Leaders Don’t Want to Be Told—They Want to Discover
“People don’t like to be sold, but they love to buy,” said Jeffrey Gitomer, author of The Sales Bible and columnist in business journals around the world. I believe the same goes for leadership teams: they hate being told what to do—but love figuring it out.
Most leaders are dominant, driven, and wired to influence. They get irritated when a coach tries to steal the spotlight by preaching. They want to pitch the ideas and take the credit. Passive listening? Not their thing.
Facilitators Don’t Sell—They Guide
Helping leaders find their own answers is the art of facilitation. If teachers are the salespeople of ideas, then facilitators are shopper guides for the brain—helping others discover insights that fit how they think and work. Leaders buy into their own ideas, not yours. Your role is to activate and channel their genius.
At Summit OS®, tools like the Vision & Strategy Map™ and Our Summit Vision™ help uncover that genius—by creating clarity around where the business is going and how to get there. These visual frameworks don’t give answers—they draw them out from your team.
Facilitation vs. Teaching: A Tougher, Better Path
Facilitation is to teaching, what listening is to talking. Both are vital communication skills—but the former is much harder. Talking is easy. Listening, real listening, requires being fully present. You must hear what’s said, what’s implied, and guide conversations to a productive place.
Good facilitation means amplifying listening—helping others hear each other, asking Socratic questions to widen narrow perspectives, and gently steering discussions back on track. It’s rare because it takes humility, self-awareness, and quiet confidence.
Facilitators Create Space for Others to Win
A skilled facilitator is like a great soccer referee—most effective when invisible. They don’t need the spotlight. That’s reserved for the team. Like Yoda in the jungle, they train the Lukes of the world and let them return to cheers and applause.
Teaching is easier. Read ahead of the class, control the room, and talk through a lecture. Anyone with enough prep can manage that.
But facilitation? That’s the craft of indirect control. The rewards? Empowered, engaged teams who actually take action—and believe in it.
The Summit OS Approach to Business Coaching
Summit OS is a facilitation-based business operating system. We don’t lecture. In fact, our #1 core value is: “Reads the Client.”
Want to see how it works?
Check out this 2-minute video about Summit the Seal. And if you’re curious about joining our growing network of Summit OS Guides™, let’s talk.