Internal calibration tool
Leadership mixing desk
A working tool for calibrating what good leadership looks like in ivolve operational roles. Eighteen faders across four families, with a non-negotiable baseline. Click the i for definition and risks; click the ? for senior-grade interview probes.
ivolve
Cognitive avg
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Drive avg
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People avg
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Personal avg
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Most emphasised: —
De-emphasised: —
Cognitive faculties
how the leader thinks
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average
Conceptual / strategic thinking
Sees patterns and long-horizon implications
6
What it is
The capacity to see beyond the immediate situation — to identify patterns across cases, anticipate second-order consequences, and think in time horizons longer than the current operating cycle.
Closest lineage: Jaques on time-span of discretion; the strategic-thinking literature in the Lominger / Korn Ferry tradition.
What "high" looks like
Comfortable abstracting from specifics. Connects today's operational signal to next year's sector dynamic. Frames decisions in terms of options rather than answers.
Risk when too low
Operates only in the present tense. Solves the problem in front of them but cannot anticipate the next one. Strategic plans become extrapolations of last quarter.
Q1
Describe a decision you made where the right answer in twelve months would be different from the right answer today. How did you handle the tension?
Q2
What is the strategic question you are currently sitting with where you do not yet know the answer? Walk me through your thinking.
Operational acuity
Notices what is actually happening on the ground
9
What it is
The ability to perceive what is genuinely going on at the front line — not what reports say is going on, not what direct reports tell you, but what is actually visible to a trained eye on a service visit.
Lineage: gemba walking in the Toyota / lean tradition; Goffman on the difference between front-stage and back-stage behaviour in institutions.
What "high" looks like
Picks up the small thing that matters within minutes of arriving at a service. Reads body language. Notices what is missing as well as what is present.
Risk when too low
Manages by report. Surprised by inspections. Trusts dashboards over their own eyes. The CQC inspector sees things the operational director did not.
Q1
Tell me about a time you visited a service and your impression diverged from the reports you had been receiving. What specifically tipped you off?
Q2
If I sent you to a service tomorrow with no advance brief, what would you look for in the first thirty minutes that would tell you whether the service is well or poorly run?
Analytical rigour
Pressure-tests assumptions with data
7
What it is
The discipline to interrogate one's own and others' assumptions with data, to distinguish causation from correlation, and to recognise when a confident-sounding argument rests on weak evidence.
Lineage: Tetlock on superforecasting; the broader Bayesian-thinking tradition. Connects directly to the McNamara fallacy.
What "high" looks like
Asks "how would we know if we were wrong?" Quantifies where quantification helps. Comfortable saying "we do not actually know that."
Risk when too low
Persuaded by the most confident voice in the room. Uses anecdote as evidence. Conflates effort with impact.
Q1
Show me a decision you reversed because the data did not support what you had originally believed. What changed your mind, specifically?
Q2
Give me an example of a metric your organisation tracks that you think is misleading or unhelpful. What would you replace it with?
Pragmatic judgement
Decides well with incomplete information
9
What it is
The ability to make sound calls when the data is incomplete, the situation is ambiguous, and waiting is itself a decision with cost. The capacity to be approximately right rather than precisely paralysed.
Lineage: Kahneman and Klein's joint paper on naturalistic decision-making; Simon's satisficing principle. The recognition that in some domains expert intuition outperforms formal analysis.
What "high" looks like
Makes the call. Calibrates confidence to the evidence available. Knows when "good enough" is the right answer and when it is not.
Risk when too low
Either freezes (asks for more data indefinitely) or over-commits (decides on insufficient evidence with false certainty). Confuses caution with rigour.
Q1
Walk me through a decision you made with about 60% of the information you wanted. What told you it was time to call it, and what would have made you wait?
Q2
What is the bias you most often catch in your own decision-making, and what mitigation do you use when you catch it?
Structured problem decompositionnew
Translates observed problems into logical, measurable, transferable structures
8
What it is
The capacity to take an inchoate problem — observed intuitively or felt operationally — and translate it into a structure that is logically explicable, decomposable into distinct parts, and measurable against each part.
Lineage: the McKinsey "issue tree" / MECE tradition; Kahneman on translating intuitive judgement into reasoned analysis.
