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Why Perfectionism is a Leadership Problem with James Cleverly

  1. Why Perfectionism is a Leadership Problem with James Cleverly Evergreen Podcasts 21:15

Is admitting a mistake a sign of weakness or a leadership superpower? In this episode of Connected Leadership Bytes, Andy Lopata reaches into the archive to share a fascinating conversation with James Cleverly MP.

Cleverly explores the “artificiality” of politics—a world where a simple “I’ll check those figures and get back to you” can be framed as a lack of credibility, and any change of course is branded a ” U-turn.” Drawing from his background in the military and business, he contrasts these rigid expectations with other industries where making mistakes is seen as a vital part of the evolutionary process.

James discusses the anatomy of a political car crash, to reveal how “clever people in closed rooms” accidentally create echo chambers. Discover why leaders often fail to press the “stop button” even when they see a disaster coming, and learn how to balance the need for speed with the vital necessity of a “periodic sanity check.”

What you will learn in this episode

1. The Pivot vs. The Scandal: Why is a “course correction” celebrated in startups but punished in leadership—and how is this mindset stifling your team’s Growth?

2. The “Clever People” Trap: How small, high-performing teams accidentally “plug themselves into the matrix” and ignore the elephant in the room.

3. The Anatomy of a Car Crash: Discover the five or six specific points in every decision where a simple intervention could have prevented total failure.

4. The Aeronautical Safety Lesson: Why adding too many “safety valves” to your leadership process might actually make your organisation too heavy to fly.

5. The Art of “Rolling the Pitch”: Why you should never present a solution until you have achieved a collective agreement on the parameters of the problem.

Actionable Insights

1. Schedule a “Sanity Check”: To avoid echo chambers, ensure that your decision-making process includes an explicit phase where the team must “unplug from the matrix” and seek a blunt, external perspective. Ask: “Am I the only one who thinks this is bonkers?”

2. Reward the “Stop Button”: Build a culture where team members feel empowered to pause a process if a fact or figure “doesn’t feel right.” In high-stakes environments, the confidence to intervene is more valuable than the speed of implementation.

3. Frame Mistakes with the 80/10/10 Rule: When correcting a policy or project, frame it logically: “80% is working brilliantly, 10% is adequate, and 10% needs adjustment.” This shifts the narrative from a “failure” to a pragmatic optimisation.

Connect with Andy Lopata: Website | Instagram | LinkedIn | X/Twitter | YouTube

Connect with James Cleverly: Website |LinkedIn |

The Financial Times Guide to Mentoring

Episode 164 Featuring James Cleverly

Andy Lopata Author, Podcast Host and Speaker on Professional Relationships Strategy

Andy Lopata is a specialist speaker on professional relationships, mentoring, networking, and social media strategy. He is a firm believer that professional relationships underpin our success in business, our roles, and our careers. The right relationships with the right people can lead to new business opportunities, investment, collaborative working, innovation, and career progress. We just need to be comfortable approaching those relationships strategically, without making people feel ‘networked’ by us.

Andy has worked in the field of networking and professional relationships for 25 years, working with global giants such as Paypal, GSK, AstraZeneca, Wella, HSBC, Wembley Stadium, the BBC, and the Prime Minister’s Office of the UAE, among many others during that time. He has also worked with leading universities including NYU, Duke University, and Oxford University’s Said Business School.

A regular blogger for Psychology Today, Andy has been quoted in The Sunday Times, The Financial Times, and The Guardian, as well as many other national and regional newspapers and magazines worldwide. He has written or co-authored six books on networking and professional relationships, with his sixth book, "The Financial Times Guide to Mentoring," being published in Spring 2024. He is also the host of The Connected Leadership Podcast and has interviewed globally recognized names in business, academia, sports, and entertainment for the show.

Andy has been inducted into the PSAE Hall of Fame – the Professional Speaking Association Award of Excellence, which was held by only 21 other speakers at the time it was presented. He is a Fellow and a former President of the Fellows’ Community of the Professional Speaking Association (PSA), a Fellow of the Learning and Performance Institute (LPI), and a Member of the Association of Business Mentors and the Meetings Industry Association.