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Leadership Insights Archives | Tanya Cross Consulting

Pride Matrix: The Price of Pride in High-Performing Leaders

The pride matrix reveals what most leaders do not see about the cost of their own success.

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We are more willing to work on our pain than on our pride. Pain announces itself. Pride does not. And that is what makes it expensive.

How Pride Shows Up in Leadership

Most of the time, pride does not arrive with arrogance and a loud voice, although sometimes it does.

 

More often, it arrives dressed as confidence. As high standards. As knowing what you are doing and not needing to explain yourself.

 

In fact, it shows up as a higher tone of voice when you tell the story of your last win. It shows up as you rehearsing the outcomes that confirm you are correct. And it shows up in the rooms that go quiet when you speak.

 

When you are at the top, the environment around you confirms it. The results. The reputation. The silence.

 

The Pride Matrix

Here is the framework. You decide where you sit.


Your success causes the people around you to subordinate to your values. When they look up to you, they minimise themselves and silence their own authority.


At the same time, your brain develops a confirmation bias. It seeks the praise and compliance that validate your position, and discards the pushback that would otherwise humble you.


So you end up operating inside an echo chamber of your own success. And the pride matrix is the structure of that echo chamber.

 

Quadrant One: The Overconfidence You Do Not See

The pride matrix maps four ways pride fractures a leader’s behaviour and identity without them realising it.


The quadrant most industry leaders live in without knowing it is not the loudest one. It is overconfidence.


And not in the way you might think.


It is not arrogance directed outward. It is an autonomy so embedded that it has become identity.


It is the belief that asking for help would fracture something you have spent decades building.


You do not dismiss people. You do not need them. And that distinction is what costs you.

 

The Other Quadrants Running in the Background

Meanwhile, the other three quadrants of the pride matrix run in the background.


Delusion inflates what is possible while you ignore your real limitations.
Envy, the one few leaders admit to, surfaces as restlessness or irritation when someone else gets the recognition.


Dismissiveness shows up not as contempt but as impatience. A boardroom of ideas you have moved past before anyone has finished their sentence.

 

The Pendulum Swing

Pride does not hold its position. It swings.


In fact, the month after your biggest win is statistically the most dangerous. Not because success runs out, but because pride blinds you to the forces moving against you.


The environment does not reward inflation. It corrects it.


And the correction arrives first as a feather, then as a slap, and then as the collision you did not see coming because you had stopped looking.

 

Self-Governance as the Leverage Point

The leverage point is not humility as a virtue. Instead, it is the discipline of governing yourself.


The leaders who avoid the harsh corrections are not the ones who stay modest. They are the ones who search for the downside of their own positions before the outside world finds it for them.


Yet this work is not comfortable. Few leaders walk into a coaching room and say, “I have too much pride, please help me dissolve it.”


They come in pain. They come for growth. They come to feel better.


But if you treat the pain and leave the pride untouched, you are working downstream of the actual cause.


So if you recognised yourself in any of this, if peak authority delivered the result but not the peace, that recognition is worth paying attention to.

 

The Practice: Find the Cost of the Win

It requires a leader to sit with their greatest win and find where it cost someone something.


Where your confidence became a closed door.


Where your independence became abandonment.


That is not weakness. In turn, that is the most rigorous leadership practice there is.


So the question is not whether pride is operating in your leadership. It is whether you are governing it, or waiting for something outside you to do it for you.

 

Book a 15-minute Strategy Call and let’s look at what the pride matrix reveals about where you are right now.

 

To your brilliance,

Tanya Cross

Industry Leader Coach & The Coaches’ Coach

BAppSoSc (Counselling) 

Tanya Cross Consulting

Maximum Growth

The Success Trap: When “Better” Becomes a Cage

Most high-capacity leaders will encounter the success trap at some point. This is what it actually looks like.

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You are doing everything “right” and still feel less free.


That is the success trap.

 

Agitation: The Hidden Cost of the Success Trap

The obvious trap is burnout.

The real one is quieter: you are objectively winning, yet you feel more constrained, more vigilant, more suffocated by obligation and less able to move on instinct.

When your wins start dictating your permissions, success becomes a cage.

 

Truth / Reframe: The Mechanics of the Success Trap

So here is the diagnosis.

Success creates proof. Proof creates expectation. Expectation creates a role. And roles, when they are rewarded, become almost impossible to interrogate.

