Leadership expert and President of LearnToLead, Dave Anderson, delivers a pointed reality check for new and aspiring managers: being handed a title isn’t a declaration of competence—it’s a countdown to prove it. On today’s episode of Lessons in Leadership, Anderson urges dealers to challenge the illusion that promotions equal preparedness and to focus instead on developing the real-world skills that make leadership meaningful.
Firstly, Anderson starts with a cautionary message about what he calls “the delusion of titles.” Whether someone has just been promoted or is promoting someone else, titles can easily distort perceptions of competence. “A title doesn’t make you a leader,” Anderson explains. “It buys you time to become one, to get the job done—or to blow it.”
In addition, Anderson warns against assuming that a change in title automatically grants someone the skills required for their new role. The more dangerous misconception, he says, is when managers give someone a title and believe they’ve also given them the capability to lead, without providing development, support, or accountability.
He stresses the importance of investing in skill-building during any transition to a new role. Moving from “X to Y to Z,” as he puts it, requires deliberate growth—not just a title update. This includes:
- Learning how to interview and recruit effectively.
- Deliver skillful feedback.
- Establish vision and tactics.
- Conduct one-on-one coaching conversations.
- Lead productive meetings.
Anderson urges managers to roll up their sleeves and help new leaders develop the right skills, habits, and mindset. By doing so, organizations can keep their leaders humble, hungry, and in a state of continuous growth. The title alone is not the achievement—it’s the starting point.
"That title doesn't make you a leader. It buys you time to become one, buys you time to get the job done or to blow it, to earn influence or to lose it." – Dave Anderson