What "high" looks like
Articulates problems in a way that survives leaving their head. Others can interrogate the structure, attack any branch, and test the leaves against evidence.
Risk when too low
Knows there is a problem but cannot describe it in a way that delegates well. Solutions stay artisanal. The team only operates effectively when this leader is in the room.
Q1
Describe a complex problem you faced. Walk me through how you decomposed it for the team that had to deliver against it — what was the structure you handed them?
Q2
Take a problem from a domain you do not operate in — say, declining attendance at a school. Walk me through how you would structure your thinking about it.
Systems-improvement instinctnew
Translates local fixes into cross-functional system changes that prevent recurrence
Watch zone above 9: above 9 risks chronic re-design instead of delivery
7
What it is
The instinct to see the system that produced a problem rather than only the problem itself, and to intervene at the level that prevents recurrence — usually requiring cross-functional change rather than a local fix.
Lineage: Goldratt's Theory of Constraints (working on the right constraint, not the available one); Senge on systems thinking; the lean distinction between corrective and preventive action.
What "high" looks like
Asks "what produced this?" before "how do we fix this?" Reaches across functional boundaries to design changes that hold over time.
Risk when too low
Fixes the same kind of problem repeatedly without questioning the system that produced it. Heroic in the moment, exhausting over time.
Risk when too high
Chronic re-design. Operating models redrawn every 18 months. Reorganisation becomes a substitute for delivery. Front-line stops trusting any change will stick.
Q1
Tell me about a problem you fixed twice — once locally, then again at a system level. What told you the first fix was insufficient, and what cross-functional work did the second require?
Q2
Describe a system change you proposed that did not get implemented. Tell me honestly why.
Drive and orientation
what the leader does with the thinking
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average
Action orientation
Closes the loop, does not get stuck
8
What it is
The disposition to convert intent into action and action into completion. The opposite of meeting-as-output cultures where decisions get re-litigated indefinitely.
Lineage: GTD-style execution discipline; Slootman on accountability and tempo (Amp It Up).
What "high" looks like
Converts decisions to commitments to delivery. Tracks closure. Names owners and dates. Comfortable with imperfect action over perfect inaction.
Risk when too low
Activity without throughput. Lots of meetings, slow decisions, things that keep slipping. The org learns that intent does not predict outcome.
Q1
Tell me about a decision you took that others wanted to keep debating. What told you it was time to close the discussion, and how did you handle the resistance?
Q2
Where do you struggle to take action — what kind of decision sits in your in-tray longer than it should?
Standards / quality bar
Insists on a high bar
Watch zone above 9: above 9 risks perfectionism that costs staff retention
7
What it is
The unwillingness to accept work, behaviour, or outcomes below an agreed bar, paired with the discipline to know what bar applies in this context.
Lineage: Bezos on raising-the-bar; Collins on the disciplined culture in Good to Great. The distinction between high standards and perfectionism is the operative one.
What "high" looks like
Names the bar explicitly. Holds it consistently. Praises specifically when it is met. Does not tolerate sloppiness.
Risk when too low
Drift. Mediocrity becomes the norm. The good people leave because they want to be in a place that aims higher.
Risk when too high
Perfectionism that nothing clears. Decision paralysis. Staff cannot succeed because the goalposts keep moving. Disproportionate cost in retention and morale for marginal quality gain.
Q1
Describe a piece of work you accepted that you knew was not as good as it could have been. What made you let it go, and what would have made you reject it?
Q2
Tell me about a time your standards cost you something — a relationship, a person, a budget.
Resilience under pressure
Steady under regulatory and operational stress
9
What it is
The capacity to continue functioning effectively when pressure is sustained, consequences are real, and the path forward is unclear. Distinct from stoicism — it is functional steadiness, not absence of feeling.
Lineage: Bonanno on adaptive resilience (the realisation that resilience is more common than trauma response, not less); military leadership writing on cognitive performance under stress.
What "high" looks like
Stays operational during regulatory action, serious incidents, or sustained organisational change. Decisions remain quality rather than reactive. Does not transmit panic downward.
Risk when too low
Becomes part of the problem under pressure. Decisions degrade. Catastrophises. Drains energy from the room when the room needs energy.
