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Deciding with Emotional Clarity — When Listening Also Means Feeling

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Subdimension of RCPCV™ | Expanded interpretation of Pillar 2

Not every decision is logical.
Not every act of listening is technical.

When I shared Pillar 2 – RCPCV™: Effective Decision-Making, I received a comment that made me pause and reflect:

“What is often overlooked is the emotional weight carried by decisions.
Leaders are not only analyzing data or exploring alternatives - they’re also facing uncertainty, external pressures and the expectations of those who depend on their choices.”

This expanded reading reveals something essential:
Deciding well is not just about thinking — it’s also about feeling.

That’s why I’m sharing today a transversal subdimension of the RCPCV™ model:
Emotional Presence in Decision-Making

In each of the five RCPCV™ phases, there is an emotional layer that can influence, support — or block — clarity:

Phase

Rational Clarity

Emotional Clarity

1. Gather

Listening to data, signals, voices

Perceiving emotions, tensions, unspoken dynamics

2. Clarify

Prioritizing what’s essential

Dealing with ambiguity, resistance, insecurity

3. Think

Exploring options, applying critical thinking

Regulating emotions, recognizing bias, embracing doubt

4. Communicate & Commite

Sharing with intention, engaging others

Speaking with courage, generating safety, active listening

5. Verify

Validating impact, adjusting direction

Receiving reactions, acknowledging emotional outcomes

 

Emotional clarity does not replace critical thinking.
But it humanizes the decision.
It strengthens trust.
It makes the process more real, relational, and regenerative.

Because decisions are not neutral.
They carry pressure, legacy, and emotion.

And for that reason, they deserve full presence — cognitive, ethical… and emotional.What about in your reality?

When do you feel the emotional weight of decision-making most strongly?
What helps you decide with more clarity — and with more presence?

Share in the comments.
This series stays alive because it is also collective.

 

Missed the previous posts in the series?

Post 1 — Introduction to the 11 Keys of Regenerative Leadership

Post 2 — Pillar 1 — Regenerative Trust

Post 3 — Pillar 2: Effective Decision-Making (RCPCV™)

Posted on: September 03, 2025 09:25 AM | Permalink | Comments (6)

Pillar 2 — Effective Decision-Making (RCPCV™)

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This is the second post in the series “The 11 Keys to Regenerative Leadership”

In regenerative leadership, decision-making is not a single act.
It’s a conscious, iterative, and relational process.

Effective decision-making goes beyond speed or assertiveness.
It generates clarity, collective commitment, and continuous learning.

That’s why I developed the RCPCV™ model - a regenerative decision cycle built on five essential steps:

1. Gather the Facts — collect available data, signals, and context (acknowledging uncertainty)
2. Consult the People — engage those affected to listen and surface perspectives
3. Reflect and Analyze — make sense of complexity, test assumptions, and weigh options
4. Communicate the Decision — state the decision with clarity and purpose, explain its rationale, and ensure shared understanding across those impacted or involved in its execution
5. Verify and Follow Up — check outcomes, learn, and adapt

Practical example:
In complex or ambiguous environments, I often see leaders waiting for “complete certainty.”
The RCPCV™ model helps them move forward with sufficient clarity, avoiding paralysis.
Each decision becomes a learning opportunity, not just a destination.

To decide regeneratively is to choose with purpose - and to recognize that each decision also shapes our evolution.

What does your decision-making process look like in times of uncertainty?


Which of the 5 steps do you feel you most need — or most rely on?

 

Missed the first post in this series?
Read it here: 🔗 Post 1 — Introduction to the 11 Keys to Regenerative Leadership

Posted on: September 01, 2025 01:00 PM | Permalink | Comments (6)

Pillar 1 — Regenerative Trust

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This is the first post in the series “The 11 Keys to Regenerative Leadership

In a world where everything changes rapidly, trust is no longer just “important.”
It has become vital.

But trust, from a regenerative perspective, is neither static nor guaranteed.
It is a living asset — something that must be cultivated, nurtured, and continuously renewed.

Regenerative leaders understand that trust does not stem from authority, but from consistency, listening, and presence.
And that organizational trust is not an abstract value — it’s an invisible infrastructure that sustains collaboration, accelerates decision-making, and makes teams more resilient.

Practical example:
In my work with hybrid teams and critical projects, I use the concept of Invisible Infrastructures of Trust — intentional practices that foster psychological safety, predictability, and alignment.
Things like:

  • Keeping micro-agreements
  • Making decisions transparent
  • Listening with genuine curiosity

When trust is regenerated daily, it transforms what used to require control into something that flows with autonomy.

And in your experience: what practices help you regenerate trust in your context?

