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TEDxKL, Naked Autocrats of the 21st Century

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Despite billions invested in leadership development, most people can name only one or two truly great leaders they’ve encountered. The uncomfortable truth is that much of what we call leadership today is actually followership—behaviors driven by the need to please, conform, and fit within established norms rather than challenge them.

True leadership, the speaker argues, is not democratic or consensus-based—it is fundamentally autocratic and top-down. This assertion may sound unfashionable, but a 27-country study reveals that people worldwide still prefer leaders who are decisive, clear, and uncompromising about purpose. In a complex, fast-moving world, the majority—72% of respondents—believe that strong, top-down leadership is essential for breakthrough success.

Yet this form of autocracy is not about oppression. History’s most admired leaders—Nelson Mandela, Mahatma Gandhi, Lee Kuan Yew—were “benevolent autocrats”: uncompromising in their principles, yet deeply compassionate and respectful toward others. They earned the right to lead by embodying values that inspired voluntary followership.

Leadership, then, begins not with position but with a vision for a better future—and the inner energy to pursue it relentlessly despite resistance. This energy does not come from management training or best practices; it arises from clarity of purpose and alignment with one’s deepest values. Skills can be taught, but conviction must be discovered.

In today’s transparent and hyper-connected world, we need what the speaker calls “naked autocrats”—leaders who are autocratic about purpose but humble in behavior, firm on principles yet open in humanity. These leaders don’t seek to please; they seek to transform.

Leadership is not about being liked—it is about being clear, courageous, and compassionate enough to do what’s right, even when it’s unpopular.

 

Posted 10/06/2021

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