When Experience Stops Speaking for Itself – How Authority Has Quietly Changed by Michelle Gines
- Brainz Magazine
- 20 hours ago
- 7 min read
Michelle “MG” Gines is a strategist, publisher, and executive advisor who helps leaders transform ideas into books, brands, and platforms. She brings two decades of digital strategy and purpose-driven leadership to authors, entrepreneurs, and organizations ready to elevate their impact.
Accomplished leaders often face a point when something familiar stops working. The work is still strong, judgment is deeper, and responsibility remains. Yet authority feels less visible, and access to influences is more complex.

This is not a personal failing. It signals a shift in how leadership authority is recognized. In this article, I explain why experience alone no longer defines authority and how quietly successful leaders can assert themselves with clarity and confidence, without becoming louder or sacrificing their grounding. Specifically, I'll share practical strategies to articulate experience effectively, helping you anticipate actionable value and set clear expectations for your leadership journey.
What authority used to mean in leadership
Early in my career, authority came from tenure, proximity, and consistency. Leaders earned trust by staying, delivering over time, and carrying responsibility through complexity. Credibility developed slowly, often without explanation.
There was an adage repeated often: keep your head down, do good work, and it will speak for itself. In many leadership environments, that approach worked. The context lived in the room, history filled in the gaps. Authority accumulated quietly.[1]
This model shaped a generation of professionals who valued depth over display and contribution over commentary. Leadership authority was assumed rather than articulated.
That model no longer operates the same way.
Why experience alone no longer defines authority
Experience has not lost value, but authority is now recognized only when that experience is made explicit. For example, a recent Deloitte (2024) study found that leaders in remote and hybrid organizations who regularly explain the rationale for their decisions are perceived as more authoritative than those who rely solely on tenure or past achievements. This research highlights the changed context in which leadership is recognized, prompting a need to reconsider how authority is established and maintained in contemporary organizations.
Organizations are more distributed. Leadership teams are more fluid. Decisions are made quickly by those absent from earlier work or formative years. In these conditions, experience is no longer self-evident.
Today, authority is shaped by clarity. Leaders who explain complexity, frame decisions, and articulate judgment are more likely to be recognized and trusted, regardless of others' levels of experience.
When leadership experience remains unspoken, it stays private. When it is articulated with care, it becomes visible and transferable.
This shift does not reward noise. It rewards interpretation.
The confidence gap many leaders experience
For many seasoned professionals, this creates a quiet confidence gap, as influence becomes less predictable and recognition arrives unevenly. Self-doubt may arise even alongside strong leadership capability, and feelings of restlessness or a whisper of impostor syndrome can surface as leaders question their visibility. Importantly, these emotions do not reflect a lack of skill but signal shifting expectations in leadership authority. They are both common and temporary.[2] Leaders often misinterpret these feelings, assuming declining relevance, when in reality the criteria for recognizing leadership authority have changed. In this piece, I will share strategies to help navigate these transitions with confidence.
The gap is not about diminished value. The new challenge is that authority is earned through articulation, not just experience.
Without language, depth can look like absence. Without framing, wisdom can go unnoticed. Over time, leaders may withdraw, attempt visibility that feels forced or performative, or both. Neither response restores authority.[3] Radigan and colleagues further observe that leadership authority is shaped by a leader’s ability to express genuine concern, which encourages authentic self-expression among employees and helps align individual identities with their job roles. While tenure remains essential for building substance, how leaders communicate and connect is key to their authority, articulation allows that substance to travel.
For many quietly successful leaders, articulation feels uncomfortable. Those shaped by past models often see speaking about their work as self-promotion. But articulation is not exaggeration, it is translation.[4] To help ease this transition, consider starting with low-pressure articulation methods. Research supports the effectiveness of reflective writing as a means for leaders to articulate tacit knowledge and clarify their thinking in safe environments.[5] Reflective memos can provide a structured way to express insights without feeling overexposed. Mentoring, widely recognized for its reciprocal benefits, offers a natural setting to articulate your experiences in ways that benefit others and reinforce your authority.[6] Engaging in small group discussions can also provide an opportunity to share and refine your thoughts in a more intimate setting, as collaborative reflection has been shown to foster leadership development and shared understanding.[7] These approaches help demystify articulation, allowing it to feel more like an extension of your leadership rather than a forced performance.
I encountered this tension myself during a later professional chapter. The work was strong. The judgment is sharper than before. Yet fewer people understood the context behind my decisions. Authority had not disappeared, but it now required language.
