For executives tasked with steering their organizations through turbulent times, the weight of responsibility can feel crushingly isolating. Many C-suite leaders find themselves starved for genuine, trusting relationships with people who understand their challenges.
But what if the solution to this endemic loneliness at the top was right in front of them all along?
The key to unlocking tremendous organizational value lies in your willingness to invest in and nurture your peer relationships, according to Bright Arrow Coaching founder and CEO Tegan Trovato and executive coach Cheryl Schofield. “Without relationships, we are really just transacting at work,” Tegan explained during a Bright Arrow Coaching webinar. “And humans do not exist to transact. They exist to be in relationship.”
This deceptively simple insight holds the power to transform the way executive teams operate — and the results you can achieve. By modeling healthy relationship dynamics, you can create a contagious culture of trust, respect, and open communication that ripples throughout the entire organization.
Check out the highlights from their conversation and watch the full webinar on demand.
Relationships Are Contagious — for Better or Worse
The invisible threads that bind an executive team can make or break an entire organization. The interpersonal dynamics among your leadership team have an outsized impact on the people around you. “If we are in healthy relationships, that is contagious,” Tegan said. “And if we are not in healthy relationships, that is equally contagious.”
Cheryl shared an example of how one executive’s inconsistent treatment of their own team rippled up to the C-suite level. People surrounding this executive felt that their relationship dynamic was unpredictable. “That same kind of intermittent, inconsistent kind of behavior was going on amongst the members of the C suite, and sometimes this individual was the catalyst,” Cheryl said.
On the flip side, Tegan recalled working for a company that had such a cohesive executive team that the strength of their bond created clarity and purpose for the rest of the workforce.
Executive Conflict Can Be an Opportunity
Conflict, especially at the executive level, is an inevitable reality. But rather than viewing it as a threat to be avoided, savvy leaders recognize conflict as an opportunity when managed effectively.
“Conflict is a given in life, at work,” Cheryl said. “And it can … really prompt growth.” The key, she explained, is for executives to approach discord with a spirit of forgiveness, both for themselves and their peers. A willingness to own mistakes and seek understanding, rather than assign blame, is essential for resolving conflicts constructively.
Tegan echoed this sentiment, emphasizing the importance of executives being willing to acknowledge conflict rather than letting the problem fester. “Until we can call out that there is conflict or unhealthy dynamics, we can’t really move on — because there’s a part of our brain that’s just needing to make us right,” she said. “Until we can surrender that, we can’t really move into the healthy part.”
If an executive can’t overcome the need to be right, they’ll continue carrying around the unresolved conflict, undermining their ability to move forward. But through self-awareness and humility, leaders can navigate even the most contentious situations in a way that strengthens, rather than fractures, the executive team.
Creating a Virtuous Cycle of Engagement and Performance
For executives seeking to gain an edge in today’s volatile business landscape, the answer may lie not in the latest management theory or technological innovation, but in the quality of your own interpersonal relationships.
This notion flies in the face of the common perception of leadership as a solitary endeavor, where the CEO or C-suite stands apart from the rest of the organization. The very foundation of organizational success lies in the strength of the connections forged between its leaders. “Even when clients come to us and they have something really intellectual they want to work on,” Tegan said, “inevitably, we can trace the root of that work back to something relationship-oriented. Their ability to get that work done is based on the quality of their relationships at work.”
The benefits of nurturing these vital peer relationships can be profound. Cheryl pointed out that teams with cohesive, collaborative leadership often exhibit a sense of what she calls “humming” — where leadership teams navigate even intense workloads and high-pressure situations with palpable energy and camaraderie. This, in turn, inspires loyalty and admiration from the broader workforce, creating a virtuous cycle of engagement and performance.
For leaders seeking to future-proof their organizations, there may be no more powerful competitive advantage than the willingness to invest in one another.
To learn more about the power of healthy executive peer relationships, watch the webinar on demand.