Q1
Take me through a six-month period where the pressure on you was sustained and serious. What kept you functional, and what did you let drop deliberately to protect the things that mattered?
Q2
When did you last feel close to your limit — and what did you do?
Commerciality
Understands what makes the business work
7
What it is
The understanding of how the business actually makes money, where the value is created, and which decisions affect it. In care, this means understanding fee structures, occupancy economics, agency leakage, and commissioner dynamics, not just P&L lines.
Lineage: classic management accounting; the executive education tradition of running the numbers in your head. Specific to regulated services: occupancy and acuity drive economics in ways general MBA training does not capture.
What "high" looks like
Reads the P&L diagnostically. Understands the operational drivers behind the numbers. Frames trade-offs in terms of value, not cost.
Risk when too low
Operationally competent but commercially passive. Surprised by financial outcomes. Cannot defend or pressure-test their own budget.
Risk when too high
In a regulated, dignity-of-care sector: commerciality dominating values judgements. Hiring above 8 here without strong care-sector commitment is a known risk profile.
Q1
Walk me through your service's economics — not the P&L lines, but what actually drives them. If you had to cut 5% of cost without affecting quality, where would you look first and why?
Q2
What is a commercially sensible decision you have decided not to make on care-quality grounds?
People and relationships
how the leader works with others
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average
Empathy / compassion
Connects with frontline reality and people
8
What it is
The capacity to perceive and take seriously the experience of others — service users, families, frontline staff. In care leadership, this is the substrate that makes operational decisions feel human rather than transactional.
Lineage: Goleman on emotional intelligence (specifically the social-awareness domain); Bloom's Against Empathy refines this towards empathic concern (compassion) rather than emotional contagion.
What "high" looks like
Reads people accurately. Adjusts message and tone to audience. Decisions visibly factor in human consequences before operational ones.
Risk when too low
Treats people as interchangeable. Frontline disengages. Care-sector values commitment cannot rest on this leader because they do not feel the work.
Risk when too high
Decision paralysis when someone has to be moved on. Empathy as substitute for action. Common combination: high empathy plus low confrontation produces the leader everyone likes who cannot run a service.
Q1
Describe a decision that was operationally right but emotionally hard. How did you handle the tension between what the role required and what the person needed?
Q2
Tell me about a decision you made that protected someone — service user, staff member, family — when it would have been easier not to.
Authority / executive presence
Commands the room, gets followed
7
What it is
The quality that makes others orient to a person's reading of the situation. Less about volume or seniority signals than about composure, clarity, and visibly thinking on the available evidence.
Lineage: Heifetz on authority as a relationship rather than a property; Hogan on the bright side of leadership emergence.
What "high" looks like
When they speak in a meeting, the meeting orients. When they walk into a service, the team straightens up — not from fear, but from recognition that something that matters has just arrived.
Risk when too low
Cannot get the room. Decisions get re-litigated by people two levels below them. Lateral peers route around them.
Risk when too high
Presence becomes performance. Crowds out other voices. The room converges on their view rather than the right view.
Q1
Tell me about a meeting where you were not the most senior person but you ended up shaping the outcome. What did you do, and what gave you the standing to do it?
Q2
Describe a time you walked into a difficult room and had to take it. How did you read the room and what did you do in the first five minutes?
Coaching / development
Grows the next layer down
7
What it is
The active disposition to develop the people who report to you and those around you, treating their growth as part of the deliverable rather than an HR initiative.
Lineage: Goldsmith on stakeholder-centred coaching; Kim Scott on radical candour for developmental feedback.
What "high" looks like
Spends real time on direct reports' growth. Gives feedback specifically and often. Promotes from within because there is something to promote.
Risk when too low
Builds dependency. The team performs only when they are present. No succession pipeline. The leader becomes a single point of failure.
Q1
Tell me about someone you developed who is now operating at a level you are proud of. What did you do specifically, and what did you stop yourself from doing?
Q2
Tell me about someone you could not develop. What did you try, what did not work, and what did you eventually do?
Confrontation / accountability
Faces into underperformance directly
Watch zone above 9: above 9 risks fracturing teams rather than improving them
8
What it is
The willingness to name underperformance, address damaging behaviour, and take action when development has not closed the gap. Distinct from aggression — it is direct, not hostile.
