Information and Communication Are the Stealth Pillars of Stable Management

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Information and communication underpin every resilient management system, yet they are rarely treated as core leadership duties. Organizations preach transparency while quietly punishing anyone who demands real context. The result: management layers that look aligned until stress reveals the shallow shared understanding. When information routes through people instead of systems, leaders don’t manage, they become … Read more

Stakeholder Management is not a Soft Skill. It is the Operating System of Strategy.

A weathered bronze plaque mounted on a stone wall featuring the embossed text: "Stakeholder Management is not a Soft Skill. It is the Operating System of Strategy."

Stakeholder management is routinely discussed in leadership forums as a communication skill or a cultural competency. In boardrooms, it is still too often treated as an execution detail important, but delegable. That framing is no longer tenable. In regulated, politically layered markets across APAC, stakeholder management has become a first-order governance variable. Strategies do not … Read more

The Perils of Epicaricacy: A Quiet Leadership Instinct!

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The Perils of Epicaricacy: A Quiet Leadership Instinct I Had to Unlearn. I didn’t recognize it the first time it happened. A competitor I knew reasonably well lost a key regulatory approval. Nothing dramatic, no headlines, no scandal. Just a delayed expansion that quietly stalled their momentum. I remember reading the update on my phone between meetings. My first reaction wasn’t concern.

It was relief. I didn’t smile. I didn’t say anything out loud. But internally, something loosened. Pressure eased. The bar felt lower for a moment. And that’s what bothered me later, not the thought itself, but how natural it felt. There’s a word for that reaction: epicaricacy. Most people know it as schadenfreude—taking pleasure, however small, in someone else’s misfortune. I used to think this was a personal flaw you either had or didn’t. Over time, I’ve come to see it differently. In senior leadership roles, especially in competitive and regulated environments, this instinct is surprisingly easy to acquire and dangerously hard to notice. Not because leaders are malicious. But because the conditions quietly reward it. I know some will agree and others won’t. But this exist.

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Great Leaders Prioritize People — The Uncomfortable Economics of Talent in Global Payments

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Great Leaders have far farsightedness. In Global Payments and cross-border payments talent decisions are more than HR. They are economic imperatives with long term consequences. Leaders who strategically invest in skilled teams, compliance expertise, and managerial capability drive higher profitability, operational resilience, and regulatory compliance. This article explore the uncomfortable trade-offs between short-term margin protection and long-term execution capacity, offering insights for CXOs navigating APAC payments infrastructure, fintech workforce strategy, and banking automation challenges.

The Purple Squirrel in Leadership and Strategy: Why the Pursuit of the Perfect Leader Can Undermine Strategic Momentum

An illustrative banner titled "The Purple Squirrel in Leadership and Strategy." It features a stylized purple squirrel standing on a futuristic city platform labeled "Strategy" and "Leadership." The squirrel holds a compass and points toward a glowing "Goal" at the top of an ascending arrow. The background includes a lighthouse, a digital network bridge, and icons for "Visionary," "Adaptive," and "Strategic."

The Purple Squirrel in leadership and strategy represents one of the most subtle yet consequential challenges in modern organizational decision-making. Most leadership searches begin with a reasonable objective: identify the best possible leader for the next phase of growth. Yet as job specifications evolve, expectations accumulate. Requirements expand across multiple dimensions, experience, technical expertise, industry … Read more