The First-Time Leader’s Reality Check

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What no one tells you about earning respect, setting boundaries, and finding your voice

Stepping into a leadership role is an exciting journey. Along the way, you'll find yourself building new relationships, learning to set boundaries, and navigating unfamiliar territory.

 

Every leader faces changes at first. Maybe you’re younger than your team, have a different communication style, or suddenly find that friends are now reporting to you. Maybe you’re simply unsure of the best way to handle new challenges. That initial discomfort won’t last forever. What matters is how you adapt and move forward. Embracing the challenge shapes how you lead and how others see you.

 

I remember stepping into my own leadership journey right after graduating from college, taking on a coaching role. Coaching was always something I pictured myself doing. People used to tell me growing up that I would make a great hockey coach someday, but I never expected it to happen so soon.

 

One night after a men’s league hockey game, another coach, someone I played on a team with, asked if I would join her for the upcoming season. I was honored she thought I was ready for the job, but I also found myself wondering: Was I truly ready? It took some self-reminding that we are never really “ready” when big opportunities come our way.

 

Why wait for the perfect moment?

 

Why wait until we feel fully prepared?

 

If we wait for those opportunities, they may be gone, and they never come our way again.

 

So, I took the leap. I said “yes” when the chance arrived, trusting that growth often starts with a little uncertainty.

 

And once I said yes, excitement took over. I was eager to make a difference, to give back to the community that shaped me, and to start building my own story as a coach.

 

But that’s when the real work began.

 

My first season was with a U19 team, mostly players not much younger than me. I thought we would relate easily since I had just finished my own college career. But I saw quickly that clear boundaries were important. Some players saw me more as a peer than a coach, so I reminded myself that respect does not come from a title alone. It needs to be earned.

 

It turns out I am not alone in facing these challenges. Many new leaders run into similar situations, such as:

 

• Establishing credibility and trust: The pressure to prove yourself quickly is real, especially while your team is still figuring out who you are and what you stand for.

 

• Understanding team dynamics and culture: It takes time to “read the room.” Learning personalities, unspoken norms, and existing relationships can be tricky at first.

 

• Balancing quick wins with long-term strategy: There’s always a tension between showing results fast and building a foundation for lasting success.

 

• Shifting from peer to leader (if promoted internally): Managing former peers can feel awkward, blur boundaries, and sometimes stir up resistance if you don’t address it head-on.


So how do you move through these challenges and become the kind of leader people trust, respect, and turn to in any situation?

 

It starts with consistency.

Trust is not built in big, one-time moments. It is built in the small, everyday actions, how you show up, how you follow through, and how you treat people when no one is watching. When your team knows what to expect from you, they feel more secure. And when people feel secure, they start to trust.

 

It also requires humility.

You do not need to have all the answers. In fact, pretending to know everything can create distance between you and your team. Strong leaders ask questions, seek input, and admit when they are still learning. That kind of honesty does not weaken your authority; it strengthens it.

 

Clarity is another key piece.

People cannot meet expectations they do not understand. As a leader, it is your responsibility to communicate clearly: what success looks like, what your values are, and how decisions are made. When you provide that clarity, you remove confusion and create alignment.

 

Then there’s accountability.

The fastest way to lose respect is to hold others to a standard you do not follow yourself. If you expect punctuality, be on time. If you expect effort, give it fully. Leadership is not about telling people what to do; it is about modeling the behavior you want to see.

 

And finally, connection matters more than you might think.

People do not just follow titles. They follow leaders who take the time to understand them. Get to know your team as individuals. Learn what motivates them, what challenges them, and how they define success. When people feel recognized, they are more likely to be engaged and give their best.

 

Becoming a trusted leader doesn’t happen overnight. It’s built over time through intentional actions, self-awareness, and a willingness to grow.

 

You will not get everything right, and that is okay.

 

What matters most is that you keep showing up, keep learning, and keep choosing to lead with purpose.

 

Because at the end of the day, leadership is not about being perfect. It is about being someone others can rely on, learn from, and believe in.

 

So here’s the question:

What kind of leader are you choosing to become, especially when it feels uncomfortable?

 

Author: Haley Sellers

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