Lineage: Lencioni on the dysfunctions of avoidance; Kim Scott on caring personally while challenging directly. The dimension where ivolve sits deliberately higher than tolerant peers.
What "high" looks like
Names the issue when it appears, not three months later. Addresses behaviour at the level it occurred. Will move someone on when development has been given a fair run.
Risk when too low
Underperformance entrenches. Damaging behaviour normalises. Strong people leave because the leader will not protect culture from those who erode it.
Risk when too high
Confrontation becomes the default rather than the last step. Teams fracture. Psychological safety collapses. Becomes the tyrannical version of what was meant to be standards-protection.
Q1
Tell me about a time you moved someone on. What was the threshold that told you it was time, and what did you try first?
Q2
Describe a confrontation you held back from when you should have had it sooner. What stopped you, and what was the cost?
Cross-functional workingnew
Gets things done with peers across functions you do not control
8
What it is
The capacity to influence laterally — to make things happen with peers you do not manage and across functions whose KPIs are not yours. The opposite of running your function as a fortress.
Lineage: Gabarro and Kotter on managing across; the matrix-management literature in the Galbraith tradition.
What "high" looks like
Picks up the phone before sending the email. Trades favours. Names shared problems honestly. Other functions consider this leader an ally rather than a threat.
Risk when too low
Function-as-fortress. Territorialism. Cross-functional issues become cross-functional standoffs. Things that need three teams to deliver get delivered by none.
Q1
Describe a piece of work that required you to deliver something through a peer's function rather than your own. How did you get them to prioritise it?
Q2
Tell me about a peer-level conflict you handled. What was the disagreement and how did it resolve?
Stakeholder relationship depthnew
Builds durable trust with commissioners, regulators, families, sector bodies
7
What it is
The capacity to build and sustain durable trust-based relationships with parties outside the organisation — commissioners, regulators, families, advocacy bodies, sector associations. Distinct from networking; this is depth, not breadth.
Lineage: relational sociology (Granovetter on the strength of strong ties); the diplomatic-relationship management tradition. In regulated sectors, often the dimension that determines whether problems escalate or get managed.
What "high" looks like
Has real relationships with the commissioners and inspectors who matter. Trust is banked over years and drawn down in difficult moments. Families remember this leader by name.
Risk when too low
Transactional. Relationships are activated only when something is needed. Inspections, escalations, and complex placements all become harder than they need to be.
Q1
Tell me about an external relationship where you went out of your way over years rather than weeks. What did you invest, and when did the investment pay off?
Q2
Describe a stakeholder relationship that broke down. What happened, and what would you do differently?
Personal qualities
the substrate
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average
Humility / lack of ego
Serves the work, not the role
7
What it is
The disposition to treat the work as the point and the role as the means. Comfort with being wrong, with credit going elsewhere, and with not being the smartest person in the room.
Lineage: Collins on Level 5 leadership; the broader humility-leadership literature (Owens and Hekman).
What "high" looks like
Takes feedback well. Gives credit naturally. Says "I do not know" without performance. Builds teams that outperform individual brilliance.
Risk when too low
Edifice complex. Decisions made for personal narrative rather than organisational need. Surrounded by people who are no threat. Career outlives results.
Risk when too high
Self-effacement that becomes abdication. Cannot represent themselves to a board. Hides their own contribution to the point where succession becomes invisible.
Q1
Tell me about a time you were publicly wrong about something significant. How did you handle it, and what did you change as a result?
Q2
Tell me about someone in your team who is better than you at something important. How do you work with them?
Energy / vitality
Sustains the pace the role requires
7
What it is
The physical and psychological capacity to sustain the pace and intensity the role demands, over the time horizon the role demands it. Includes both stamina and recovery.
Lineage: Loehr and Schwartz on energy management; the broader work on circadian and ultradian rhythms in sustained cognitive performance.
What "high" looks like
Sustains intensity over months without depleting. Has practices that protect recovery. Energy in the room rises rather than falls when they are present.
Risk when too low
Burns out predictably. Capacity collapses under sustained load. Available for the easy weeks, absent for the hard ones.
