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Echoes from the Hollow Crown
What happens when a crown is handed to the wrong head? In this reflective story, warmth, charm, and quiet struggle reveal a deeper truth about leadership, fit, and finding rhythm where it belongs.

Lessons In Leadership Part 5

Even a crown, if hollow, cannot carry weight for long.

đŸ§±Where Great Work Meets Great Complexity

At Rea Bana National Institute, the air often pulsed with a quiet intensity. The corridors didn’t just echo with footsteps, they moved with the rhythm of coordination, collaboration, and purpose. The organization stood as the sector’s gold standard: the place where governments turned for policy direction, civil society groups sought support for legislative reform, and communities relied on for training, protection, and empowerment.

 

The organisation managed projects that stretched across boundaries—research, public education, social protection, systemic transformation, advocacy, and community upliftment. It was a legacy institution, grounded in trust, and driven by a vision for sustainable change.

 

To keep that engine running, we drew from a wide, and talented pool of professionals—project managers, analysts, administrators, field coordinators, lawyers, policy experts, social and community workers. People weren’t just hired; they were developed. We moved them between teams, departments, and portfolios to stretch their potential and spark growth. It was our version of cultivation—careful, considered, intentional.

 

But with diversity, comes unpredictability.

đŸŸWorking Styles and Quiet Storms

Every office has its characters—personalities that shape how the organization breathes.

2 Echoes from the Hollow Crown

There are the ants: consistent, methodical, never flashy, always moving. You rarely have to follow up with them—they meet deadlines before you even remember there was one.

Then come the owls: reflective and wise, guiding from the shadows. They don’t speak often, but when they do, people listen.

Parrots fill the room with sound. They're vibrant and talkative, often echoing others, but rarely pushing original ideas. Their presence is loud, but sometimes hollow.

Chameleons blended in. They attend meetings, follow the motions, but you’d struggle to remember their contribution. Always there, but rarely felt.

And of course, the cats—independent and brilliant, but on their own terms. You never know if they'd purr through a task or walk away entirely. When they deliver, it is genius. When they don’t, it’s radio silence.

Overall, in every workplace, there are some you could set your watch by—their works are always early, crisp, and clean. But others; they need nudging, prodding, or even a foghorn. Some thrive with freedom; others need a chaperone. Together, they form a sometimes, "chaotic", often brilliant, always human ecosystem in the workplace.

🍃A Gentle Breeze in a Heavy Room

The organisation had all these personalities. Each one contributing to the organization’s rhythm in their own way. It was this blend of characters that gave the place its complexity, its frustrations, and ultimately, its beauty. In a system that thrived on people power, one of those personalities stood out—not for their technical genius or strategic brilliance, but for something rarer: warmth.

 

Zed had long been part of the organisation's story. He had served diligently as a community worker and field coordinator. Warm, reliable, cheerful. In meetings, he’d ask who was absent before starting. He brought coffee for new staff, offered support during tough weeks or rough times, and had a laugh that could melt even the iciest week.

He was the kind of colleague who made the office feel less like work and more like fun.

So, when the opportunity came to promote from within, Zed was among those chosen to move into a Project Manager role. On the surface, it felt like a natural step.

But in time, we came to see the mismatch. What looked like alignment on paper turned out to be different in practice. It was like asking a summer breeze to lift an anchor—gentle, good-hearted, but never built for that kind of weight.

đŸ§©Role Fit For The Rhythm

Some people shine in the sun, but wilt under spotlights. Zed was brilliant in human connection, but project management requires a different kind of wiring—structure, initiative, precision, accountability.

At first, his gaps were easy to overlook. His charisma softened the edges of missed deadlines. His charm explained away overlooked details. His kindness made people want to help him catch up.

But charm doesn’t keep a timeline. And charisma won’t balance a budget.

Slowly, things began to slip. Reports were late. Budgets didn’t align. Project assessments were shallow. Colleagues found themselves working around Zed. And still, his smiles remained. But the work didn’t.

It was like asking a gifted mechanic to handle plumbing. He may hold the right tools, but every adjustment only made the leak worse.

4 Echoes from the Hollow Crown

đŸ«„It Fell Apart Quietly

Each moment defined and highlighted the shortcomings.

We had spent months preparing for a critical project. A bidders’ conference, a mandatory requirement, stood between us and the next phase.

Zed didn’t attend.

He said he wasn’t sure if he needed to. But as the Project Manager, the responsibility was his.

Just like that, we were disqualified. Months of preparation, gone in a moment. Not with a bang, but with a shrug.

It wasn’t dramatic. It was just... quiet. Like watching a vase fall in slow motion. You reach out, but you’re too late. And when it shatters, the silence says everything.

Trust in our systems, in our decision-making, in each other was challenged.

🔧Rebuilding from the Inside

The missed opportunity wasn’t an isolated event. However, it exposed deeper cracks in how we matched people to roles.

Around the same time, the organisation was undergoing an institutional renewal—reviewing structures, reassessing leadership, and redefining what excellence looked like. It was also the period when I was appointed to lead the organization and steward that renewal plan. With fresh responsibility came the challenge of turning vision into structure, and structure into progress. As part of the effort, we audited capacity, reinvested in staff development, and offered targeted support aimed at aligning people, purpose, and performance.

Many rose to the challenge. They adapted, upskilled, asked for coaching, and flourished.

But some didn’t. Not because they didn’t care, but because they were in the wrong lane.

Training works—usually. But you can’t teach a fish to run; nor should you!

3 Echoes from the Hollow Crown

Zed wasn’t lazy or unmotivated. He was quietly exhausted—trying to be something he wasn’t, in a role that didn’t let him breathe. And sometimes, that struggle is invisible
 until it’s not.

🔄Redirection, Not Rejection

Eventually, we had a choice: continue waiting for a duck to soar—or let it swim where it thrives.

We chose the latter.

After open conversations, honest reflection, and mutual agreement, Zed was reassigned to an operational coordination role—paired with a precise, detail-focused manager. Zed brought cohesion and empathy; his counterpart brought structure and timelines.

And something shifted.

Zed came alive again. He found his rhythm. He delivered with quiet confidence. The very qualities that made him struggle in one role became his superpower in another. He was no longer compensating, he was contributing.

Over a corporate event, he smiled and said, I was drowning quietly. I’m glad someone helped. I was glad too.

đŸȘžThe Quiet Power of Good Leadership

Zed’s journey reminds me that leadership isn’t about assigning roles and waiting for performance. It’s about aligning people with their strengths and giving them space to thrive.

It’s not about micromanaging for results—it’s about seeing potential beyond titles, listening between the lines, making room for failure without shame, and choosing redirection over reprimand when the moment calls for grace.

In every organization, there are crowns—titles, roles, expectations. But not every head is built to carry a heavy crown. Some shine brighter when the weight is adjusted—just enough for them to rise.

And when leaders pay attention—even a quiet, broken note can find its harmony again.