabilize and grow their organizations.

The Value of Business Coaching in Uncertain Times

Economic challenges often demand a shift in mindset and strategy. Business coaching provides leaders with a structured approach to analyzing risks, exploring new opportunities, and making informed decisions under pressure. During uncertain times, the ability to remain agile and proactive is essential, and coaching helps instill these qualities in executives and teams alike. Moreover, business coaching fosters a culture of resilience, empowering leaders to communicate effectively, maintain team morale, and implement innovative solutions that drive sustainable growth despite external challenges.

  1. Strategic Planning
    • Through the use of proven frameworks, leading coaches help businesses reassess their market position and develop adaptive strategies.  This can help leaders quickly pivot, embrace change and find new revenue streams.
  2. Financial and Operational Efficiency
    • By focusing on financial performance, especially cash management during uncertain times, coaches help leaders identify opportunities for cost optimization and resource allocation in order preserve capital and business flexibility.
  3. Leadership Development
    • Overall business success in uncertain times historically has come down to have strong leadership teams in place.  Coaching that deeply explores team dynamics, accountability and skill development fosters confidence, decision-making, and resilience among business leaders.
  4. Employee Engagement and Retention
    • Uncertain times also elevate anxiety levels amongst all employees, especially those in leadership roles concerned about their performance and their teams in a cloudy environment.  Highly engaged teams lean on each other in order to dampen fears and as a result are far more productive and committed during challenging periods.

Steps to Implement Business Coaching

  1. Assess Current Challenges: Identify key pain points affecting business performance.
  2. Find the Right Coach: Select an experienced professional with industry expertise.
  3. Set Clear Goals: Establish measurable objectives for coaching outcomes.
  4. Commit to the Process: Encourage leadership and employees to engage in coaching sessions.
  5. Measure Progress: Regularly evaluate the impact of coaching and adjust strategies as needed.

Why Newlogiq

Choosing the right business coach can make all the difference in how effectively an organization navigates economic uncertainty. Newlogiq brings a wealth of experience in business strategy, leadership development, and AI-driven innovation, helping companies transform challenges into growth opportunities. With a deep understanding of small and mid-sized businesses, Newlogiq tailors coaching programs to meet unique needs, ensuring leaders have the tools and insights necessary for success.

Newlogiq’s coaching follows a simple three step process:

  • Develop a Tailored Program: Our process starts by understanding your unique circumstances and challenges and developing a custom plan for you and your organization.
  • Present the Plan: We sit with you and your management team to outline our detailed plan, month-by-month, quarter-by-quarter, so that you know what to expect, as well as the outcomes we will use to track our progress.
  • You Decide to Move Forward: Following presentation of our plan, you then decide whether to hire us to implement the plan.  With our Short Pay Promise, there is virtually no risk to ensuring your success.

With a commitment to empowering businesses through cutting-edge strategies and hands-on coaching, Newlogiq is the ideal partner for organizations looking to thrive in uncertain economic conditions.

Conclusion

Business coaching is a powerful resource for companies looking to navigate economic uncertainty with confidence. It provides leaders with the necessary tools to assess risks, adapt strategies, and execute informed decisions that foster stability and growth. By refining strategy, enhancing leadership, and fostering innovation, coaching enables businesses to weather financial storms and emerge stronger. Furthermore, coaching encourages a proactive mindset, ensuring that leaders do not merely react to challenges but anticipate and prepare for them, turning obstacles into opportunities for innovation and market expansion.

Are you prepared to tackle economic challenges head-on? Now is the time to equip your leadership team with the insights and skills necessary to drive sustainable success. Investing in business coaching can provide the strategic guidance, resilience-building techniques, and innovative approaches needed to not only survive but thrive in an evolving economic landscape. With the right coaching support, your business can seize new opportunities, strengthen competitive positioning, and secure long-term growth.

Newlogiq Releases Whitepaper on Reducing Stress and Transforming Your Business

Reduce Stress and Transform Your Business

Jeff Oskin Headshot

Jeff Oskin

Owner

Reduce Stress and Transform Your Business

  • Are You Struggling with Communication in Your Leadership Team?
  • Is Sustainable Growth Becoming a Constant Challenge?
  • Is Your Workplace Culture Not Living Up to Expectations or Core Values?

This insightful paper offers proven strategies and practical solutions to help you and your family achieve better balance, personal well-being, and long-term business success. Download now to learn how.


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Achieving Work-Life Balance Through Executive Coaching: A Summer Priority

Achieving Work-Life Balance Through Executive Coaching: A Summer Priority

As the summer sun shines bright, many of us can’t help but feel a sense of rejuvenation and renewal. The warmer months offer a perfect opportunity to reassess our priorities and make meaningful changes to our lives. One area that often takes a backseat during the busy winter and spring months is our work-life balance. As the pace of life slows down slightly, now is the ideal time to focus on achieving a better harmony between our professional and personal lives through executive coaching, such as those offered by Newlogiq.

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The Science of Habit Formation: How Long Does It Take to Develop a New Habit?

There is a widespread belief that it takes 21 days to form a new habit.