Articulation means explaining why a decision matters, not just that it was made. It means naming patterns that feel obvious because you have lived them repeatedly.
This shift does not require becoming louder. It requires becoming clearer. Imagine adjusting a dimmer switch instead of flicking on stadium lights, a gradual, intentional increase in understanding rather than a sudden blast of noise. This way, your influence grows naturally and authentically.
Rethinking leadership visibility
Visibility is often misunderstood in leadership development conversations. According to Forbes, adequate leadership visibility is not about constant output, personal branding, or lack of humility. Instead, it involves being intentional and measured, speaking with discernment, focusing on clarity rather than sheer volume, and sharing perspectives thoughtfully. Effective articulation also benefits younger leaders. Articulation without experience collapses quickly. Depth gives language weight. According to Christy Chiarelli, when leaders combine their experience with reflective practices, their authority becomes more transparent and more effective.
Authority as stewardship in mature leadership
A report from Christy Chiarelli notes that at more advanced stages of leadership, the focus of authority often moves from demonstrating competence to using reflection to guide and steward insight.
Experienced leaders no longer build credibility from scratch. They carry a perspective shaped by responsibility. Articulation is a leadership responsibility, not self-assertion.
When you explain what you have learned, you are not seeking attention. You are offering orientation. You are helping others navigate complexity with greater clarity.
I often see this when leaders begin writing or speaking later in their careers. The ideas have been there for years. Once named, they create immediate clarity, not because they are new, but because they are finally visible.[8]
A season-specific insight for quietly successful leaders
If you are quietly successful yet increasingly unseen, this season is not asking you to reinvent yourself. It is asking you to clarify yourself.
Consider the example of John Mitchell, a mature leader at a mid-sized tech firm. John exemplifies how individual leaders’ actions can influence organizational outcomes. He consistently communicates his decision-making process to his team and shares strategic insights during regular meetings. This intentional communication not only makes his leadership more visible but also fosters greater alignment and coherence within his team. In John’s case, transparently sharing the rationale behind his decisions builds trust. He facilitates a mutual understanding of goals, which contributes to more cohesive collaboration and improved problem-solving. As a result, his team members are better equipped to anticipate expectations and align their efforts with organizational priorities, thereby enhancing overall performance. Such practices reflect a broader trend in strategic leadership research, which highlights the explicit connection between personal leadership behaviors (like those demonstrated by John) and their positive impact on team alignment and overall organizational effectiveness.
What feels obvious to you is often invisible to others. Naming it is an act of leadership.[9]
Today, authority evolves less on time served and more on clarity.
Closing reframe
Experience continues to hold significant value, though it no longer serves as the sole determinant of leadership authority. In contemporary contexts, authority is established by translating expertise into purposeful action and by offering insights that are thoughtfully communicated and accessible to others. Quietly successful leaders advance by expressing their perspectives meaningfully rather than by increasing their visibility through superficial means. To begin adapting to this shift in leadership expectations, take time to reflect on a recent decision you made, analyze its context and consequences, and share your reflection with a colleague. This practical step provides a foundation for articulating your leadership insights, enabling you to participate more intentionally and visibly in the ongoing evolution of leadership authority.
When you give language to what you have lived, your authority becomes visible again.
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If this reflection resonates, I share insights on leadership authority, visibility, and professional transition in my newsletter here. It is for leaders who value clarity over performance. You are welcome to join.
Read more from Michelle Gines
Michelle Gines, Founder of Purpose Publishing
Michelle 'MG' Gines is an author, publisher, and executive strategist known for helping leaders turn their expertise into books, businesses, and platforms that create lasting influence. As the founder of Purpose Publishing and Expertise Unleashed, she has guided hundreds of authors from idea to implementation, building pathways that amplify both message and momentum. She also serves as a corporate digital strategies leader in the healthcare payer space, where she designs experiences for millions across the U.S. MG blends clarity, compassion, and conviction with a faith-forward perspective that inspires transformation and purposeful growth. Her work equips high-achieving professionals to unlock their voice, elevate their brilliance, and lead.
References:
[1] (The Leading Blog: A Leadership Blog, 2025)
[2] (Unger, 2025)
[3] (“Seeing to be seen”: The manager’s political economy of visibility in new ways of working, 2021)
[4] (Schweitzer, 1963)
[5] (Yost, 2012)
[6] (Allen et al., 2004)
[7] (Killion & Todnem, 1991)
[8] (Creating Organizational Clarity, 2024)
[9] (Marquis, 2025)



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