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Building a Team You’re Proud Of

  • Jan 15
  • 2 min read

One of the most underestimated responsibilities of leadership is this:building a team you’re genuinely proud of.


Not just a team that performs. Not just a team that delivers results. But a team you respect — even when no one is watching.


Early in my career, I thought building a team was about capability. Getting the right skills in the room. Filling gaps. Optimising output. Over time, I’ve learned that skills are the easy part.


Character is harder.



When you’re under pressure, culture doesn’t rise — it reveals itself. How people behave when deadlines tighten, when mistakes happen, or when things don’t go to plan tells you far more than any CV ever could.


I’ve become far more intentional about who we bring into the business. Not because everyone needs to think the same way, but because values need to align. You can teach systems. You can develop skills. You can’t retrofit integrity or accountability.


Building a team takes patience. It means resisting the urge to hire quickly just to relieve pressure. It means sometimes carrying more weight yourself while you wait for the right person, rather than the available one.


It also requires trust — not the superficial kind, but the willingness to give people real responsibility and allow them space to grow into it. Development doesn’t happen when everything is controlled. It happens when people are trusted to think, decide, and occasionally get it wrong.


Some of the moments I’m most proud of haven’t been financial milestones or business wins. They’ve been watching individuals grow in confidence, take ownership, and begin to lead in their own way.


A strong team isn’t built on fear or dependency. It’s built on clarity. People knowing what’s expected of them, why it matters, and where they’re trusted to act.


As a leader, you set the tone — not through slogans, but through behaviour. How you handle pressure. How you treat people when things go wrong. How you give credit and take responsibility.


In the long run, the team you build becomes a reflection of you. Not who you say you are, but who you consistently choose to be.


And that’s a responsibility I don’t take lightly.


Question:If your team reflected your leadership exactly, would you be proud of what it shows?

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