Leadership Development Practices: Your First 30 Days of Integration

You don’t need a year. You need intention and 30 days.

I want to say that carefully, because it could easily sound like a weekend workshop promise. It isn’t.

The 30 days I’m describing won’t complete your development. They won’t resolve the tensions you’re holding or close the gaps your last 360 identified.

What they will do—if you stay with them—is shift how your leadership feels to you from the inside, which sits at the core of how to develop leadership integrity.

Most leadership development practices, including many leadership coaching practices, focus on adding new behaviors or frameworks. The approach here is slightly different. We’re working with attention, not accumulation.

Because with the Leadership Integrity Framework, you don’t need hours of journaling, a formal executive leadership development program, or quarterly retreats. What you do need are moments of conscious choice woven into what you’re already doing.

The practices here are designed to fit into your actual life as a senior leader. That means they work less like a list of leadership daily habits for executives and more like moments of deliberate attention woven into a real leadership context.

Why 30 Days, and What to Expect

The number is anything but arbitrary.

Neuroscience tells us that the brain responds to repetition. Because when you repeatedly focus attention on something, you strengthen the neural pathways that support new ways of seeing and responding.

If you’ve ever looked at a diet or a fitness plan, you may have noticed many habit frameworks suggest around three weeks. Similarly, programs for becoming a morning person or forming a new habit are often three to four weeks. That’s not a coincidence, and it’s not about marketing.

Research on neuroplasticity suggests new patterns start to feel available, not yet automatic but accessible, within three to four weeks. You’re not a master quite yet, but you’re closer to “I noticed I had a choice.” And that’s exactly what we’re building toward.

Weeks one and two are usually about awareness. You’ll catch yourself mid-pattern, mid-meeting, mid-decision, and recognize something you wouldn’t have named before.

This stage can feel uncomfortable because awareness without new behavior becomes self-consciousness. Stay with it anyway.

Weeks three and four are when awareness begins to carry weight. Not dramatically. More like: the choice feels real rather than theoretical.

The one thing 30 days won’t help you do is build a complete practice. But you are building the beginning of one. The distinction matters because the leaders I work with who get the most from this work stop expecting a destination and get genuinely curious about the process.

Each week focuses on one dimension of the Leadership Integrity Framework—Purpose, Presence, Partnership, and Perspective—so that by the end of the month you’ve experienced the full range of the work in practice.

Rather than introducing a long list of leadership development practices, this structure keeps the work focused and intentional.

Week One: Purpose

The first week focuses on reconnecting with what actually matters to you. Not your organization’s values statement, not the leadership principles on the wall, but the interior ground you stand on when everything else is in motion.

This is harder than it sounds for senior executives. At altitude, demands are relentless and feedback loops long. It becomes easy to operate from momentum, focusing on what needs to happen next rather than a genuine conviction about why it matters.

Purpose work is the practice of interrupting that momentum, briefly, and asking a more honest question.

Each day, choose one practice. You don’t need all of them, just one with genuine attention.

Before your first meeting on day one, ask yourself: “What do I actually believe about this?” Don’t think about what the situation requires or stakeholders expect. Focus on what you believe.

On day two, track a single moment when you acted from your values versus a moment when you acted from approval-seeking. Just notice the difference in how each felt.

Day three: name three values that are genuinely yours. Where did they show up in your leadership today?

Day four: identify a decision you’ve been avoiding. Ask what clarity, not comfort, wants you to do.

Day five: at the end of the day, ask when you felt most like yourself as a leader this week. No, this isn’t about when you felt ‌most effective, or productive. Most like yourself.

The question worth sitting with at the end of the week, on days six and seven: “Where is my leadership grounded? Where is it borrowed?”

Week Two: Presence

During the second week, we turn our attention outward. With one key aspect. You shouldn’t focus on what you’re doing, but on how you’re landing.

This is often where senior leaders encounter the most friction, because the gap between intention and impact can be significant and invisible.

You may be working hard to project steadiness while those around you are experiencing something different, like urgency, distance, or performance.

Presence work is about closing that gap, slowly, through deliberate attention to what you’re actually communicating beyond your words.

On day eight, before an important conversation, take three conscious breaths. Don’t think of it as a relaxation technique. It’s a way of arriving.

On day nine, ask someone you trust how they experienced your energy in a specific recent meeting. This requires real trust and a willingness to hear the answer.

Day 10 is when you should pay attention to your body during a conversation. What is your posture communicating? What is your face doing when someone else is talking?

On day 11, before sending a significant email, pause and look beyond the words you need to say, asking yourself how you want it to land.

Day 12: reflect on what others experienced from you this week that you didn’t intend.

