When the data runs out—or becomes overwhelming—your next move often depends on something harder to quantify: intuition. It’s not guesswork. It’s a skill built from experience, reflection, and pattern recognition. If you want to trust your gut more confidently as a leader, you need to train it.
Start with the “calm test.” Before acting on a strong impulse, ask yourself: Would I make the same decision if I were completely calm? This helps separate grounded clarity from emotional urgency.
Reflect on each decision. After major calls, jot down what you felt, which cues you noticed, and what patterns stood out. Revisit these notes later to see how your instincts played out—then refine them.
Label where you are. Intuition unfolds in stages. Are you gathering info, interpreting signals, or sitting with uncertainty? Naming the stage helps you act with intention, not impulse.
Build a circle of sense-makers. Surround yourself with people who won’t just confirm your thinking but will challenge it. Their questions help surface your own inner signals more clearly.
Practice in the small stuff. Use everyday moments—who to call, when to speak up, what to delegate—as chances to build your gut. These micro-decisions sharpen pattern recognition and confidence over time. |