06/11/2026
A saskatoon branch in full bloom is a real signal of the tree's capacity. It is not a guarantee of yield. Between bloom and fruit, dozens of conditions determine what actually develops - some can be tended, most cannot be controlled. The same is true of senior leaders. Strong performance is a real signal. It is not the whole read.
One of the patterns I see most often in senior leaders right now is what I call Fading. Fading is not burnout. The person is still delivering. They are still in the room, still on the agenda, still hitting the marks.
But something has gone quiet in them. The energy they used to bring to a hard decision has thinned. The colleague who used to push back in the meeting now lets things pass. The leader who used to come back from a weekend with a new idea is no longer doing that.
Fading is one of three responses I see in senior leaders under prolonged organizational pressure. It is the one most often missed, because from the outside it looks like steadiness. From the inside it feels like running on whatever is left. Most performance reviews do not catch it. The numbers do not catch it. What catches it is a colleague who has known the leader for years and notices that something has gone out of the room when they
walk into it.
If you are leading a senior function and something feels off in a way you cannot quite name, pay attention to that signal.