That last one is the practice worth returning to even after this week ends. The gap between what we intend and what we transmit is where most presence work lives.

The weekend’s question: “Is my presence creating the impact I want?”

Week Three: Partnership

By this point, most leaders notice they’re seeing their relationships differently. There’s a quality of attention that starts to shift. Partnership work builds on that shift deliberately.

The focus here is on the relational field: the texture of trust, accountability, and genuine collaboration that either exists or doesn’t in the surrounding systems. Some will be tempted to think this is all about being warmer or more available. That’s not exactly true.

The goal is to understand what your relationships are actually built on and whether that foundation is strong enough for the work you’re asking people to do.

Start like this. On day 15, in one conversation, spend more time listening than talking. Think of it as an act of curiosity about what this person sees that you don’t.

Then, on day 16, ask a colleague what they need from you that they’re not getting. You might want to defend or explain yourself. Resist that urge.

On day 17, when you notice tension or conflict, ask what the relationship needs rather than what the situation requires. These are different questions, so the answers will likely also be very different.

On day 18, express genuine appreciation to someone whose contribution you’ve been taking for granted. And finally, on day nineteen, ask yourself who in your orbit needs your attention that you’ve been unconsciously avoiding.

During days 19 and 20, ponder the week’s question: “What are we building together? Is it actually what we want to be building?”

Week Four: Perspective

The final week works at altitude—at the level of patterns, systems, and the longer view that daily complexity tends to crowd out.

For action-oriented executives, Perspective work often feels the most counterintuitive of the four because it asks you to slow down the decision-making process at precisely the moment when speed feels most necessary. The practice doesn’t ask you to think more, but simply to think from a different level of the system.

So, on day 22, before a decision, ask what you’re not seeing. Don’t treat it as a rhetorical exercise. Sit it with it until an actual answer emerges.

Then, on day 23, map one problem you’re currently facing. Draw it out if it helps. What systems are involved? Who else is affected beyond the obvious stakeholders?

Day 24: ask someone who sees the situation differently what they notice that you might be missing. Then listen without immediately explaining your own view.

On day 25 zoom out. What will matter about this situation in six months? What about in six years? How does the answer change what you’d do today?

Finally, on day 26, ask what patterns you’re part of that you haven’t been naming out loud.
The questions to focus on at the end of this week are: “Where is my perspective serving the situation? Where is it limiting my view of it?”

Days 27–30, and What Comes After

The last four days are for integration rather than new practice. Now it’s time to look back across the month.

Which dimension felt the most natural? Where did the work feel more like remembering, and less like learning?

Which was the hardest, and what made it hard? What surprised you the most?

These questions are the beginning of understanding your own developmental edge more precisely. And that’s ultimately what makes the work sustainable.

Because there’s no graduation from this. The leaders I work with who develop the most over time aren’t the ones who complete the framework, but those who stay curious about it.

Those who keep asking which dimension is calling for attention as their context changes, who understand that integration is an ongoing practice and not a destination they’ll eventually reach.

The compound effect of small daily choices is real. It’s just slower and less dramatic than the development industry tends to advertise. Thirty days won’t completely transform you.

Thirty days of genuine attention, followed by another thirty, that’s where something changes.

We’ve put together a 30-Day Integration Tracker to help you stay intentional through the month. It’s a separate downloadable resource, and you can find it.

An Invitation

If you want the fuller picture of why these practices work, the theoretical foundation, and the extended stories of leaders doing this work in real conditions, it’s in Leadership Integrity: How to Stay Grounded, Build Trust, and Lead with Wholeness in Uncertain Times, available now.

The Leadership Signature Discovery will help you understand where to focus first, which dimension is your natural foundation, and which might be asking for more attention right now.

If you’re ready to go deeper, the MyWorldView® assessment offers something the quiz can’t: a developmental lens on how you make sense of complexity across all four dimensions. It’s still self-discovery, not a coaching engagement, but it’s supported by a structured digital debrief that helps you see patterns in your own thinking that are hard to notice from the inside. I use MyWorldView in my coaching practice because it reveals the meaning-making underneath the leadership, and that’s often where the most important growth edges live.

And if this way of thinking about leadership speaks to you, join our growing community of senior leaders exploring what integrated leadership actually means in practice. Thoughtful reflections, meaningful communication, not inbox clutter.

Thirty days. One conscious choice at a time.

Take the Next Step

Discover Your Leadership Signature

Not sure where to start? The LīF Assessment helps you identify which dimension is your natural strength right now.

Explore the Leadership Integrity Framework

Want to understand the four dimensions before you dive into the book? Start with the framework overview.

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