Leadership Self-Assessment
Quick Guide
A condensed, actionable field guide. 10-question self-assessment, scoring rubric, and quick-win exercises across 5 key leadership dimensions.
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Leadership Self-Assessment Quick Guide
A condensed assessment tool based on the Modern Leadership Institute's full 30-question framework — built to surface your strongest dimensions and your biggest growth opportunities in under 10 minutes.
Self-Awareness Is the #1 Leadership Skill
Leadership development research consistently points to a single root variable: how well leaders know themselves. A 2018 Harvard Business Review study found that leaders with high self-awareness are 36% more effective at achieving results through others — not because they're more technically skilled, but because they understand how their behavior shapes the environment around them.
The problem isn't effort or intelligence. It's that most leaders operate without a structured map of their strengths and blind spots. They receive feedback ad hoc, if at all, and interpret it through the filter of their existing self-image.
Our framework measures five dimensions that together define executive-level effectiveness: Self-Awareness, Strategic Vision, Team Empowerment, Change Leadership, and Communication. These aren't abstract competencies — they're the specific behaviors that separate leaders who drive results from those who plateau.
The guide below gives you a condensed version of our full assessment. Be honest. The score isn't a judgment — it's a starting point. Your growth depends on seeing clearly, not seeing favorably.
10-Question Mini Assessment
Rate each statement on a scale of 1 (rarely) to 5 (consistently). Answer based on how you actually behave — not how you aspire to behave. Each question maps to one of the five leadership dimensions.
I can accurately predict how others will react to my decisions or feedback before I deliver them.
When I receive critical feedback, I reflect on it seriously rather than dismissing or defending it.
I can articulate a clear 12–18 month vision for my team or organization that my people can repeat back to me.
I connect daily work to the larger mission in a way that makes the "why" visible to my team, not just the "what."
I delegate in a way that stretches my team members' capabilities, not just offloads tasks from my plate.
My team members feel psychologically safe raising problems or disagreements with me directly.
When facing a major organizational change, I address the emotional impact on people before pushing for adoption.
I actively model adaptability — visibly adjusting my own behavior or plans when new information warrants it.
I tailor my communication style to what my audience needs, not to what's most comfortable for me to deliver.
After important conversations, I verify understanding — I don't assume that saying something once means it was heard correctly.
How to Interpret Your Score
Add your ratings for each pair of questions to get a dimension score (2–10). Then use the table below to interpret where you stand. Be honest with yourself: these scores only help if they reflect reality.
| Score | Level | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| 9–10 | Strong | This dimension is a genuine asset. Your behavior here is consistent and purposeful. Maintain it and look for ways to coach others. |
| 6–8 | Developing | You're competent but inconsistent. This is the highest-leverage growth zone — small behavioral shifts will produce noticeable results quickly. |
| 2–5 | Emerging | This dimension needs deliberate attention. Left unaddressed, it will create a ceiling on your effectiveness regardless of how strong other dimensions are. |
Scoring tip: Most leaders find 1–2 "Emerging" dimensions and 1–2 "Strong" ones. That's normal. The goal isn't a perfect score — it's an honest picture. If you scored everything 4–5, go back and ask: would your team score you the same way?
3 Exercises for Each Dimension
These are small, repeatable behaviors — not programs or workshops. They work because they're specific enough to actually do this week. Pick the dimension where you scored lowest and start there.
- End-of-day reflection (5 min). Before you close your laptop, write three sentences: one moment you led well today, one moment you didn't, and what the difference was. Not a journal — three sentences. Do this for 21 days.
- Seek the 10% question. After your next performance review or important conversation, ask: "What's the 10% you held back because you weren't sure I could hear it?" Then actually listen. Don't justify.
- Map your triggers. Identify three situations that reliably cause you to become less effective (defensive, controlling, withdrawn). Write them down. Name the pattern. Awareness of the trigger is the first step to interrupting it.
- The one-sentence test. Ask three team members to complete this sentence without prep: "In 12 months, success for our team looks like ___." If the answers diverge significantly, you don't have a shared vision — you have a document somewhere.
- Narrate the "why" in every meeting. Before assigning any task or project, explicitly state why it matters in the larger context. "We're doing this because..." One sentence. Every time. For 30 days.
- Write a future-back memo. Write a 200-word memo from 18 months in the future describing what you achieved and why it mattered. This forces you to crystallize priorities and surfaces which current work actually matters.
- Delegate the decision, not just the task. This week, give one team member the authority to make a decision you'd normally make yourself. Communicate the boundary ("you own this up to $5K spend") then get out of the way. Debrief afterward.
- Run a "stop doing" meeting. Ask your team: "What should I stop doing that gets in your way?" The answers reveal where you're over-functioning and creating dependency. Implement at least one item immediately.
- Stretch one person this week. Identify a team member whose current role is slightly below their capability. Have a 15-minute conversation about one project or responsibility you can add. Growth requires stretch — not comfort.
- Name the loss before the gain. When introducing change, most leaders lead with benefits. People resist because they're grieving what they're losing (routine, certainty, status). Acknowledge the loss explicitly: "I know this disrupts how you've worked. Here's why it's worth it."
- Create visible momentum early. Find the smallest, fastest win that proves the change is real and working. Communicate it loudly. Early visible wins convert skeptics faster than any announcement.
- Model the new behavior yourself — visibly. If you're asking the team to change, they're watching you for proof that you mean it. Identify one thing you need to do differently and do it publicly, with commentary: "I'm trying something different here because…"
- The "headline first" rule. Restructure how you communicate: lead with the bottom line, then the supporting detail. Most leaders bury the point. Practice one email or meeting update this week where you state the conclusion in the first sentence.
- Verify, don't assume. After your next important conversation, end with: "Tell me what you're walking away with." Not "Does that make sense?" (everyone says yes). Actually ask them to repeat back what they heard. The gap will surprise you.
- Adapt to the room. Before your next meeting, spend 2 minutes thinking: what does this specific person need to hear from me, and how do they best receive information? Adjust accordingly. Same message, different framing for different people.
Want the Full 30-Question Assessment?
This guide gives you a directional snapshot. The full assessment gives you a precise score across all 30 questions, a personalized results report, and a learning path built around your specific profile.
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