Respect in the workplace is often spoken about as though it is secondary to “real” leadership priorities. Organisations place it inside value statements, culture decks, onboarding sessions, and behavioural frameworks, often treating it as a desirable tone rather than a foundational leadership capability. It becomes something associated with politeness, professionalism, or interpersonal style rather than something deeply connected to organisational performance itself.
But respect is not a soft extra.
It is the operating condition that determines whether trust can exist at all inside a team, whether psychological safety becomes real rather than performative, whether challenge can occur without fear, and whether people feel psychologically secure enough to contribute their best thinking rather than merely their compliance.
Without respect, organisations may still achieve short-term execution. People may still meet deadlines, attend meetings, and perform tasks. But the deeper conditions required for sustained trust, innovation, ownership, and resilient collaboration begin deteriorating quietly underneath the surface.
Subscribe to continue reading
Become a paid subscriber to get access to the rest of this post and other exclusive content.
