Scoopfeeds — Intelligent news, curated.
Moving From I To We
business

Moving From I To We

Forbes · Jun 24, 2026, 2:48 PM

Key takeaways

  • Learn more.This voice experience is generated by AI.
  • It’s critical to break down siloes before the project gets busy.
  • But eventually, that lone-wolf instinct will become your ceiling.

Learn more.This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more.Summary Successful business growth demands a shift from lone-wolf leadership to a team-first approach. Relying on individual heroics eventually creates silos and unsustainable "move fast and break things" cultures. Instead, organizations must foster alignment, communication, and shared accountability. Leaders need to prioritize collective outcomes over departmental convenience, breaking down silos before projects begin. Practical strategies include cross-functional project mapping, which clarifies sequences, handoffs, and ownership, ensuring shared visibility and reducing friction. Embracing shared wins and misses, like in sports, normalizes accountability. Understanding complementary strengths through tools like DiSC also builds diverse, effective teams.

It’s critical to break down siloes before the project gets busy. To do this, you need leaders who decide that the team’s result matters more than departmental convenience.gettyWhenever your business grows, the kind of leadership you need changes, and the leader you must become evolves. In the beginning, if you’re young and determined, you can carry a lot of the weight on your shoulders.

But eventually, that lone-wolf instinct will become your ceiling. This is why organizations that scale best do not celebrate the hero who runs ahead alone. They build teamwork in business by making alignment, communication, and shared accountability part of the operating model.

Article preview — originally published by Forbes. Full story at the source.
Read full story on Forbes → More top stories
Aggregated and edited by the Scoop newsroom. We surface news from Forbes alongside other reporting so you can compare coverage in one place. Editorial policy · Corrections · About Scoop