The Competence Crisis in Leadership
The Competence Crisis in Leadership
Why Your Most Capable Leaders May Become Your Greatest Obstacles to Change, What Happens When Professional Identity Is Built on Expertise That Transformation Renders Obsolete, and How to Navigate the Psychology of Leadership Development During Disruption
When Excellence Becomes the Enemy of Change
One of the most counterintuitive phenomena in organizational transformation is how the leaders who excelled in the old paradigm often become the most significant obstacles to the new one. This isn’t because they’re resistant to change as a personality trait or because they don’t intellectually understand why transformation is necessary. It’s because transformation threatens something far deeper than their current role: it threatens their professional identity itself.
Leaders don’t simply possess capabilities. They identify with them. The leader who built a career on operational excellence doesn’t merely have operations skills. “Operations excellence” is a core element of who they understand themselves to be. When transformation requires fundamentally different capabilities, it’s not just asking leaders to learn new skills. It’s asking them to become different people. This identity threat explains resistance patterns that seem irrational from the outside but make complete psychological sense from the inside.
Research on identity and change shows that threats to core identity elements generate far more intense psychological responses than threats to peripheral elements. A leader asked to change their meeting schedule will adapt. A leader asked to become someone who values collaboration over individual achievement, when their entire career was built on individual achievement, faces a fundamentally different kind of challenge.
Is Competence Identity Blocking Your Transformation?
Our assessment evaluates how leadership identity dynamics may be affecting your organization’s transformation capacity.
The Psychology of Competence Identity
Understanding why capable leaders struggle with transformation requires understanding how competence becomes woven into professional identity over time.
The Identity Investment Paradox
Leaders who were most successful in the previous paradigm have the most invested in that paradigm’s continuation. Their promotions, their reputation, and their sense of professional self-worth all derive from excellence in capabilities that transformation may render less valuable. This creates a cruel paradox: the highest performers in the old world may become the most problematic resistors in the new one, precisely because they have more to lose.
Consider a sales leader who built their career on relationship-based selling over decades. They became VP of Sales because nobody could work a room as they could, nobody had their client relationships, nobody could close deals through personal connection the way they could. Now the organization transforms toward data-driven, technology-enabled sales approaches. The new paradigm doesn’t just require new skills. It devalues the very capabilities that defined this leader’s professional identity.
Learning Anxiety in Leaders
Edgar Schein’s research on organizational change identified “learning anxiety” as a primary obstacle to transformation: the fear of being incompetent during the learning process. This anxiety operates more powerfully at senior levels because leaders have more invested in their competent identity and more to lose from visible struggles.
Leaders are accustomed to being the experts in the room. Their authority partly derives from knowing things others don’t know and being able to do things others can’t do. Learning, by definition, requires being temporarily incompetent. Leaders must move through a period of not knowing, of making mistakes, of needing help from people they’re supposed to lead. This prospect can be terrifying for people whose professional identity depends on being the capable one.
Learning anxiety often manifests not as explicit resistance but as avoidance strategies that seem reasonable on the surface. The leader who’s “too busy with current priorities” to attend training. The executive who delegates transformation implementation to subordinates. The manager who criticizes transformation approaches without offering alternatives. These behaviors may reflect learning anxiety more than strategic disagreement.
Research Insight: The Expertise Trap
Studies show that deep expertise can actually impair adaptation to new paradigms. Experts develop mental models that work efficiently within their domain but can blind them to patterns outside that domain. The same expertise that enabled past success can become a cognitive prison during transformation.
The Expert Trap
Leaders who reached senior positions through deep domain expertise face particular challenges during transformation. Their expertise, which was an asset in stable environments, can become a liability during change.
When Deep Knowledge Becomes Deep Blindness
Expertise develops through pattern recognition within a domain. Experts see things novices miss because their brains have been trained to recognize significant patterns quickly. But this same pattern recognition can prevent experts from seeing possibilities that fall outside their trained frameworks. The expert in traditional financial services may literally not be able to see the fintech threat that’s obvious to those without deep industry knowledge, because their expertise-trained pattern recognition filters it out as noise.
Research on expert cognition shows that experts in stable domains develop what psychologists call “functional fixedness”: the tendency to see objects and situations only in terms of their familiar functions. This cognitive efficiency becomes costly when transformation requires seeing familiar elements in fundamentally new ways.
The Expertise Entitlement Problem
Leaders who built careers on expertise often believe, at some level, that their expertise should guide organizational decisions. This belief isn’t necessarily arrogant. It’s a reasonable conclusion from their experience: their expertise has consistently produced better outcomes than non-expert judgment. The problem arises when transformation changes what kind of expertise matters.
When expert leaders resist transformation, they’re often not being cynically self-protective. They genuinely believe their expertise provides better guidance than the transformation direction offers. They’ve spent decades learning that their judgment is reliable within their domain. Accepting that transformation requires different expertise means accepting that their judgment may not be reliable in the new context. This is a difficult psychological transition that many expert leaders struggle to make.
