Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Jimmy Fallon Turns to Tolkien with a Message Worth Fighting For

    May 23, 2026

    este es su origen real

    May 23, 2026

    Entretenimiento de este fin de semana en North Wilmington – Town Square Delaware EN VIVO – Celebrity Land

    May 23, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Select Language
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    NEWS ON CLICK
    Subscribe
    Saturday, May 23
    • Home
      • United States
      • Canada
      • Spain
      • Mexico
    • Top Countries
      • Canada
      • Mexico
      • Spain
      • United States
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Entertainment
    • Fashion
    • Health
    • Science
    • Sports
    • Travel
    NEWS ON CLICK
    Home»Business & Economy»US Business & Economy»Most Leaders Misunderstand Authenticity — and It’s Costing Them Credibility With Key Stakeholders
    US Business & Economy

    Most Leaders Misunderstand Authenticity — and It’s Costing Them Credibility With Key Stakeholders

    News DeskBy News DeskMay 22, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link LinkedIn Tumblr Email VKontakte Telegram
    Most Leaders Misunderstand Authenticity — and It's Costing Them Credibility With Key Stakeholders
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Email Copy Link

    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    It isn’t just about bringing your full self to work. It’s the discipline of standing for something specific, and refusing to be moved by voices that shouldn’t be moving you.

    Authenticity has become the most misused word in leadership.

    Most leaders treat it as bringing your full self to work, being comfortable in your own skin and telling the team how you really feel. None of that is wrong. It’s also not what your most critical stakeholders are measuring.

    They’re measuring coherence. Whether your actions match your words. Whether what you said you wouldn’t tolerate is what you actually refuse when refusal is costly. Whether you can be pushed off your stated ground by the loudest voice in the conversation.

    There’s a bit of human psychology to this: people want to know who you are, but they actually respect you less when they believe anyone can control who you are.

    In a polarized environment, authenticity is a discipline, not a personality. And the leaders failing the test are doing it in a few distinct ways.

    When the process is defensible and the result isn’t

    Epic Games laid off more than 1,000 employees this year. One of them was a developer with terminal brain cancer. His family said the layoff also cost him his life-insurance coverage. CEO Tim Sweeney responded publicly, saying medical conditions weren’t a factor in the decisions, and confirmed the company was working with the family on the insurance issue.

    The process may have been applied neutrally. That isn’t the test.

    The test is whether your systems can pass the obvious humanity check when the human consequence is catastrophic. A “we followed the process” posture reads as cold the moment it collides with a story like this one, and “cold” is not a quality any company has ever stated as a value.

    This is the failure mode most companies don’t see coming: a layoff system that’s legally defensible but reputationally indefensible. It happens because nobody asked the question authenticity actually requires: Does the process we’re about to execute look like the values we say we hold? When the answer is no, neutrality of process becomes its own indictment.

    The leaders who pass the test, even when you disagree with them

    Now look at two CEOs who couldn’t be further apart ideologically: Alex Karp at Palantir and Ryan Gellert at Patagonia.

    Earlier this month, Palantir posted a 22-point manifesto drawn from Karp’s book — calling for national service, asserting a moral duty for tech companies to participate in defense, embracing religion in public life and rejecting what the company called “hollow pluralism.”

    Critics across mainstream outlets called it anti-democratic, ethno-nationalist and worse. Set the substance aside. What’s notable is that Palantir put its positions in writing, under its own name, knowing exactly how the reaction would go. Stakeholders who oppose the company’s stance now know where they stand. Stakeholders who support it know where they stand. There’s no ambiguity for anyone to exploit. Whether the bet pays off commercially is genuinely unresolved.

    Patagonia is the mirror image. Yvon Chouinard transferred ownership to a trust that channels profits to climate causes, and the company has spent decades aligning its operations and political activity around environmental positions that have cost it customers from the opposite direction. Opposite values. Same effect.

    The discipline is value-neutral. You can be Chick-fil-A or Ben & Jerry’s, Hobby Lobby or Patagonia, Palantir or any company defining itself against Palantir, and you pass the test the same way: be transparent about what you stand for, stay consistent across your actions and words and defend that ground when it’s challenged by people whose opinions shouldn’t carry weight in your decisions.

    The trait that separates the leaders who hold the line

    The leaders who hold this ground share one trait that’s harder than the others: they’re defensive, even territorial, about their stated values. Transparency is easy. Consistency is harder but achievable. Territorial defense is where authenticity gets expensive: actually firing the executive whose behavior contradicts the stated values, walking away from the customer whose demands violate them, punching back when bad-faith claims call your commitment into question. It’s also the only place it becomes credible.

    Audit your stakeholder map against your stakeholder reality

    Most leaders are quietly being moved by voices that have no business shaping their decisions.