 

 

Posted on: August 29, 2025 11:43 AM | Permalink | Comments (5)

The 11 Keys to Regenerative Leadership

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The world no longer needs leaders who are merely efficient.
It needs leaders who regenerate trust, impact, and the future.

After more than 40 years in management, leadership, and organizational transformation, I’ve come to realize that traditional leadership practices are no longer enough.

The future calls for something deeper: Regenerative Leadership.

That’s why I’ve developed an integrated model built around 11 keys that reflect what a regenerative leader practices every day:

  • Builds trust that continually renews
  • Makes decisions as learning cycles
  • Delegates as a form of legacy
  • Multiplies leadership
  • Aligns teams, organizations, and ecosystems around a greater purpose

This is the series I’m launching here on ProjectManagement:
“The 11 Keys to Regenerative Leadership”

In each post, I’ll explore one key, sharing reflections, frameworks, and practical examples.

The goal is not to create yet another theoretical model.
It’s to offer a practical compass for leaders who want to go beyond managing — and start regenerating.

Follow the series, share your thoughts, join the conversation.
The leadership of the future is a living dialogue.

Posted on: August 28, 2025 10:44 AM | Permalink | Comments (7)

Delegation with Purpose™ – From Execution to Regenerative Leadership

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How to transform task delegation into a strategy for leader development, cultural strengthening, and organizational sustainability.

Introduction

Earlier this year, I published the article, Mastering Delegation: The Key to High-Performance Teams and Sustainable Success where I presented an operational guide to delegating with clarity and effectiveness. We explored the practical steps — from defining what to delegate to monitoring results — focusing on increasing productivity and reducing leader overload.

But delegation goes far beyond efficiency. When seen only as a tool to “free up time” or “hand off tasks,” delegation loses its most transformative potential: developing leaders, strengthening cultures, and building resilient organizations. In a scenario where change is rapid, teams are more diverse, and structures are more distributed, delegating with purpose has become a central strategic competency. It is what differentiates leaders who merely manage teams from those who build high-performance ecosystems and organizational sustainability.

This approach echoes the central principle of the Toyota Model of “developing leaders who develop leaders,” where delegation is seen as a pillar for building organizational capacity. According to McKinsey’s The State of Organizations (2023), 20–30% of critical roles are not filled by the most suitable people — a gap that structured delegation can help close by developing internal talent for strategic roles.

In this second part, we will explore the strategic and integrated version of Delegation with Purpose™, which combines:

  • Stage 0 – Intention and Context to link each delegation to organizational objectives and individual development.
  • Regenerative Trust as the foundation for creating sustained autonomy.
  • RCPCV™ as a micro-cycle to structure and monitor the transfer of responsibilities.
  • Effectiveness metrics to measure real impact and promote continuous improvement.

The goal is clear: to transform delegation from a tactical practice into a lever for regenerative leadership — capable of creating leaders at all levels and sustaining long-term success. Recent studies, such as Gallup’s State of the Global Workplace (2024), show that highly engaged teams — driven by effective delegation — are 21% more productive, highlighting its impact on overall performance.

Stage 0 – Intention and Context

Before deciding what to delegate, it is essential to answer a simple yet powerful question:
“Why am I delegating this task?”

Many leaders start delegating reactively — to relieve overload, meet deadlines, or “offload” operational work. While understandable, these motivations limit the true potential of delegation. Delegation with Purpose™ starts with strategic clarity and deliberate intent, ensuring that each transferred responsibility:

  • Directly supports organizational objectives – The task must contribute to strategic priorities, not simply “fill time” or temporarily relieve the leader.
  • Develops the employee’s capability – Delegation should be an investment in the person’s growth, expanding skills and confidence.
  • Strengthens organizational culture – By involving different hierarchical levels in meaningful responsibilities, trust, collaboration, and belonging are reinforced.

Cultural Note: Perceptions of delegation vary according to cultural context. In cultures with higher power distance, delegation may be interpreted as “abandoning” the subordinate; in more horizontal cultures, it may be seen as a vote of confidence. Adjusting communication and support avoids misunderstandings. Deloitte’s Human Capital Trends (2025) indicates that collaborative cultures, strengthened by practices such as delegation, promote higher talent retention, with evidence suggesting significant impacts.

In the AI era, this stage gains relevance: delegating routine tasks to automation tools can free humans for innovation. PwC (2024) suggests that companies using AI for task automation see efficiency gains of up to 30%.

The Delegation Impact Map

A tool to quickly assess the strategic relevance of each task before delegating it:

Question

Application Example

Expected Impact

What is the impact of this task on strategy?

Preparing a report that supports investment decisions.

Contributes to growth goals, with the potential to increase decision-making speed by 20%, according to a McKinsey study on hybrid teams.

