Description du livre
The quiet leader's playbook: leadership for introverts, a management book for listeners, and a field guide to leading teams without performing — for thoughtful managers told they should be louder, more visible, more something.
The first time the author sat in on a leadership offsite as a coach, the most effective person in the room said almost nothing for ninety minutes. A vice president named Priya listened, wrote down two short phrases, and then asked one clean question: "I think we're solving the wrong problem. Can I ask you something?" Forty minutes later the team had rewritten its plan for the quarter. After thirteen years coaching heads of operations, engineering directors, and founders who think before they speak, Maren Olufsen has watched this scene play out again and again. Their quiet style is not a workaround. It is, in many of the situations that matter most, the thing that is actually working.
This is not the introvert-as-secret-hero pep talk. It is a working field guide for the manager who wants to lead in their own way and still get better at it. The book argues that influence is not volume, that listening is a trainable skill rather than a personality trait, and that calm is a strategic asset rather than a temperament defect. Across twenty-two chapters and seventeen appendices, this leadership for introverts manual covers the one-on-one that other managers skip, feedback that lands without crushing, hiring quietly, managing up to a loud boss, staying steady under pressure, and building a quiet-friendly team culture. Every chapter ends with a concrete "Try this:" practice you can run this week.
Inside this quiet leadership and management book:
Speak less, say more — Why share of voice is a poor proxy for influence, and the three-rule method one engineering VP used to go from invisible to "the most useful person in the room" without speaking more
The one-on-one that other managers skip — How to run the single most underused leadership format, the home court of the quiet manager, including the five-minute carry-over habit that flipped a team's view of a director who "didn't listen"
Feedback that lands without crushing — The three-part structure (observation, impact, question) that makes hard feedback specific instead of vague, because specificity is the kindness and vagueness is the cruelty disguised as kindness
The hard conversation you keep postponing — How to have it while it is still small, and how to walk into the large version with one frame and two anchors instead of a six-month grievance
Hiring quietly — Why introverts run better interviews, the silence move that surfaces a candidate's most honest sentence, and the "walk me through your week" question candidates cannot rehearse
Managing up to a loud boss — How to name how you work as operating information, and win arguments in writing that you would lose in real time
The quiet leader under pressure — Why steadiness reads as steadiness, not indifference, and how to communicate calm instead of performing it through a crisis, layoff, or acquisition
This is leadership for introverts that does not ask you to fake a personality. It asks you to build a method that fits the way your mind and body actually work, and to sustain it over a thirty- or forty-year career without burning out or losing yourself. The promise is not a transformation into someone on a stage. It is a version of you that fits, that produces strong teams and durable trust, and that, as the author writes, makes the loud-leader picture irrelevant.
For readers of Susan Cain's Quiet and Michael Bungay Stanier's The Coaching Habit.