Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
What is this?
Less
More

Owned by Scott

Leadership Collective

6 members • Free

Personal and professional leadership development focused on decision-making, accountability, and execution.

Memberships

MVP Training Solutions

15 members • Free

Veterans Growth Network

17 members • Free

Skoolers

190k members • Free

6 contributions to Leadership Collective
Are Leaders Born or Made?
This question comes up a lot. History gives us examples of people who seemed wired for leadership—natural presence, confidence, decisiveness. Those outliers exist. But they’re the exception, not the rule. Most effective leaders are cultivated. They’re taught. They’re coached. They’re corrected. They’re shaped by failure, accountability, and time under pressure. Leadership isn’t a personality trait—it’s a skill set built through repetition and standards. What usually gets mistaken for “born leadership” is early exposure: - Someone who was held to high expectations early - Someone who had mentors that didn’t lower the bar - Someone who learned consequences before comfort The real divide isn’t born vs. made. It’s intentional vs. accidental. People don’t drift into leadership. They either pursue it deliberately or they inherit authority without developing the skills—and the difference shows quickly. Questions for you: - Who actually shaped your leadership, whether they meant to or not? - What habits or standards were trained into you over time? - Where are you relying on instinct instead of development? Comment: Do you believe leadership can be taught—and if so, what’s one skill you had to learn the hard way?
Leading Up Without Losing Your Spine
How do you tell a senior leader they’re wrong? If you've been in a leadership position, you have probably encountered this. If leadership—especially with peers—is best exercised by example, what does that look like when the person above you holds the authority? Leading up is not about confrontation or compliance. It’s about judgment, timing, and credibility. It’s about deciding when to speak, how to frame the issue, and whether your intent is to protect standards or protect yourself. Most leaders don’t fail because they stay silent once. They fail because silence becomes their default. Questions to consider before you comment: - When was the last time you disagreed with a senior leader—and what did you do? - Did you lead with facts and intent, or did you defer for comfort? - Are you building enough trust and competence to be heard when it actually matters? Comment: Where are you currently choosing compliance over leadership—and what’s the cost if you keep doing it?
0
0
Leadership Is Influence — Or Is It?
Maxwell says, “Leadership is influence—nothing more, nothing less.” Which matters more in practice?
Poll
2 members have voted
1 like • 5d
Where have you seen influence outperform title—or title fail completely? What happened?
Question?
What does leadership mean to you right now—not the textbook definition, but how it’s showing up in your life?
1 like • 5d
@Alvaro Ferreira I 100% agree with Dr. John Maxwell on that one. I read that out of one his books when I was a young Marine. If that is the case, influencing others, then aren't we all leaders?
1 like • 5d
@Marvin Parker I think you are correct, and this is leadership in practice, not theory. Keeping standards when it would be easy to drift is where most leaders fail quietly. Showing up low-energy is discipline. Choosing integrity over convenience is character. Listening first and following through is how trust is built. Psychological safety matters because without it, leaders make decisions with bad information—and drift accelerates. For me this week, leadership is showing up in consistency and hard conversations. That’s where the bar is either held or lowered. Question: Which one of these is hardest for you to maintain when pressure is high—and what usually causes it to slip?
What Decision Are You Avoiding Right Now?
Leadership shows up at the decision point. What decision are you responsible for right now that you are delaying, avoiding, or overthinking? No backstory required. Just the decision.
0 likes • 12d
Avoidance rarely feels dramatic. It usually feels reasonable. If you’re hesitating, don’t explain it away. Just name the decision. Clarity starts there.
1-6 of 6
Scott Legg
2
8points to level up
@scott-legg-9882
Leadership development with a former U.S. Marine senior leader. Decision-making, accountability, execution.

Active 17h ago
Joined Jan 1, 2026
Billings MT