This sounds patently obvious.
But over the last 25 years working with CEOs and corporations around the world I’ve seen numerous examples of leadership teams failing, not because they lack effort, but because they’ve made the wrong diagnosis.
Revenue declines, profitability wanes, and leaders move quickly to cut costs, review pricing, change operating models, reengineer processes, push harder, and even call in, often t considerable expense, strategic advisors to drive a company-wide restructuring.
Confidence briefly rises as activity increases. A sort of placebo effect.
And then… nothing really changes.
This is the definition of going nowhere, fast.
Momentum stalls not because leaders moved too slowly, but because their diagnosis was wrong. When action doesn’t match the true source of the blockage, even brilliant execution produces mediocre results.
The real accelerator is not speed. It’s precision.
Complex organisational challenges rarely live in one place. Yet most responses assume they do.
Poor execution is treated as a capability issue.
A breakdown in trust is treated as a communication problem.
A stalled strategy is treated as a planning failure.
Each response is logical, and often wrong.
What’s missing is a way of seeing the whole system at once, without collapsing complexity or defaulting to habit. This is precisely why our I/WE/IT map sits at the heart of the 4D Leadership approach.
Not as a conceptual framework, but as a practical diagnostic.
The I/WE/IT map helps organisations see every leadership challenge in the three domains in which it really exists:
I - the individual leader
The quality of thinking about the problem by individual leaders is crucial to rapid resolution. The maturity level, emotional regulation, energy management and mindset of each leader will determine the speed of execution. Under pressure, the “I” capability determines whether a leader can think clearly at all.
WE - the relational and cultural field
On big complex issues keeping everyone aligned and motivated is vital to moving quickly. This means the quality of relationship and the strength of the social bonds is commercially critical. The levels of trust, how well a team handles conflict, the power dynamics in the room, and the quality of dialogue are key. Teams don’t operate at the level of their intent; they operate at the level of their relational maturity.
IT - the systems, strategy and decision-making frameworks
The leadership team MUST think strategically. Creating a compelling future that has been adequately pressure tested is vital to inspiring and mobilising the workforce, and the customer base. Building smart structures to deliver this strategy with efficient high-speed decision-making forums and workflows is non-negotiable. This must be bolstered by precision on the ambition, purpose and vision and brutal prioritisation of operational activity.
Without such systemic precision even the most committed people will fail. Most organisations focus, almost exclusively, on operational, not strategic, challenges. Their focus is one-dimensional, the short-term, operational IT.
But world class organisations develop the ability see and manage all three together. This is where I/WE/IT diagnosis becomes decisive rather than slow.
There’s a second dimension that leaders often overlook. It’s not just whether the challenges they face sit in the I, WE, or IT domain.
But what level of capability the leadership team is currently operating from in the I/WE/IT domains. Two leaders can face the same problem and experience it very differently.
One is overwhelmed. The other sees options immediately. The difference is not intelligence or experience. It’s developmental maturity. As leaders develop, their capacity expands:
This matters because every intervention must match both the domain and the level.
When leaders feel they are “working hard but going nowhere,” this is almost always the reason.
When leaders use the I/WE/IT map properly, something shifts. They stop debating symptoms. They stop oscillating between people fixes and process fixes. They stop over-investing in effort.
Instead, they ask better questions:
From here, action becomes faster, not slower. Because once the blockage is correctly located, the intervention becomes obvious. Confidence grows not because the reassurance is higher, but because the logic is sound.
Leaders tell me every day that they want to move faster.
What they usually mean is that they want less friction, fewer reversals, and fewer “why didn’t that work?” moments.
Speed is not created by urgency.
It’s created by alignment.
As leaders and teams develop:
This is why development is not a “nice to have” alongside performance.
It is THE performance strategy.
The most effective teams don’t launch programmes immediately.
They act precisely and early.
Once a diagnosis is clear across I, WE, and IT, and matched to the right level of capability, a single, well-chosen intervention within the first week often unlocks disproportionate movement.
Not because it solves everything, but because it shifts the system in the right direction.
From there, momentum becomes self-reinforcing.
If your organisation feels busy but not faster, active but not effective, the issue is rarely commitment or competence.
It is almost always diagnosis.
When leaders learn to see clearly, across self, relationships, and systems, action becomes simpler, confidence steadier, and results accelerate naturally.
If you’re curious about how this I/WE/IT map applies to your leadership team, or how developmental work can unlock speed without pressure, speak to us it may be the most useful conversation you have this year.