What skills will be developed?

Data analysis, executive communication.

Develops critical skills; Gallup reports that engaged teams grow retention by 23%.

How does it contribute to team culture?

Promotes information sharing and collaborative decision-making.

Strengthens resilience; Deloitte notes that collaborative cultures significantly promote retention.

Mapping these answers prevents “automatic” delegation and ensures the process is guided by long-term results.

Delegation as a Regenerative Leadership Tool

Delegating is not just transferring responsibilities — it is transferring trust, autonomy, and growth opportunities. In a regenerative leadership context, delegation becomes a lever to:

  • Create new leaders – Challenge and empower people to make decisions and lead projects.
  • Strengthen organizational resilience – Distribute skills and knowledge so operations do not depend on a few key individuals.
  • Encourage innovation and autonomy – Free up leader time for strategic thinking while the team takes a more active role in execution.

As discussed in Regeneration Journal (2025), regenerative leadership focuses on restoring organizational ecosystems, with evidence showing positive impacts on productivity. In the AI era, delegating to intelligent agents strengthens resilience, with Deloitte (2025) highlighting notable improvements in adaptability to change.

The Role of Regenerative Trust

For delegation to succeed, more than technical competence is needed. It is necessary to create an environment where:

  • Trust is reciprocal – The leader believes in the collaborator’s ability, and the collaborator feels they can act without excessive fear of mistakes.
  • Psychological safety is strong – As Amy Edmondson argues, people need to feel safe to take risks and share ideas.
  • Mistakes are treated as learning opportunities – Not as failures to be punished.

Stephen M.R. Covey, in the concept of Smart Trust, reinforces that intelligent trust is not the absence of control but rather the balance between autonomy and verification — precisely the logic that sustains Delegation with Purpose™. Gallup’s State of the Global Workplace (2024) reveals that low trust costs the global economy US$8.9 trillion, or 9% of GDP, underscoring the need for regenerative practices.

Integrating RCPCV™ into Delegation

RCPCV™ – Effective Decision-Making is an authorial model that structures decision-making with clarity and trust. Applied to delegation, it works as a micro-cycle:

  1. Recolher (Gather) – Obtain all relevant information: context, objectives, constraints, stakeholders.
  2. Consultar (Consult) – Exchange perceptions and align expectations with the collaborator before formalizing delegation.
  3. Pensar (Think) – Define, together, the action plan and success metrics.
  4. Comunicar (Communicate) – Formalize responsibility, deadlines, resources, and checkpoints.
  5. Verificar (Verify) – Monitor execution, provide support when necessary, and adjust based on results.

Practical Example: In a technology company, a product director delegated to a team manager the responsibility for a new feature line. By applying RCPCV™, they ensured vision alignment (Gather), clear priorities (Consult), defined milestones (Think), formal assignment (Communicate), and biweekly reviews (Verify). The result: a 20% increase in development speed, maintained quality, and a collaborator better prepared to lead strategic projects — aligned with McKinsey’s findings on hybrid teams, which see similar productivity gains.

Trust and Psychological Safety: The Foundation of Delegation with Purpose™

Regenerative trust is the radar for measuring and evolving the delegation environment. Metrics such as retention rate (increased by 23% with effective delegation, per Gallup) and engagement (31% in the U.S. in 2024) help track impacts. Include regular assessments to adjust, fostering a culture where delegation multiplies capabilities.

Conclusion – Delegating to Multiply, Not to Replace

Delegating with Purpose™ does not replace the leader — it multiplies their impact, creating regenerative organizations. Linking back to the previous article, this strategic approach elevates tactical execution into long-term sustainability. As the World Economic Forum (2025, New type of leadership key to future of global value chains) shows, regenerative leadership is essential for global value chains, significantly promoting resilience. Apply RCPCV™ to your next task and see the difference — test it for one week for initial results.

References

  • Edmondson, A. (2019). The Fearless Organization. Wiley.
  • Covey, S. M. R. (2012). Smart Trust. Free Press.
  • Hersey, P., & Blanchard, K. H. (1988). Management of Organizational Behavior: Utilizing Human Resources. Prentice Hall.
  • Liker, J. K. (2004). The Toyota Way. McGraw-Hill.
  • McKinsey & Company. (2023). The State of Organizations.
  • Gallup. (2024). State of the Global Workplace.
  • Deloitte. (2025). Human Capital Trends.
  • PwC. (2024). AI in Business Operations: Efficiency Gains.
  • Regeneration Journal. (2025). Regenerative Leadership: What the World Needs Now.
  • World Economic Forum. (2025). New type of leadership key to future of global value chains.

 

 

Posted on: August 23, 2025 09:32 AM | Permalink | Comments (6)
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