The Locus of Control
The Mindset That Separates Accountable Leaders from the Rest
The Pervasive Accountability Gap
A significant chasm exists between the recognized importance of leadership accountability and its actual practice in organizations worldwide. Research reveals a startling disconnect, pointing not to a failure of process, but to a fundamental mindset issue.
72%
of executives see leadership accountability as a critical business issue.
31%
are satisfied with the accountability shown by their leaders.
85%
of employees aren’t even sure what their organization is trying to achieve.
82%
of managers avoid holding others accountable or try and fail.
Are You an Architect or a Passenger?
Locus of Control (LoC) is a leader’s core belief about the cause of events in their life. It exists on a continuum and dictates whether a leader takes ownership or deflects blame, fundamentally shaping their leadership style and impact.
| Leadership Dimension | Internal LoC: “The Architect” | External LoC: “The Passenger” |
|---|---|---|
| Core Belief | “I am responsible for the outcomes. My actions shape our reality.” | “Outcomes are determined by outside forces. We are subject to circumstances.” |
| Response to Setbacks | Takes ownership, analyzes missteps, seeks lessons for improvement. | Blames external factors (market, competitors), feels powerless. |
| Decision-Making | Proactive, decisive, and willing to take calculated strategic risks. | Reactive, hesitant, and risk-averse, waits for external conditions to dictate action. |
| Team Empowerment | Fosters autonomy, delegates authority, and empowers the team to solve problems. | Micromanages, centralizes control, and prefers directive supervision. |
| Impact on Culture | Creates a culture of agency, resilience, innovation, and high engagement. | Fosters a culture of helplessness, passivity, and low morale. |
The Performance Imperative: Mindset Drives Survival
A leader’s Locus of Control is not just a theoretical concept; it has a direct and dramatic link to organizational performance and survival. A compelling longitudinal study tracked small firms over six years, revealing a stark difference in outcomes based on the CEO’s mindset.
Source: Boone, C., De Brabander, B., & Hellemans, J. (2000).
How to Cultivate an Internal Locus of Control
Because Locus of Control is learned, it can be developed. Leaders can shift their mindset from passive to active by focusing their energy on what they can control and influence.
Master Your Mindset: The Circles of Control
This exercise reframes a leader’s focus. Instead of wasting energy on things you cannot control, you consciously shift your actions and attention to where you can make a real difference.
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1Direct Control: Your effort, your attitude, your decisions, your response. Focus your primary energy here.
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2Influence: Your team’s motivation, a client’s decision, cross-departmental collaboration. Use strategy and persuasion here.
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3No Control: The global economy, competitor’s moves, the weather. Acknowledge these, but do not let them paralyze you.
More Actionable Strategies for Leaders
Reframe Language
Shift from a vocabulary of blame (“They were late”) to one of ownership (“We didn’t build in enough buffer”). Language shapes mindset.
Deconstruct Goals
Break large, overwhelming objectives into small, controllable weekly or daily tasks. This builds momentum and a sense of agency.
Treat Feedback as Fuel
Actively seek out criticism. View it not as a judgment, but as vital data needed to adjust your approach and improve future outcomes.
Empower to Create Empowerment
Delegate true autonomy. Trusting others to take control is the most powerful way to foster an internal LoC in your team.