    In any high-stakes situation, the people whose trust actually determines whether you succeed are a small list — usually 12 to 15 names. Specific regulators. Specific board members. Specific investors. Specific customers. Specific employees you can’t afford to lose. Everyone else is influence, noise or both.

    Run the test this week. Take your last five consequential decisions — what you said publicly, where you allocated, who you let in the room, what you walked away from — and write down whose reaction you were managing for each one. Then put your real 12-to-15 list next to it.

    Most leaders find a gap. Anonymous critics on a platform they don’t use. A pundit who’s never run anything. The internal stakeholder who confuses being loud with being correct. The honest answer is that some are quietly pulling them off the ground they said they’d defend. That’s where authenticity dies. Not in any single decision, but in the accumulation of small concessions to people who shouldn’t have been moving you.

    Thick skin isn’t toughness for its own sake. It’s the discipline of knowing which voices count and which ones don’t, and treating each accordingly.

    The leaders who keep their footing

    The leaders who keep their footing won’t be the ones who get every moment right. They’ll be the ones whose words and actions have been moving in the same direction long enough that people stop trying to redirect them.

    That’s what authenticity actually buys you. Not affection. Not universal approval. But a footing that holds when the wind shifts. That’s when you actually get to lead.

    It isn’t just about bringing your full self to work. It’s the discipline of standing for something specific, and refusing to be moved by voices that shouldn’t be moving you.

    Authenticity has become the most misused word in leadership.

    Most leaders treat it as bringing your full self to work, being comfortable in your own skin and telling the team how you really feel. None of that is wrong. It’s also not what your most critical stakeholders are measuring.

    Authentic Leadership Authenticity leadership Leadership Qualities Leadership Skills
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram Copy Link
    News Desk
    • Website

    News Desk is the dedicated editorial force behind News On Click. Comprised of experienced journalists, writers, and editors, our team is united by a shared passion for delivering high-quality, credible news to a global audience.

    Related Posts

    US Business & Economy

    AI coaches tell leaders what they want to hear

    May 23, 2026
    US Business & Economy

    The secret to getting assigned high-value projects

    May 23, 2026
    US Business & Economy

    4 AI Prompts to Build a One-Person Business in 2026 (No Team, No Funding, No Guessing)

    May 23, 2026
    US Business & Economy

    The ‘Steroid Olympics’ are happening this weekend, and even former Olympians are taking part

    May 22, 2026
    US Business & Economy

    How the costume designer of ‘I Love Boosters’ brought color back to Hollywood

    May 22, 2026
    US Business & Economy

    Black Rifle Coffee Co-Founder’s New Memorial Day Music Video

    May 22, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Don't Miss

    Jimmy Fallon Turns to Tolkien with a Message Worth Fighting For

    News DeskMay 23, 20260

    Jimmy Fallon posted the Samwise Gamgee quote from “The Lord of the Rings: The Two…

    este es su origen real

    May 23, 2026

    Entretenimiento de este fin de semana en North Wilmington – Town Square Delaware EN VIVO – Celebrity Land

    May 23, 2026

    este es el teléfono móvil que los amantes de la montaña y las GoPro estaban esperando

    May 23, 2026
    Tech news by Newsonclick.com
    Top Posts

    Senate GOP is kickstarting budget reconciliation to fund ICE. Here’s how that works. : NPR

    April 23, 2026

    Ralph Fiennes and Viggo Mortensen team up for István Szabó’s Embers

    April 23, 2026

    Catalan language skills ‘essential’ for Barcelona residency permit

    April 23, 2026

    ‘My main goal isn’t be to motivate Real Madrid players’

    April 23, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    Editors Picks

    Jimmy Fallon Turns to Tolkien with a Message Worth Fighting For

    May 23, 2026

    este es su origen real

    May 23, 2026

    Entretenimiento de este fin de semana en North Wilmington – Town Square Delaware EN VIVO – Celebrity Land

    May 23, 2026

    este es el teléfono móvil que los amantes de la montaña y las GoPro estaban esperando

    May 23, 2026
    About Us

    NewsOnClick.com is your reliable source for timely and accurate news. We are committed to delivering unbiased reporting across politics, sports, entertainment, technology, and more. Our mission is to keep you informed with credible, fact-checked content you can trust.

    We're social. Connect with us:

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube
    Latest Posts

    Jimmy Fallon Turns to Tolkien with a Message Worth Fighting For

    May 23, 2026

    este es su origen real

    May 23, 2026

    Entretenimiento de este fin de semana en North Wilmington – Town Square Delaware EN VIVO – Celebrity Land

    May 23, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Editorial Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    © 2026 Newsonclick.com || Designed & Powered by ❤️ Trustmomentum.com.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.