Q1
What is your current sustainability profile — what depletes you, what restores you, and what would I see in your diary that protects against burnout?
Q2
Describe how your energy looks at different points in a typical year. Where are the troughs, and how do you handle them?
Non-negotiable baseline
not faders — pass or fail
Integrity / values alignment
Right thing when no-one is looking
What it is
The disposition to act in line with the organisation's and the sector's values when no-one is watching, when the cost is real, and when the easier path is available. Not a "high score" dimension — it is binary.
Lineage: classical virtue ethics (Aristotle on character as habitual disposition); the Hogan dark-side literature on the failure modes when integrity is contingent.
Why this is a floor, not a fader
Cannot be calibrated. A leader at 7/10 on integrity is a leader at 0/10 in a regulated, vulnerable-people sector — because the gap between what they do when watched and what they do when not is the operative variable.
How its absence typically surfaces
Typically surfaces at the moment the organisation can least afford it: a serious incident, a regulator visit, a financial pressure point. The leader who has been adequate for years suddenly makes the decision that changes the organisation's trajectory.
Q1
Describe a situation where doing the right thing cost you something material — money, a relationship, a promotion, time. What did the calculation feel like, and how did you decide?
Q2
Tell me about a time you reported or escalated something you knew would be unwelcome. What did you do, and what happened?
Self-awareness
Knows their own gaps, takes feedback
What it is
The accurate perception of one's own capabilities, limits, biases, and impact on others. Distinct from confidence, distinct from humility — it is the calibration of self-perception against reality.
Lineage: Tasha Eurich on internal versus external self-awareness; the Hogan inventory specifically measures the gap between self-perception and observed behaviour.
Why this is a floor, not a fader
Cannot be calibrated because its absence corrupts every other dimension. A leader high on confrontation but low on self-awareness becomes a bully. A leader high on commerciality but low on self-awareness optimises for what looks like success rather than what is.
How its absence typically surfaces
Persistent blind spots. Receives the same feedback for years and does not act on it. Believes their own narrative more than the evidence around them. Surrounds themselves with people who confirm rather than challenge.
Q1
What is the most consistent piece of feedback you have received in your career? Do you agree with it? What have you done about it?
Q2
What is one thing you know you do that drives the people around you mad?
Care-sector values commitment
Genuine belief in dignity-of-care, not transactional
What it is
A genuine, durable belief that the work matters because of who it serves — vulnerable adults whose lives are made better or worse by the quality of the leadership above them. Distinct from sector experience; many sector veterans operate transactionally.
Lineage: Frankl on meaning as a driver of sustained performance; the public-service-motivation literature (Perry and Wise).
Why this is a floor, not a fader
Cannot be calibrated because it is the dimension that determines what gets traded against what when the hard call comes. A leader without it can perform technically well for years and still misalign you when the pressure arrives.
How its absence typically surfaces
Performs the language well but the decisions reveal the truth: cost reductions that pinch quality, occupancy pushes that ignore acuity match, agency-leakage strategies that degrade continuity of care. Sector vocabulary, transactional substrate.
Q1
Why care, specifically, given your skills are portable? What would you trade off in another sector that you would not trade off here, and where has that played out in a decision you have actually made?
Q2
Describe an interaction with someone you supported (or a family member of someone you supported) that has stayed with you. What did it tell you about the work?
Reliability / follow-through
Does what they said they would
What it is
The discipline of converting commitments into delivery, consistently, over time. The substrate of trust at every other level — peers, reports, board, external stakeholders.
Lineage: Covey on the speed of trust; the integrity-of-action literature in the executive performance tradition.
Why this is a floor, not a fader
Cannot be calibrated because reliability is a binary in the perception of others. The leader whose commitments are 80% reliable is filed mentally as "unreliable" by the people who depend on them — the missing 20% colours the whole.
How its absence typically surfaces
Commitments quietly degrade. Things slip. The team learns to apply a discount to anything this leader says, which then becomes a discount applied to anything the organisation says.
Q1
Walk me through your last three significant commitments — what you said you would do, what you did, and where the gap was if there was one. What does that pattern tell us about how you operate?
Q2
What is a commitment you have made that you did not keep? Why, and what did you do about it?
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