Hi {{ subscriber.first_name }},

On paper, it looked like the dream team.

Every member was an A-player — experienced, sharp, proven.

But when the pressure hit, the team cracked.

I’ve seen this pattern repeat across industries — from tech to energy to finance. High-performing doesn’t mean unbreakable. And the cause is almost never capability. It’s ego.

When ego becomes louder than purpose, collaboration collapses.

It doesn’t happen overnight. It happens quietly — through small signals leaders often miss:

  • The guarded silence in meetings
  • The subtle competition for credit
  • The defensiveness when challenged.

The result? Alignment fades, trust erodes, and execution slows down.

Ego in teams isn’t about arrogance.

It’s about self-protection — the fear of losing status, control, or visibility. That fear grows in high-performance cultures that celebrate outcomes over openness.

So how do great leaders stop ego from breaking their best teams? They don’t suppress it. They redirect it.

Here are five ways world-class leaders keep performance steady under pressure:

  1. Reset clarity often. In calm waters, alignment feels automatic. In turbulence, it drifts fast. The best CEOs run short “rapid reset” sessions weekly to clarify goals and ownership. It’s not about control — it’s about coherence.
  2. Make conflict productive. Avoiding conflict kills progress. Invite it. One CEO I coach starts meetings with: “Who disagrees with me?” That single question changes the tone — disagreement becomes contribution, not defiance.
  3. Reward collaboration, not stardom. If you only celebrate individual wins, you feed ego. One pharma CEO I advised created a “One Company Award” to honor cross-functional success. Within months, silos softened, and teamwork became status.
  4. Protect psychological safety. High performers often hide uncertainty to protect their image. Great leaders go first — they show vulnerability, admit what they don’t know, and ask for help. It sets the tone for truth.
  5. Reconnect purpose under pressure. In hard times, people forget why they’re doing the work. Purpose is the quiet anchor that keeps teams aligned when results fluctuate. Remind them of the mission — not the metrics.

Ego will always exist in high-performing teams.

The difference is whether it’s managed or multiplied.

When purpose leads, ego follows. When ego leads, everything else fractures.

Andrea Petrone

CEO Whisperer | Top 1% Executive Coach and Speaker in the UK | Founder of WCL.

You need more? Here are other ways to get value from what I do:

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