Follow the Path from Task Management to Trusted Leader
The hidden kernel
I spent the better part of two decades in the trenches of the technology sector (infrastructure, product, strategy, support, writing about it all) and one of the most consistent (and honestly, baffling) paradoxes I’ve seen is the relationship between getting things done and getting people to trust you.
I’m talking about the progression from raw Executive Function (EF) to fully realized Executive Presence (EP). They sound like two sides of the same corporate coin, but I assure you, the journey between them is where all the messy, emotional work (the real work) happens.
The Tyranny of the Checklist
In my early days (especially when I was knee-deep in managing servers running Windows NT or trying to figure out how to debug mail flow on a legacy system), my entire identity was built on EF. Executive Function, at its core, is the administrative suite of the brain (it is the operating system for how we plan, prioritize, initiate tasks, and inhibit distracting thoughts).
For a lot of us who are wired a little differently (a big hello to my fellow Autistic and ADHD-i folks), EF is often a battleground. We develop complex scaffolding (tools, rituals, body doubles) just to get the minimum viable product (the MVP of the workday) out the door. When you’re an individual contributor or a tactical expert, this raw ability to execute, to organize the chaos into a checklist, is golden. It is the hard skill that gets you hired, promoted to Senior Engineer, and maybe even a Team Lead role.
But then you hit the wall.
You ascend to a role where your job is no longer primarily about doing the task, but about defining the task, prioritizing the team’s capacity, and influencing stakeholders. Suddenly, your perfect Trello board and your ability to remember obscure command-line flags for the BlackBerry Enterprise Server are functionally useless. The most perfectly planned project roadmap fails because the team is stressed, the client is panicking, and the CEO needs assurance, not a Gantt chart.
The Empathy Bridge (The Missing Link)
The reason so many brilliant, technically capable people stall out at the mid-management level is simple: they mistake Executive Function for Executive Presence. They believe the solution to chaos is more order, more planning, more doing.
But EP isn’t about doing tasks; it’s about inspiring confidence and commanding trust in volatile environments (which is essentially the definition of a startup, right?).
This transition requires one fundamental, often overlooked, layer: Emotional Intelligence.
EP is the public output of internal emotional maturity. If EF is the operating system, then Emotional Intelligence is the network security layer and the user experience team combined. It’s what allows you to perceive that your CEO isn’t worried about the Q3 numbers (which are solid), but is actually worried about their personal standing after a recent board meeting (which is messy). It is the ability to read the quiet tension in a meeting and address the subtext, not just the agenda.
In the language of the leadership track, Executive Presence is often boiled down to “Gravitas, Communication, and Appearance.” But what is Gravitas, really? It isn’t a power stance or a tailored suit. Gravitas is the calm that comes from knowing yourself (self-awareness) and knowing your audience (social awareness, or empathy). It is the unshakeable self-regulation that allows you to say, “The system is down, but we have a process, and we are following it.” That composure is what instills confidence in others.
It’s the shift from obsessing over the details of your own work (EF) to mastering the emotional details of the people around you (EI), thereby allowing you to project credible authority (EP).
For me (and for many neurodivergent leaders), this required actively building what others might take for granted. We have to learn to translate our deep systemic understanding of the world (our EF superpower) into a human context, using empathy as the translator. It’s not about masking; it’s about broadcasting the confidence we already possess in our capability, but packaging it in a way that aligns, engages, and inspires others to action.
The future of work, especially in tech, doesn’t need more perfect project managers. It needs fewer brilliant jerks and more empathetic executives who understand that the most complex system they will ever manage is the human heart.


