Serve, Adapt, Lead: Why Great Leaders Never Just Eat Last with Myra Hall
No More Leadership BS
Serve, Adapt, Lead: Why Great Leaders Never Just Eat Last with Myra Hall
May 27, 2026
Simon Sinek told leaders to eat last. Beautiful principle. Terrible policy when it becomes a cover for checking out. This episode of No More Leadership BS gets into the real meaning of servant leadership -- the Sherpa who held everything together, the flight director who got three astronauts home, and the one guy dancing at a concert who somehow became a crowd. Great leadership isn't front or back. It's knowing which one the moment demands. And that's a skill, not a personality type. Drop us a line at askus@leadershipbs.co if you're ready to build it.
The Leadership Myth That's Making Good Leaders Look Like Cowards

Simon Sinek told us to eat last. Organizations made it policy. And somewhere between the book launch and the boardroom, a lot of leaders turned a beautiful principle into a very comfortable excuse. This episode of No More Leadership BS takes a hard look at servant leadership -- what it actually means, what it definitely doesn't mean, and why confusing the two might be burning your team (and you) to the ground.

Servant Leadership Wasn't Designed to Make You Invisible

The origin story matters here. Servant leadership traces back to a Sherpa whose quiet, consistent presence was so foundational to his expedition that when he disappeared, the whole operation fell apart. The lesson wasn't "be humble and step back." The lesson was that the leader was the infrastructure nobody noticed until it was gone. Leading from behind means being the invisible scaffolding of your team's success -- not clocking out early and calling it humility.

But When the Building Is on Fire, Nobody Wants a Servant Leader

There's a difference between nourishing your team in steady conditions and navigating a crisis. In emergencies, people don't scan the room looking for the most humble person. They look for whoever is already moving. Gene Kranz didn't ask the Apollo 13 crew to vote on next steps -- he made the call and involved everyone in executing it. Jocko Willink didn't servant-lead on the battlefield; he prepared his team so thoroughly that when contact was made, everyone knew their role. Preparation is servant leadership. Reaction is frontline leadership. You need both.

The Real Question: When Do You Know Which Mode to Be In?

This is where it gets honest: there's no universal answer, and anyone who says otherwise is selling something. What the panel agrees on is this -- the leaders who get it right aren't operating purely on instinct. They're operating with intention. They know their team, they know the stakes, and they've done the hard work of reflection after every success and failure. Wisdom isn't downloaded. It's earned through mess, iteration, and the courage to ask "what did I do wrong?" after every stumble.

Checking Out Is Not the Same as Trusting Your Team

There is a critical, career-defining line between genuine delegation and just... disappearing. Real servant leadership is not "I need it done by Friday, see you then." It's active presence without micromanagement. It's genuine curiosity about your people. It's the difference between a team that runs like a Rolex and a team that quietly falls apart because they've been "trusted" into abandonment. The team that performs at that level doesn't happen because the leader stepped back. It happens because the leader was fully in it -- right up until the moment the team no longer needed them.

The Bottom Line

Leading from behind is wisdom. Always leading from behind is avoidance. The leaders who get it right know the difference between nourishing their team and abandoning it -- and they've made enough mistakes to tell the two apart. Great leadership isn't front or back. It's knowing which one the moment is calling for. That's a skill. And it's learnable.

Tune In For:

Ready to stop guessing and start leading with intention? Send your questions to askus@leadershipbs.co -- or hit the show notes for direct contact with the panel. Our collective pile of hard-earned mistakes is available to you as a shortcut.

Have questions,  suggestions or just a great story to tell about some Leadership BS you have experienced? Let us know by emailing us 

Today's Featured Coach - 

  • Myra Hall - Individual and Team Coaching, Midlife Mentoring- Helping you get excited about life again as you overcome the things that keep you from living and loving a life that counts. - Owner/Founder Waypoint Coaching Group Reach Myra at Myra@WaypointCoachingGrp.com or 765-623-9711

The rest of the gang:The rest of the gang: