Insights

Reflection as a Leader: Fuel Performance for You and Your Org

A practical guide for leaders who want to use mid-year reflection to drive personal growth, empower their teams, and add more value to their organisation.

June 5, 2025   |   Victoria Buckenham

orange sunset over calm ocean water. the sun is reflecting in the water like an orange beam.

The mid-year point offers a valuable strategic pause, long enough to gather meaningful evidence and early enough to make effective course corrections. Taking time to reflect is a dual investment: it accelerates your personal growth while also amplifying the value you and your team delivers. In this article, Victoria explores why reflection matters, how to support your team to reflect too, and offers practical ways to embed this habit into your workflow. Use the questions and tools below to turn insight into action and encourage a culture of continual learning.

Why Mid-Year Reflection Matters

  1. Beyond Compliance, Toward Competitive Edge

Annual performance cycles can sometimes slip into a box-ticking exercise. A proactive mid-year review, on the other hand, keeps objectives alive, helps to identify shifting priorities, and avoids the pressure of what we call ‘the Q4 scramble’.

  1. Strengths as Strategic Levers

When leaders are aware of, and play to, their best strengths, they are able to focus effort where it delivers the greatest return. At the same time, they can seek out stretch opportunities that build future advantage.

  1. Modelling a Growth Culture

As a leader, your willingness to pause, reflect on your own impact, and share what you learn sends a strong signal to everyone around you (not just your team) about psychological safety. It reinforces that reflection is a legitimate part of the job, not something extra.

  1. Fuel for Engagement and Retention

Employees who can articulate what they enjoy doing and why (and who have a clear plan to do more of it) report higher levels of energy, creativity, and commitment to their organisation.

  1. Organisational Agility

In fast-moving markets, the ability to make course corrections mid-way through the year is far more effective than waiting for year-end reviews to identify changes.

Questions for Self-Reflection

Ask yourself:

  • Impact: Where have I created the most value since January, measured by outcomes, not hours?
  • Energy: Which activities consistently energise me versus drain me?
  • Growth: What new capability or perspective have I developed, and how am I applying it?
  • Stretch: Which upcoming challenges excite me, and what support will I need to succeed?
  • Stakeholders: Who needs more (or different) communication from me in H2?
  • Legacy: If December were tomorrow, what story would I want my team to tell about my leadership this year?

Questions to Help Your Team Reflect

You can use these prompts in 121s or team sessions:

  • What achievements are you most proud of so far, and why do they matter to our customers?
  • Which strengths did you rely on, and where do you want to deploy them next?
  • Where did you feel stretched (positively), and where did stretch tip into strain? Do you know how to spot triggers for this if it happens again, and what may I notice when observing you?
  • What fresh challenges or projects would accelerate your development over the next six months?
  • How can I, as your leader, remove blockers or create space for this growth?

Practical How-To: Build Reflection into the Workflow

  1. Block Protected Time

Put a 90-minute “strategy pit-stop” in your calendar, and treat it as non-negotiable.

  1. Keep a Career Journal

Use a simple format (date | highlight | low-light | lesson | next step) to regularly capture insights and patterns in real time. You may wish to build 15 minutes weekly into your diary to reflect in this way – bedding in the habit really helps and creates what we call great ‘career habits’ for ongoing success.

  1. Leverage the Questions Above

Copy the reflection prompts into your journal or meeting agendas to keep them visible and usable.

  1. Collect Evidence

Bring real data such as metrics and stakeholder feedback into the process to keep your reflection grounded in facts.

  1. Book the Conversation

Follow up with your Manager, Mentor, or Coach within two weeks. We know that timely conversations help turn insights into actionable next steps.

  1. Cascade the Practice

Share your own reflections in a team huddle and invite others to do the same. Visible commitment from leaders increases adoption and builds momentum.

Takeaways & Soft Call to Action

Reflection is not a luxury, it’s a strategic accelerator. Investing just 90 minutes now can help you reset and refocus for the next 6 months. When leaders model this practice openly, it signals that reflection is valuable and worth prioritising. This can help teams develop the same habit, which over time, compounds high performance.

Final thought: Act quickly on any insights that emerge. Convert them into tangible goals, experiments, or support requests to make the most of your momentum.

If you’d like expert help designing reflective prompts, facilitating team reviews, or coaching leaders through change, VB&A would love to chat. Get in touch victoria@vb-associates.com or completing our Contact Us form.

Further reading

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