Welcome back to Relationships At Work – A leadership podcast helping you build workplace connection, improve culture, and avoid blind spots. I’m your host Russel Lolacher
I’m a communications and leadership nerd with a couple of decades of experience and a heap of curiosity on how we can make the workplace better.
This mini-episode is a quick and valuable bit of information to help your mindset for the week ahead.
Inspired by our R@W Note Newsletter, I’m passing on to you…
Imagine you’re driving down a familiar road and suddenly come across a pothole. To drive through it, there’s a risk of damage to your vehicle, so you have a choice. You can either drive on or turn back. It’s simple metaphor but it tells the story of something that creeps up in leadership – aversion vs awareness. In this story….
Both mindsets recognize the exact same problem. But only one still gets you where you need to go, or tries to get you there. And that’s the story of leadership far more often than we admit.
Risk is present in every project, every strategy, every conversation with a team member who needs something different than what you’ve always offered. It’s part of culture shifts, new ideas, and maybe most importantly—how your people decide whether to stay or go. But how we interpret that risk? That’s where leadership either unlocks progress, or quietly stalls it out.
Risk Aversion – This is the instinct to avoid uncertainty altogether. It sounds like:
It’s an emotional reflex disguised as strategy. And while it feels protective, it usually protects the wrong things—comfort, routine, the status quo. Not outcomes. Not people. Not culture. Risk aversion kills innovation and suffocates engagement. It allows problems to continue and can convince top performers that the only place they’ll ever get to stretch, experiment, or grow… is elsewhere.
Risk Awareness – This is the mindset that says: “I see the risk. I understand it. And now I can make an informed, intentional decision about how to move forward.” It sounds like:
This approach isn’t reckless. It’s responsible. It’s measured. It acknowledges potholes without letting them become roadblocks. This mindset strengthens trust because it creates clarity, invites collaboration, and shows your team that progress is not just allowed—it’s expected.
In the workplace, risk aversion looks like:
And inevitably, it shows up in your leadership ecosystem: Innovation slows. People disengage. Retention drops. Culture stagnates.
Meanwhile, risk awareness allows us to know identify the problem and adjust according, leading to better questions, planning, collaboration, adaptability, and outcomes. And here’s the real kicker: Your team always knows which mindset you’re operating from.
They can tell when your decisions are grounded in awareness vs. fear. They can feel when ideas are welcomed or pre-dismissed. They can sense when leadership is more interested in managing than leading.
I’ve seen it erode the trust in leaders because everyone knew that progress would never be made. People actually trusted them NOT to move the organization forward. Not the kind of trust we aim for as leaders.
Keep in mind, our people don’t need us to be fearless. They need us to be aware… and moving forward.
The road ahead will always have potholes. That’s not the problem. The problem is when we treat every bump as a barricade instead of information. Awareness lets us adapt. Aversion keeps us stuck. And teams can feel the difference long before leaders admit it.
So how’s this: stay in motion. Stay curious. Stay awake to what’s possible. Your organization—and the people in it—are counting on you to lead… and we aren’t leading if we’re standing still.