For years, popular leadership models have celebrated the extrovert, the bold speaker, the room-commanding presence, the fast decision-maker. But as we head deeper into 2025, it’s becoming clear: that’s not always what teams need.

In fact, there’s growing demand for a different kind of leader, the kind who doesn’t chase the limelight, but quietly builds trust, listens deeply and creates psychologically safe environments for others to shine.

Recent research reveals that listening is “a likely cause of desired organisational outcomes in numerous areas, including job performance, leadership, quality of relationships, job knowledge, job attitudes, and well-being.”

Yet only 26% of leaders exhibit workplace behaviors that create psychological safety, despite employees who experience high-quality listening reporting greater levels of job satisfaction and psychological safety. (Source: McKinsey and Deloitte research, 2024)

These leaders aren’t reactive. They’re intentional. In a time of constant disruption, that’s a superpower.

"In a gentle way, you can shake the world"

What Makes a “Quiet Leader” So Effective?

1. They Create Calm in Complexity

Rather than adding noise, they bring clarity. They’re often the ones employees turn to when everything else feels chaotic.

2. They Make Space For Others

Their ego doesn’t drive the conversation. They encourage input, empower diverse voices, and elevate their teams.

3. They Follow Through

They may not make grand speeches, but they consistently deliver. And over time, this reliability becomes their influence.

4. They’re Self-Aware

Quiet leaders tend to reflect more, they know their impact, own their blind spots and grow deliberately.

How to Spot and Support – the Quiet Leaders in Your Organisation

Don't Overlook Your Your Powerful Assets

The quiet leaders in your organisation may not be the ones commanding attention in meetings or dominating conversations at company events. They might not have the corner office or the most impressive LinkedIn profile. But make no mistake they are likely the steady force keeping your teams cohesive, your culture authentic and your people engaged during times of change.

Look around your workplace tomorrow with fresh eyes. Who do people naturally turn to when they need guidance? Who asks the questions that shift perspectives? Who creates the calm spaces where innovation actually happens? These are your quiet leaders, whether they hold formal leadership titles or not.

The question isn’t whether you have quiet leaders in your organisation, you do. The real question is: are you giving them the recognition, development and opportunities they deserve?