Yet in practice, even experienced leaders don’t always act on what they know.
The gap between intention and behaviour is common, and often frustrating.
Understanding what good leadership looks like does not automatically make it easier to deliver.
In the moment, leadership is shaped by context. Time pressure, competing priorities, emotional responses and organisational culture all influence how people behave.
What seems clear in reflection can feel much harder in real situations.
This is why leaders often find themselves reverting to familiar patterns, even when they recognise that a different approach would be more effective.
Leadership behaviour is not just an individual choice. It is influenced by habit and reinforced by the surrounding environment.
Teams respond in predictable ways. Organisations reward certain behaviours over others.
Established routines shape how decisions are made and how conversations unfold.
Changing behaviour within this context requires more than awareness. It requires conscious effort to interrupt existing patterns and create new ones.
Without that, leaders tend to operate on autopilot, particularly under pressure.
Leadership decisions are not purely rational.
Choosing to challenge, to give difficult feedback, or to invite disagreement involves risk. Leaders weigh how their actions will be received and what the consequences might be.
In some cases, avoiding discomfort feels easier than addressing an issue directly. Over time, this can reinforce behaviours that leaders themselves would not describe as effective.
Recognising this dynamic is an important step in closing the gap between knowing and doing.
For leaders to act differently, change needs to feel practical and achievable.
That often means focusing on specific situations rather than broad intentions. What will be done differently in the next team meeting? How will feedback be handled in a particular conversation?
Small, defined shifts are easier to implement and more likely to be sustained.
It also helps to create accountability. Not in a formal sense, but through reflection and feedback. Leaders benefit from understanding how their behaviour is experienced, not just how it was intended.
Closing the knowing-doing gap is not about acquiring more knowledge. It is about applying what is already understood.
Leaders who make progress in this area tend to approach change as a process. They experiment, reflect and adjust. They accept that behaviour change takes time and requires consistency.
Over time, these small shifts accumulate, leading to meaningful differences in how teams experience leadership.
Most leaders already have a good sense of what effective leadership involves. The challenge is translating that into consistent behaviour.
At Zeal, we work with leaders to bridge that gap, using insight, feedback and practical support to help change take hold.
If you’d like to explore this further, you can find check out the rest of our leadership articles, or contact us for an informal discussion.