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Jeff Oskin

Owner

Executive Coaching Aides in Habit Forming

There is a widespread belief that it takes 21 days to form a new habit. This notion is often attributed to Dr. Maxwell Maltz, a plastic surgeon in the 1950s who noticed his patients seemed to acclimate to their new faces or limbs after approximately 21 days. However, modern psychology and neuroscience have a more nuanced understanding of this process.

Breaking Down Habit Formation

A habit is a routine of behavior that is repeated regularly and tends to occur subconsciously. Habits are integral parts of our daily lives, influencing everything from our morning routines to our professional tasks. They can be good (like exercising regularly) or bad (like excessive screen time). Regardless of whether we aim to develop new habits or change old ones, understanding the timeline of habit formation can be beneficial, especially when working on habits as part of an executive coaching process.

The Myth of 21 Days

The “21-day rule” is somewhat of a misconception. Dr. Maltz’s observation was more anecdotal than empirical, and he himself stated that “it requires a minimum of about 21 days for an old mental image to dissolve.” This became misinterpreted over time, leading to the widespread belief in the 21-day rule.

The Real Timeframe for Habit Formation

In a 2009 study published in the European Journal of Social Psychology, researchers Phillippa Lally and colleagues from University College London set out to determine how long it really takes to form a habit. Over 96 participants chose an eating, drinking, or activity behavior to carry out daily in the same context for 12 weeks, while they reported on whether or not they did the behavior and how automatic it felt.

The study concluded that, on average, it takes 66 days for a habit to become automatic or habitual, but the range can be anywhere from 18 to 254 days. It’s a stark contrast to the catchy 21-day rule, and it underscores the importance of perseverance when trying to form a new habit.

Factors Influencing Habit Formation

The duration of habit formation can vary considerably depending on several factors:

  1. The complexity of the habit: Simpler habits like drinking a glass of water after waking up are easier to form than complex ones like a 1-hour workout each morning.
  2. Individual differences: People’s personalities, behaviors, and attitudes can influence how quickly they form habits. Some people are naturally more inclined towards routine and consistency, while others might struggle.
  3. Consistency: The more consistently you perform the behavior, the quicker it will become a habit. Habits form by creating a new neural pathway in your brain, and each time you repeat the behavior, you’re reinforcing this pathway.
  4. Motivation and commitment: If you are highly motivated and committed to the habit, you are more likely to stick with it, leading to faster habit formation.

The Importance of Patience and Perseverance

Regardless of how long it takes, the key takeaway is that habit formation is a process, not an event. It’s vital not to be discouraged if a new habit doesn’t stick after 21 days or even after 66 days and this is where an executive coach can really assist your efforts. By partnering with a good executive coach, they will help you focus on the progress made and help you understand that setbacks are a normal part of the process. The path to successful habit formation is rarely a straight line, but with patience, perseverance, and a good coach, the desired change is achievable.

Conclusion

Developing a new habit through executive coaching varies widely based on the complexity of the habit, individual differences, consistency in executing the habit, and one’s motivation and commitment, taking a considerable amount of time and effort. Instead of focusing on a set number of days, it’s critical to concentrate on the process of habit formation. Executive coaching should acknowledge small victories, learn from setbacks, stay patient, persistent, and track the progress, keeping an assessment chart handy to gauge the development of the habit. Whether it’s developing new leadership skills, refining business processes or enhancing communication skills, executives who commit to habit formation are more likely to achieve the outcomes they seek. Contact Newlogiq today to learn how our coaching process supports long-term habit formation.

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A Whitepaper: Executive Coaching at Newlogic

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Jeff Oskin

Owner

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Many small-to-mid-sized businesses face a common challenge: the development of a strong leadership team below the chief executive. Often, individuals are promoted to leadership positions because of their exceptional skills in a particular area, but they lack the necessary formal leadership training to excel in their new role.

As a result, businesses struggle to reach their full potential, and chief executives may stress about a transition plan for the organization. At Newlogiq, we understand these challenges and have developed an executive coaching process designed to help businesses address this issue.

With years of coaching experience, we know that strong leadership is key to a company’s success. Our approach is designed to provide comprehensive training and support to leaders at all levels, helping them to grow and develop the skills necessary to drive business growth and success.

In this paper, we will outline the Newlogiq executive coaching process and its benefits for business owners and their staff. Executive coaching is a process that aims to enhance the performance and potential of business leaders, including CEOs, entrepreneurs, and executives. The coaching process is a personalized, one-on-one approach that focuses on addressing specific challenges, improving skills, and achieving goals. The Newlogiq approach is based upon the 20 bad habits as defined in Marshall Goldsmith’s book, “What Got You Here Won’t Get You There.”

To Read the Entire Whitepaper, Please Complete this Form:

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Overcoming the Challenges of Leading a Family Business

Introduction

Lower Frustration by Developing Your Team

Family businesses often have a unique dynamic that can be both a blessing and a curse for leadership. Specifically, family members who have grown up in the business have a wealth of knowledge and experience. They know virtually every aspect of the business and have probably done every job at one time or another. However, while this can be a tremendous asset, it can also become a burden when team members continually look to the owner for guidance. When the owner is constantly answering questions and solving problems, it makes it difficult to grow and develop a leadership team. That’s where executive coaching and leadership development come into play.

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