You stop asking “What do I actually want now?” because you are too busy answering “What do I have to do to maintain this?”

This is why the trap is so sticky: it is built on who you had to be to build the success, not on who you have grown into since.

 

Solution path (naming, not fixing)

You develop a way of operating that gets results. You repeat it. It keeps working. People start relying on it. You start relying on it too.

Soon, the business is no longer simply a vehicle for value. It is a beast you cannot afford to disappoint.

So you narrow. This is the success trap taking shape in your daily behaviour.

  • Behavioural: You keep shipping what you know you can win with, even when your curiosity has moved on. Your calendar becomes a defensive wall, not a design.
  •  Relational: You become the “reliable one” in every room. You stop having honest conversations because the role you’ve been rewarded for is “unshakeable.”
  • Internal: You are not just doing the work. You are surveilling yourself while you do it. Every decision is filtered through reputation maintenance, not mandate.

And because it still works, you do not call it a problem. You call it discipline. You call it standards. You call it strategy.

But your internal experience tells the truth.

Your energy is flat. Your attention is fragmented. You are moving from fear, not inspiration.

 

Proof (why more wins do not help)

In fact, more wins intensify the role. They raise the stakes of staying the same. That is the mechanics of the success trap at its most advanced stage.

However, the trap is not that you are successful.

The trap is that you have started treating your success as evidence of who you must continue to be.

Once success becomes identity, the business becomes a defence mechanism. You keep producing the version of yourself that has been rewarded, even when it is no longer the most honest one.

 

If any of this is landing, take it as information, not a call to action.

This is not about fixing anything. It is about naming the mechanics clearly enough that you can see them operating in real time.

The moment you can spot the trap, it stops being invisible. And that is where everything can begin to shift.

If you want to explore this in a private conversation, you can start here:

Book a 15-minute Strategy Call.

 

To your brilliance,

Tanya Cross

Industry Leader Coach & The Coaches’ Coach

BAppSoSc (Counselling) 

Tanya Cross Consulting

Maximum Growth

Leadership Equilibrium: The Balance Strong Leaders Learn to See

Leadership equilibrium is not something you find by making sense of the hard seasons. It is something you find by seeing the whole picture without needing to spin it.

 

let’s level up:

Grow Yourself To Grow Your Business

Smash through growth ceilings,
again and again to new heights
in business, leadership and life.

 

If you are a leader who values clarity but often finds yourself chasing meaning in extremes, this is worth sitting with. There is a moment in the journey where you realise how much effort you have put into making things make sense. And that effort itself becomes a barrier to leadership equilibrium.

 

The Pressure to Frame Pain as Purpose


The phrase “it all serves a purpose” shows up often in leadership circles. And while it comes from a meaningful place, it can also become a subtle pressure to label what is happening as useful. Especially when things feel anything but.


But business, like life, does not operate in single layers. When you are trying to justify something as meaningful, you may be overlooking the reality that disservice walks right alongside service.


In fact, this is not about being cynical. It is about being honest. And grounded leadership requires that honesty.

 

What Leaders Are Holding on Both Sides

Industry leaders are often the ones carrying both. The growth and the grind. The praise and the pushback. The breakthroughs and the burnout.


Yet when you frame things as service, you create a lopsided view. Your mind senses it too. That restlessness. That edge of trying to make something fit when it does not land.


Leadership balance does not come from reframing the difficulty as good. Instead, it comes from seeing both sides without needing one to justify the other.

 

What Shifts When Leadership Equilibrium Takes Hold

When you allow both sides to be seen without the need to spin it, something shifts. You start to feel more grounded. More in charge.


There is less effort in your leadership. More presence in your thinking. And the pressure to extract meaning from pain softens into a deeper appreciation of what is unfolding.


In turn, leadership equilibrium is not something you chase. It is something you recognise when you stop forcing alignment and let the full picture come into view.


So if you recognised yourself in any of this, that recognition is worth paying attention to.


Book a 15-minute Strategy Call and let’s look at what leadership equilibrium could open up for how you lead.

 

To your brilliance,

Tanya Cross

Industry Leader Coach & The Coaches’ Coach

BAppSoSc (Counselling)

Tanya Cross Consulting

Maximum Growth

Nothing Is Missing, What Are You Searching For?


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