The Status Threat
Transformation often reshuffles organizational status hierarchies. People who held power and influence in the old paradigm may find themselves less central in the new one. This status threat generates defensive behaviors that can undermine transformation, even when leaders don’t consciously recognize that status protection is driving their responses.
Status Defense Mechanisms
Leaders facing status threats often engage in behaviors that protect their position without explicitly opposing transformation. They may emphasize past accomplishments as evidence of ongoing value. They may dismiss new capabilities as fads or overcorrections. They may position themselves as wise skeptics, asking important questions while actually slowing progress through endless questioning. They may subtly undermine colleagues who possess transformation-relevant capabilities that they lack.
These status defense mechanisms often operate below conscious awareness. The leader genuinely believes they’re providing valuable skepticism rather than protecting threatened status. This makes the behaviors difficult to address directly because the leader experiences confrontation as unfair criticism of their legitimate contributions.
The Status Inversion Problem
Transformation sometimes creates status inversions where previously junior people gain influence because they possess transformation-relevant capabilities that senior leaders lack. The data analyst who understands the new systems becomes more valuable than the vice president who doesn’t. The younger manager, comfortable with digital tools, becomes the expert while the experienced executive becomes the student.
These inversions can feel deeply unfair to leaders who earned their status through years of demonstrated performance. They may intellectually understand why the inversions are occurring while emotionally experiencing them as injustice. This sense of injustice can generate resistance that seems disproportionate to the specific changes involved because it’s not really about those changes. It’s about fundamental questions of how value and status should be determined.
Addressing the Competence Crisis
Create psychological safety: Leaders need assurance that learning struggles won’t undermine their standing or career prospects.
Model learning from the top: When senior executives visibly struggle and learn, it signals that learning is acceptable at all levels.
Reframe development: Position transformation capabilities as additions to the leadership toolkit rather than replacements for existing strengths.
Provide development before demand: Invest in capability building before expecting new capabilities to be demonstrated.
What Organizations Can Do
Addressing the competence crisis requires approaches that recognize its identity dimensions rather than treating it as simply a skills gap to be filled.
Creating Psychological Safety for Leaders
Much attention has been paid to creating psychological safety for teams during transformation. Less attention has been paid to psychological safety for leaders. Yet leaders facing competence threats need safety as much as anyone. They need to know that learning struggles won’t be held against them, that asking for help won’t undermine their authority, and that admitting confusion is acceptable.
Creating this safety requires visible modeling from the highest levels. When CEOs publicly acknowledge what they don’t understand and ask for help, it signals that learning is acceptable at all levels. When senior leaders share their own transformation struggles, it normalizes the experience for others. This modeling must be genuine rather than performative. Leaders quickly recognize the difference.
Development Approaches That Work
Effective leader development during transformation differs from traditional training approaches. Peer learning cohorts allow leaders to struggle together rather than in isolation. Coaching relationships provide private space to work through identity challenges that can’t be safely explored in public settings. Framing matters enormously: positioning new capabilities as expanding the leadership toolkit rather than replacing existing strengths reduces identity threat.
Transformation timelines must account for development time. Expecting leaders to demonstrate new capabilities before they’ve had a genuine opportunity to develop them sets everyone up for failure. Development investments should precede implementation demands rather than being added when leaders start struggling.
Honest Assessment
Not every leader will successfully navigate competence transitions. Some will adapt and thrive. Some will struggle but eventually develop. Some will remain stuck in old capabilities regardless of development support. Organizations that successfully transform are honest about these different trajectories rather than pretending that all leaders will come along if given enough time and support.
This honest assessment serves both organizational effectiveness and individual well-being. Leaders stuck in roles that require capabilities they can’t develop often suffer more than leaders who move to positions better matched to their strengths. Compassionate honesty about capability fit is kinder in the long run than indefinite accommodation that serves neither party.
Take Action: Navigate the Competence Crisis
Continue the Series
Read the complete Change Leadership series for deeper insights into transformation psychology
The competence crisis in leadership represents one of the most challenging aspects of organizational transformation because it touches on identity rather than merely skills. Capability gaps cannot be resolved through exhortation, incentives, or accountability systems that treat them as performance problems. They require genuine development that addresses the underlying identity dynamics of competence threat, learning anxiety, and status protection.
Organizations that successfully navigate this challenge create conditions where leaders can develop new capabilities without threatening their sense of professional self. They invest in development before expecting demonstration. They create safety for learning struggles. They model vulnerability from the top. And they maintain honest conversations about capability fit that serve both organizational effectiveness and individual well-being.
Next in the series: We explore the paradox of transformation communication, examining why increasing communication during change often increases confusion rather than clarity, and what leaders can do to communicate in ways that actually support rather than undermine transformation success.

