How to Know if You are a Good Leader

Are you in a position of leadership, but starting to wonder if you actually *are* a good leader?

It’s smart that you are reflecting!

I’m just going to give you the qualities of truly great leaders. And you can evaluate for yourself.

Qualities of Great Leaders:

  1. Inner stability (even when things aren’t stable)

A good leader is not thrown off-center by every fluctuation.

  • They can feel stress, uncertainty, even fear… without becoming it
  • They don’t outsource their emotional state to circumstances or other people
  • They can hold tension without rushing to get rid of it

This is the foundation. Without it, everything else becomes reactive leadership.

  1. Self-honesty

They are willing to see themselves clearly.

  • They notice when they’re acting from ego, fear, approval-seeking
  • They don’t build identity around being “right” or “the leader”
  • They can admit mistakes without it threatening their sense of self

This creates clean leadership. People trust what feels real.

  1. Emotional responsibility

They don’t make others responsible for their internal state.

  • No subtle blame, pressure, or emotional leakage
  • No punishing tone when things go wrong
  • No using authority to discharge discomfort

Instead, they regulate themselves and respond deliberately.

  1. Clarity of values and grounded decision-making

They know what matters to them, and decisions come from that.

  • Not constantly second-guessing based on optics or approval
  • Not over-indexing on short-term comfort
  • Willing to make clean, sometimes difficult calls

There’s a quiet confidence here, not bravado.

  1. Presence in interaction

When they’re with someone, they’re actually with them.

  • Listening without mentally preparing responses
  • Seeing the person, not just the role or function
  • Responding to what’s real, not to assumptions

This is where people feel respected and understood.

  1. Ability to hold space for others

They can be with other people’s emotions without trying to fix, control, or avoid.

  • They don’t get overwhelmed by someone else’s stress or reactivity
  • They don’t shut people down to maintain order
  • They allow others to be human while still holding standards

This is rare, and incredibly stabilizing for teams.

  1. Clean boundaries

They can say no, redirect, or push back without aggression or guilt.

  • Not over-accommodating
  • Not avoidant of conflict
  • Not harsh or defensive

Just clear, grounded, and consistent.

  1. Congruence

What they say, feel, and do are aligned.

  • No hidden agendas
  • No performative “leadership persona”
  • No mismatch between tone and truth

People may not always like their decisions, but they trust them.

  1. Focus on what they can control

This is a core understanding that is essential for leaders, and all people.

  • They take responsibility for their attention, words, and actions
  • They don’t spiral on what others should be doing, thinking or feeling
  • They bring their best to the moment in front of them
  • They understand that no human can control all outcomes

Over time, that compounds into results.

  1. A quiet orientation toward service

Not in a self-sacrificing way, but in a grounded, natural sense.

  • “How can I contribute here?” rather than “How do I look?”
  • Supporting others’ growth without needing credit
  • Making decisions that benefit the whole, not just self-image

To Summarize:

A good leader is someone who knows who they are, stays connected to that, and consistently brings their most present, grounded, and honest self to each moment.

From that, everything else flows.

Do you want to be a better leader? Get in touch for a complimentary session.

Learn more at CoachMichele.com