Where The Honesty Happens Matters

A sealed bottle of water will break even the strongest containers when placed in a freezer and allowed to expand. The extra pressure created just has to come out, one way or another.

The same is true for honest feedback, critique and assessment. The real question in your organization is … where does it come out?

In the knowledge age, corporate battles are won through creative thinking and fresh human innovation, not by bending steel or cutting costs. Accordingly, business cultures that support, nurture, and harness their team’s best creative ideas are the winners of photo-finish victories. Creative ideas are rarely born as fully developed and fully defensible. Rather, they are nascent sparks that must be refined and shaped to bring their full power to life. Unfortunately, many organizations neuter their best ideas because politics impede honest feedback that could help jettison mediocre concepts.

A good barometer to gauge the potency of your creative culture is to observe where the honesty happens. In many hierarchical structures, sycophants quickly nod their heads to the boss’s idea, holding their own opinions back instead of challenging and elevating the ideation process. Like the frozen water, the honesty must come out somewhere, so it ends up spewing out as finger-pointing criticism among colleagues at the water cooler or the nearby lunch joint.

If the organization has reached a Defcon 5 level of dysfunction, honesty among colleagues becomes too risky and the distance for its release expands outside company walls to neighborhoods, sharing concerns with friends and family. If authentic relationships are void at that level, honest feedback gets released to therapists, strangers at the bar or as anonymous blog posts.

The key point is that the further the honesty is removed from the source, the worse it is for everyone. The bitch-and-moan club produces no tangible results, and isn’t even fulfilling for its participants.

As leaders in our organizations and communities, we must work hard to structure cultures and relationships that revere honest feedback rather than punish it. If thoughtful and candid feedback happens in real time at the point of ignition, creativity and results both soar. Unproductive gossip helps no one. Let’s insist on sharing candid and direct viewpoints in order to drive progress. Proximity matters. After all, wouldn’t you want someone to point out you have spinach in your teeth instead of laughing about it later behind your back?

Fight to move the honesty close to the source and you’ll enjoy a significant boost in performance. Honest.

Read More

Top CEO Keynote Speakers for 2026

Introduction CEO keynote speakers bring direct operating experience to the stage, which is something career speakers just cannot match. They have built companies, managed employees, ...

The True Impact of AI on Education

Introduction Every time I speak about education these days, I get some version of the question: "How do we stop students from using AI to ...

Top AI & Future Tech Keynote Speakers for 2026

Introduction Artificial intelligence has moved from the edges of corporate strategy to the center of it. In 2026, virtually every industry, from financial services and ...

Why Emotional Intelligence Matters for Business Leaders

Introduction I've spent most of my career surrounded by smart people, and it’s true that none of them got where they are by lacking intellect ...

How to Choose the Right Keynote Speaker for Your Event

Introduction Having delivered over 1,300 keynote speeches around the world, I’ve been involved in my fair share of speaker selection processes for corporate events, and ...

How to Master Change and Uncertainty

Introduction Every leader I work with is navigating some version of the same challenge right now, trying to figure out how to best navigate volatile ...

The Best AI Transformation Frameworks for 2026

Introduction Almost every leadership team I work with right now is trying to figure out how to actually transform their organization with AI. Not just ...

Building an Ethical Culture of Innovation

Introduction I recently read The New Yorker’s piece questioning whether Sam Altman can be trusted to lead OpenAI, given the importance of the company’s technology. ...

AI in Your Industry: CPG and Retail

About the Author Josh Linkner is a five-time tech entrepreneur, New York Times bestselling author, keynote speaker, and globally recognized innovation expert. He has founded ...