The Standard You Walk Past Is the Standard You Accept

TL;DR

Your team will never exceed the standard you demonstrate. Every time you cut a corner, tolerate mediocrity, or fail to follow through, you set a new ceiling for everyone watching.

There’s a phrase in leadership that gets repeated so often it’s almost lost its weight:

“The standard you walk past is the standard you accept.”

Most managers hear it and nod. Few actually live it. Because living it means holding yourself to the same — or higher — standard than everyone around you. Every day. Especially when it’s inconvenient.

Your team is watching. Not occasionally — constantly. They notice when you’re late but expect punctuality. They notice when you skip the process you told them to follow. They notice when you say accountability matters but never admit your own mistakes. And they adjust their behaviour accordingly.

Role modelling isn’t a principle you believe in. It’s a behaviour you demonstrate. Without it, the other four Rs in the 5R Framework collapse.

Why Your Behaviour Sets the Ceiling

Teams rarely exceed their leader’s example. They might match it on a good day. But the ceiling is always set by what the leader does — not what they say.

If you respond to emails at midnight, your team learns that boundaries don’t exist. If you blame others when things go wrong, your team learns that accountability is optional. If you’re visibly checked out during difficult periods, your team learns that presence doesn’t matter.

None of this requires a conversation. It happens through observation. And it compounds. Small inconsistencies between your words and your actions erode trust faster than any single mistake.

Five Ways to Lead by Example

1
Hold yourself to the same standard
If the expectation is punctuality, be the first one on time. If the expectation is preparation, arrive more prepared than anyone. The standard you set for yourself is the minimum standard for your team.
2
Admit mistakes openly
Saying “I got that wrong” doesn’t weaken your authority — it builds it. Your team already knows when you’ve made a mistake. Owning it tells them it’s safe to own theirs too. That’s how you build a team that learns instead of hides.
3
Be visible when it’s hard
Anyone can lead when things are going well. Your team judges you by what you do during the difficult periods — the busy shifts, the crises, the moments when pressure is highest. Be present. Not managing from a distance. On the floor, in the room, alongside your team.
4
Follow through on what you say
If you say you’ll do something, do it. If you say there will be consequences, follow through. If you promise to get back to someone, get back to them. Broken commitments — even small ones — teach your team that words are optional.
5
Address what you see
When a standard slips and you say nothing, you’ve approved the new standard. Walking past a problem tells your team it’s acceptable. You don’t need to be heavy-handed — but you do need to be consistent. See it, name it, address it.

Three Questions to Ask Yourself

1. If my team behaved exactly the way I behave, would I be satisfied with the result?

2. Is there a gap between what I say matters and what I actually demonstrate?

3. When was the last time I admitted a mistake to my team?

If any of those made you uncomfortable, that’s useful information. Not a criticism — a diagnostic. The 5R Framework isn’t about perfection. It’s about awareness and consistent action.

What This Looks Like in Practice

Real Scenario

Early in my management career, I asked my team to follow a new process I’d introduced. Two weeks later, I noticed most of them had reverted to the old way. My first reaction was frustration. Then I realised: I hadn’t been following the new process consistently myself.

When I started visibly using it — every day, without exception — the team followed within a week. No reminder needed. No second conversation. They just needed to see me do it.

— Nelson Fernandes

One Thing to Do Right Now

Pick the one standard you’ve been asking your team to meet. Ask yourself honestly: have I been demonstrating it myself? If not, start tomorrow. No announcement. No email. Just do it consistently and let your team see. That’s role modelling.

Put the 5R to Work

The 5R Leadership Toolkit includes self-assessment templates, daily trackers, and the one-page framework reference.

Get the 5R Toolkit — £12
Instant download · Templates + scripts + daily tracker

Next in the 5R Series

Framework
The 5R Leadership Framework — The Complete System

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

FREE STARTER KIT

Get the Leadership Starter Kit

A curated bundle of our best frameworks, checklists, and tools — everything you need to lead with clarity. Straight to your inbox.

You'll receive the kit + occasional tips on leadership & growth. Unsubscribe anytime. Privacy Policy.

Check your inbox!

Your Leadership Starter Kit is on its way. Check spam if you don't see it in a few minutes.

Best of Motivation

Your 5R Leadership Quick-Start

A proven leadership system — distilled into one actionable page you can pin to your desk.

What's Inside
Reprioritise Reset Recognise Resource Role Model

🔒 You'll receive the free guide and occasional emails with leadership tips and resources. Unsubscribe anytime. Privacy Policy.

Check your inbox!

Your 5R Leadership Quick-Start guide is on its way. Check your spam folder if you don't see it in a few minutes.