Story-Driven Leadership: Become the Hero of Your Own Narrative
Donna Lichaw
Executive Coach, Bestselling Author
Published
The Framework
The Story-Driven Leader Model
"You need to start with you first at the center of the equation. First you lead yourself, then you can lead others, then groups, then the business."
Self-leadership is the foundation of all leadership impact
The inside-out approach: your internal story fuels your external influence
Stories we tell ourselves shape behavior, identity, and outcomes
The brain doesn't know if stories are true or false—only that they're stories
The Method
How to Uncover Your Real Story vs. Your Limiting Story
Interview your peers: Ask colleagues, direct reports, and stakeholders how they actually experience your leadership
Look for gaps: Compare the story you believe about yourself ("I'm too nice," "No one listens to me") against what real people say
Find the pattern: Often the gap reveals your real strength being misinterpreted or unused
Co-create the ending: Once you know the truth, work together to write a better story
The CEO example
He believed "people don't listen to me" and "I'm too nice." Reality: Senior execs didn't want orders—they wanted vision, problems to solve, and autonomy. New story: "I empower my team by setting direction and letting them lead."
The quiet executive
She believed "I'm not good enough." Reality: Her silence was being read as disinterest, demoralizing the team. New story: "I show up, speak up, and make my leadership visible."
Finding Your Superpowers
Pull Strengths from Stories, Not Tests
Peak experience #1: Go back to childhood. What project or activity lit you up completely?
Peak experience #2: What's something in the last 10 years that jazzed you and energized you?
Peak experience #3: How did you get into what you do now? What's your meandering path?
Lay them together: Your superpowers emerge at the intersections
The connector superpower
An executive kept being told she had "attention to detail" (which she hated). Her actual superpower: connecting themes, ideas, trends, and people together. Once she owned this identity, her effectiveness soared.
Why tests don't work
A list without context isn't memorable. Stories with context stay with you because they have meaning. Your superpowers need emotional anchors.
Play to Your Strengths
There Is No "How You're Supposed to Be"
CEOs come in many flavors: loud and visionary, quiet and collaborative, analytical, empathetic
The misconception: leadership requires one type of personality
The reality: Bob Iger ran Disney as a thoughtful listener, not a shouter
Every strength has a shadow side (kryptonite) — learn to manage it
You can achieve the same outcomes using completely different strengths
The work style insightDonna prefers conversations to emails. Lenny prefers writing to meetings. Both valid. Both effective when you honor how you work best, not how you think you "should" work.
Contrarian Truths
What Leaders Get Wrong About Themselves
✗Leadership means being someone elseINSTEAD →✓ Leadership means being authentically you, amplified. Stop trying to fit a mold.
✗The stories I tell myself are trueINSTEAD →✓ Most limiting stories are false beliefs. Test them with real feedback before believing them.
✗Others' feedback is the problemINSTEAD →✓ Others' feedback is data. Like customer research, it reveals what's actually happening, not what you think is happening.
✗I should be good at everythingINSTEAD →✓ Lean hard into what makes you come alive. Your superpowers need 80% of your focus, not your weaknesses.