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Layer 4: Development
Organizations invest significant resources to hire talented people, then often fail to grow them. This layer is about becoming a multiplier: a leader who makes everyone around them smarter and more capable.
Development is not a separate activity bolted onto the other three layers. It is the mechanism through which clarity and alignment propagate. Leaders who coach well are literally how the cascade works. Every 1:1 conversation, every delegation decision, every piece of feedback either grows capacity or diminishes it.
The Coaching Stance
Default to asking, not telling. The goal is to help people access their own knowledge and develop their own plans.
Stanier's core questions are deceptively simple: “What’s on your mind?” “What’s the real challenge here for you?” “What do you want?” “What was most useful for you?”
The discipline: Stay curious a little longer. Rush to action a little slower.
Wiseman's multiplier practices build on each other: start with the mindset shift to change how you show up:
Wiseman's multiplier practices build on each other: start with the mindset shift to change how you show up:
- "Create space for others to contribute. Don't fill the air." This is a touchstone whether in a quarterly strategic check-in or a 1:1.
- Your monthly problem-solving meetings will improve if you "Ask questions that make people think harder, not questions that lead them to your answer" and "Invest in debate and constructive conflict. The goal is the best answer, not the fastest one."
- And finally, in line with the very practical advice from "The Effective Manager": "Give ownership of problems, not just tasks" and "Expect people's best work and hold them to it." If you've spent the time on Layers 1 & 2 (Clarity and Alignment) your people will know what they are doing and why, and you'll know this because of their back-brief telling you what they're going to do and how.
You’ll know this is working when your team starts solving problems you didn’t assign, when meetings generate better ideas than you’d have come up with alone, and when people seek out stretch assignments rather than waiting to be told what to do.
The Cascade
This framework isn’t just for the top team. Each leadership layer applies the same system to their own team:
Level 1: Executive team establishes clarity on the six questions
Level 2: Each executive briefs their leadership team and receives back-briefs
Level 3: Each leader applies the same cycle to their teams
Result: Aligned intent flows through the organization; commitment and feedback flow back up.
The cascade only works if every leader in it is doing this. That's what implementation actually requires.
Now that we've covered all four layers, the next question is how to actually implement them without losing momentum. That's what the first 90 days looks like.
The cascade only works if every leader in it is doing this. That's what implementation actually requires.
Now that we've covered all four layers, the next question is how to actually implement them without losing momentum. That's what the first 90 days looks like.
References: The Coaching Habit (Michael Bungay Stanier); Multipliers (Liz Wiseman); The Effective Manager (Mark Horstman, Kate Braun, and Sarah Sentes)