Unlearning Hierarchy in Modern Teams
In theory, every voice matters.
In practice? Some voices are still louder than others.
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I’ve seen teams where collaboration is encouraged—but only after the most senior person speaks. Where “open dialogue” is welcomed—but junior staff only speak freely in the side chats after the meeting. Where diversity is valued—but decision-making stays in the hands of the same three people.
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This isn’t a people problem.
It’s a power problem.
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And it’s one that can’t be solved by good intentions alone.
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Power isn’t just about roles. It’s about access, influence, and psychological safety. It’s about who gets to challenge ideas without backlash, who gets second chances, who gets looped in early… and who gets informed later (if at all).
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Power shows up in subtle, system-reinforced ways:
Why your values mean nothing without structure
At first glance, it looked like a culture win.
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Posters in the hallway said “Trust. Inclusion. Courage.” Town halls opened with affirmations about transparency and care. Leaders gave enthusiastic nods when someone mentioned psychological safety.
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But when I looked beneath the surface? Team members still avoided feedback, new ideas died quietly in the approval chain, and junior employees were noticeably quiet in strategy meetings.
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It hit the team hard when I said, “Culture isn’t what you say. It’s what you systemize.”Â
But it wouldn’t do them any good if I had lied to them.Â
They had work to do.
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Culture is not built on slogans, intentions, or good vibes. It’s built on systems; how things actually function day to day. The real culture of your organization is reflected in how people behave when no one’s watching, because of how things actually work.
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How Unlearning Perfection Transforms Strategy
By Carolina Caro
Founder of Conscious Leadership Partners & Creator of The Unlearning Advantage™
We all know the drill: a strategic plan is created with fanfare, presented in polished decks, color-coded across departments… and then quietly abandoned within the first quarter.
If you’ve ever watched a well-crafted plan dissolve under the pressure of day-to-day operations, you’re not alone.
No, it’s not because the plan was bad. It’s because the way we approach planning is broken.
We’ve been taught to think that great strategy is about control, clarity, and contingency; everything mapped out, accounted for, and locked in. However, in today’s fast-moving, high-stakes environments, that approach no longer serves us.
What we need now isn’t tighter planning. It’s unlearning perfection and replacing it with strategic adaptability.
I recently worked with a leadership team that prided themselves on being “a...
We talk a lot about feedback in modern leadership circles.
We want “feedback cultures.”
We promote “radical candor.”
We train managers to “give and receive feedback effectively.”
However… Most organizations won’t speak this truth out loud: Feedback still feels like failure to most people.
Even when it’s well-intentioned.
Even when it’s constructive.
Even when the culture says it’s welcome.
Deep down, many of us were trained to associate feedback with judgment, inadequacy, or punishment. Not growth. Not support. Not innovation.
Until we unlearn that?
The feedback loop stays broken.
In one organization I worked with, leaders were frustrated by how resistant their teams were to feedback. And it’s a good thing they reached out when they did…
“We tell them all the time, feedback is a gift,” one director said. “And yet people still get defensive, shut down, or spiral.”
I asked how feedback had been handled historically. There was a pause. Then a qui...
Collaboration sounds like a given in modern organizations. We say we value it. We hire for it. We even list it on our websites and walls. But in practice? Collaboration often fails quietly… not because people aren’t willing, but because the system isn’t built to support it.
I’ve seen it firsthand. In one organization, teams were competent and well-intentioned. Managers were trusted, and departments operated smoothly on their own. Yet, initiatives stalled. Communication misfired. Trust eroded.
The culprit wasn’t motivation or talent. It was a deeper issue:
They hadn’t unlearned the habits and structures that make real collaboration possible.
Here’s what that transformation looked like, and what it made possible.
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A few years ago, I worked with a mid-size organization in the healthcare space that reached out to me with a strange problem. On paper, they were thriving: Each department was meeting its KPIs (for the most ...
Only 23% of employees globally are engaged at work.
That means 77% of the workforce is operating with one foot out the door, mentally if not physically. Burnout is on the rise. Managers are drowning. And leaders at every level are being asked to do more with less, faster, and better.
Here’s the most important insight from the report:
Organizations in the top quartile of engagement aren’t just lucky.
They’re doing something different.
They’re not simply offering more perks or better pay (though those things matter). They’re designing systems that support thriving leadership, meaningful accountability, and cultures people want to be part of.
And the best part?
You don’t have to be a Fortune 500 company to join them.
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At Conscious Leadership Partners, we’ve been anticipating this shift for years. Our work isn’t about surface fixes. It’s ...
The headlines from Gallup's 2025 State of the Global Workplace report are stark:
   🧯 Global employee engagement remains low.
   🔥 Burnout is on the rise.
But the stat that hit me hardest?
Only 30% of managers are engaged at work.
Let that sink in.
The people we rely on to set the tone, uphold culture, and carry out organizational strategy... are exhausted. Disillusioned. Quietly burning out. Not because they don’t care, but because they’re expected to lead without the tools, support, or systems to do it effectively.
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According to Gallup, manager engagement is now lower than both frontline workers and senior leaders. Here’s what that looks like inside the organizations I support across California and beyond:
By Carolina Caro
In leadership, unlearning is only the beginning.
Real change happens when we integrate what we’ve learned. When we consciously choose new ways of leading, collaborating, and relating.
In The Stories We Inherit: Unlearning Generational Conditioning in Leadership, an article a wrote a little while ago, I explored how biases about different age groups often get passed down through workplace culture. These inherited stories shape how we perceive ambition, authority, feedback, and contribution. But once we’ve begun to question those biases, the next step becomes:
Now what?
How do we move forward in a way that’s productive, not performative?
The answer lies in integration.
Integration is more than “getting along.”
It means designing environments where a diversity of thinking styles, values, and experiences actively fuel progress, not friction.
Before stepping into leadership development, I worked in the medical field. And one of th...
By Carolina Caro
We don’t just work with people of different ages, we work with the stories we’ve inherited about people of different ages.
From jokes about “lazy millennials” to assumptions that Boomers are resistant to change, generational stereotypes have quietly embedded themselves into the walls of our organizations. And while it’s tempting to laugh them off, these narratives have power. They shape how we lead, collaborate, promote, and invest in our teams – often without realizing it.
Over the past decade, I’ve worked with leaders across California's public sector agencies, educational institutions, and large mission-driven organizations. And I can tell you: these tensions show up everywhere.
But I’m not exempt from them either.
I’ve had to confront my own generational assumptions: reflecting on where they came from, how they were reinforced, and how they may have shaped my expectations as a leader and collaborator. It’s an uncomfortable process at times, but it’s also where...
There's a pervasive belief in leadership circles that success comes from continually adding more strategies, more frameworks, more initiatives. While growth and innovation are important, the hidden truth I've discovered working with executives is that real, sustainable progress often comes from doing less, not more.
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Organizations today suffer from an overload of initiatives, checklists, and tools. Leaders chase the latest trends and pile on solutions, unintentionally burying their teams under layers of complexity. What’s truly needed is clarity, simplicity, and intentionality—the practice of strategically subtracting what's no longer working.
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Think of subtraction like a surgical procedure: it’s precise, intentional, and necessary to remove harmful or redundant elements impeding health and performance. My background in medicine taught me that sometimes healing isn’t about adding more treatments, but about removing what’s harming the system. This same pr...
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