Authenticity in leadership is often spoken about as if it were simple. We are told to "just be ourselves." Yet anyone who has led diverse teams, coached executives, or guided organisational change knows that authenticity is far more complex.
Authenticity is genuine, but it is also intentional. It requires both self-awareness and "other-awareness": an understanding of who we are and how others experience us. Effective leaders recognise that leadership presence is not a fixed expression of personality but an ongoing balance between being true to one's values and being responsive to the people and context around us.
In this way, authenticity is a dance. The rhythm is integrity, and the steps change depending on who is in the room.
Authentic leadership builds trust, encourages open communication, and fosters psychological safety. When people believe a leader is genuine, they are more likely to engage, contribute ideas, and speak up about risks or concerns.
Research supports this view. One study found that both personal and collective self-awareness significantly affect how authentic a leader is perceived to be (Steffens, Haslam, & Reicher, 2021). Leaders who understand themselves and those they serve are viewed as more credible and trustworthy.
Authenticity, therefore, is not only a moral virtue. It is a practical necessity for effective leadership and cultural resilience.
Authenticity is not about acting the same way in every situation or sharing every thought or emotion. It is about maintaining alignment between your intent, values, and actions while adjusting how you express those values to suit the context.
A leader addressing a frontline crew after an incident might show humility, empathy, and resolve. The same leader presenting to a board of directors might demonstrate composure, clarity, and accountability.
Both expressions are authentic because they reflect the same core values of care, respect, and responsibility.
Authenticity without adaptability becomes rigidity. Adaptability without integrity becomes performance. True authenticity lives in the balance.
Self-awareness forms the foundation of authenticity. It involves understanding one's values, strengths, blind spots, and emotional triggers. Leaders who are self-aware recognise how their internal state influences their external impact.
While self-awareness anchors authenticity, "other-awareness" gives it relevance. Other-Awareness is the ability to understand how others experience your words, actions, and intentions, and to adapt your behaviour in ways that build trust, connection, and shared understanding. (Adapted from Goleman, 1995; Eurich, 2018.)
For leaders, this means being able to "read the room." It involves understanding what others need to hear or see from you and adjusting your expression accordingly without losing authenticity.
When leading a frontline team, authenticity might show up as empathy, presence, and hands-on engagement. When addressing executives, it might involve translating people insights into strategic priorities. In both cases, authenticity remains intact because the underlying intent of care and clarity stays constant.
Across my work with leaders in mining, transport, construction, utilities, and manufacturing, I have observed that authentic leadership is not about comfort. It is about alignment and courage.
Consider these practices:
In high-risk industries, authenticity is not a soft skill. It is an essential leadership competency that affects safety and performance.
When people believe their leaders are genuine, they are more likely to report weak signals, raise concerns, and participate in honest discussions about risk. This openness strengthens both learning and prevention.
Leaders who hide behind authority may appear strong, but they create distance. Authentic leaders build relational bridges that enable trust, transparency, and continuous improvement.
Authenticity in leadership is not about rigid self-expression. It is about remaining faithful to one's values while adapting communication and behaviour to meet others where they are.
The rhythm is integrity. The steps are adaptability.
Leaders who master this dance create trust, strengthen culture, and enhance performance, whether they are on the shop floor, in the boardroom, or guiding teams through uncertainty.
Jamie is a psychologist and senior facilitator at GYST with over 30 years' experience. Drawing on a clinical psychology foundation and 14 years specialising in organisational work, he helps leaders strengthen trust, care and psychological safety. Jamie has partnered with mining, transport, construction, utilities, manufacturing and service organisations, delivering board briefings, executive coaching and practical workshops. Known for calm, evidence-based guidance and engaging facilitation, he turns research into usable habits that lift safety leadership, safety culture and day-to-day performance.
References:
Center for Creative Leadership. (2025). What is authentic leadership? [Article]. https://www.ccl.org/articles/leading-effectively-articles/authenticity-1-idea-3-facts-5-tips/
Duarte, A. P., Nuno, R. J., & Lopes, C. A. (2021). Authentic leadership and improved individual performance: The mediating role of affective commitment. Frontiers in Psychology, 12, 642160. https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.675749/full
Eurich, T. (2018). Insight: The surprising truth about how others see us, how we see ourselves, and why the answers matter more than we think. Currency.
Eurich, T. (2025). Authentic leadership for uncertain times. IE Insights. https://www.ie.edu/insights/articles/authentic-leadership-for-uncertain-times/
Goleman, D. (1995). Emotional intelligence: Why it can matter more than IQ. Bantam Books.
Macamo, A. I. (2024). Authentic leadership—For better and for worse? Journal of Managerial Psychology. https://doi.org/10.1080/1359432X.2024.2361511
Steffens, N. K., Haslam, S. A., & Reicher, S. D. (2021). The role of personal and collective self-awareness in authentic leadership: A multilevel analysis. Social Science & Medicine, 273, 113776.