Why Most Leadership Development Fails (And What Actually Works)
Organizations spend billions on leadership development. Most studies agree that the range is somewhere around $370 billion annually worldwide. The results, though, are far less impressive than the invoice.
According to McKinsey, only 11% of executives strongly agree that their leadership development interventions achieve and sustain the desired results. A separate survey of CEOs cited in the same research found that just 7% believe their companies are building effective global leaders.
Other industry research, including DDI’s Global Leadership Forecast, converges on the same uncomfortable conclusion: leadership development effectiveness is questionable, and most programs don’t produce meaningful, lasting change.
The worst part is that the people running these programs are often aware of this reality. The executives sitting through them suspect it as well.
And yet the industry keeps growing, the programs keep running, and the gap between what’s promised and what’s delivered stays roughly where it’s always been. Because the real problem is neither the effort nor the budget. It’s the model.

