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The Meeting That Revealed a Leadership Vacuum

Something happens in meetings that have no clear leader. Not nothing — worse. Something happens that exposes the gap where leadership should be.

People talk over each other. Nobody intervenes. The loudest voice wins, regardless of the quality of the idea. Important topics get dropped. Unimportant topics get debated. The meeting runs over, and nobody knows why.

The meeting that revealed a leadership vacuum. It's not a meeting problem. It's a leadership problem.

What a Leadership Vacuum Looks Like

No one intervenes when things go off track.

The discussion drifts. Someone raises a concern that derails the agenda. Nobody says "let's stay on topic." Nobody redirects.

Decisions get made by whoever speaks last.

There's no process for deciding. The last person to make a strong case wins — not because their idea was best, but because no one was managing the decision-making.

The meeting doesn't end — it dissipates.

Instead of wrapping up with clear decisions and next steps, the meeting just... stops. People start checking their phones. Someone says "we should probably wrap up." Everyone leaves without knowing what happened.

Why It Happens

Leadership vacuums happen when the person who called the meeting isn't willing to lead it. They scheduled it, but they're not driving it. They're reacting to what happens instead of shaping what happens.

Or when the meeting has too many stakeholders and no one has the authority to make final calls. Everyone has input rights, but no one has decision rights.

How to Fill It

Before the meeting, know who's driving.

The person who called the meeting is responsible for its outcome. That person opens it, guides it, and closes it. If they can't, they assign someone else who can.

During the meeting, name the vacuum.

If you see it happening, say: "It sounds like we need someone to drive this. I'll take that role — here's the agenda." Leadership isn't waiting to be assigned. It's stepping up.

After the meeting, assess.

Ask: "Did we have a clear decision owner? Did the meeting have a clear end?" If not, the next meeting needs a different format.

A meeting without leadership is a meeting that wastes everyone's time. Leadership isn't optional in meetings — it's the job.

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