Leadership Traits Decoded
Leadership is shifting - and so are the demands on today’s leaders.
Join Cynthia Kyriazis and Andrea Martin as they spotlight a core leadership trait, exploring how it meets the evolving challenges of today’s workplace.
Through candid, practical conversations, they unpack how each trait influences culture, drives development, and creates the conditions for growth and performance in modern organizations.
Learn more at www.plllab.com.
Leadership Traits Decoded
The Metrics-Focused Mindset - Why Great Leaders Blend Data and Big-Picture Thinking
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Do your metrics actually drive better decisions or are they just sitting on a dashboard?
In this episode of Leadership Traits Decoded, Cynthia Kyriazis and Drea Martin unpack the leadership trait of being Metrics Focused—and what it really means inside modern, investor-backed organizations.
Far from a technical skill reserved for analysts, metrics focus is now a leadership expectation. The trait reflects a leader’s ability to identify the right indicators, track them consistently, and—most importantly—translate insights into decisive action.
Cynthia and Drea explore why the highest performers don’t just collect data; they know when to step back, connect numbers to strategy, and make informed tradeoffs.
They also dig into an issue every CEO will recognize: not everyone on the team thinks in metrics. Some lean toward intuition, qualitative observations, or pattern-recognition rooted in human behavior.
Rather than treating this as a liability, the conversation reframes it as cognitive diversity—valuable when guided by a leader who reinforces a data-driven culture and keeps decision-making grounded in facts.
You’ll learn:
- Why metrics focus is really about decision quality—not dashboards
- How the best leaders blend data discipline with strategic perspective
- What to do when a team member leans on opinions over evidence
- Why diversity of thinking strengthens metrics-driven teams (when guided well)
- How CEOs can coach leaders to balance detail orientation with big-picture thinking.
Whether you’re scaling, integrating new systems, or preparing for investor scrutiny, this episode will sharpen how you use metrics to accelerate execution—not just report on it.
Ready to explore your leadership traits? Connect with us on LinkedIn or visit www.plllab.com to see how we transform leadership intelligence into return-driven action.
Setting The Stage: Data-Led Leadership
Cynthia KyriazisWelcome to Leadership Traits Decoded. I'm Cynthia Kyriazis, Chief Experience Officer at the Culture Think Tank.
Andrea MartinAnd I'm Drea Martin, Chief Operating Officer of the Crucible. We are collaborative partners at Performance Leadership Learning Lab, where we transform leadership intelligence into return-driven action.
Why Metrics Focus Drives Results
Cynthia KyriazisToday we're unpacking the leadership traits essential for building, investing in, and scaling successful companies. Our insights come directly from data-driven metrics within our platforms solution. So let's dive in. Hello there, Drea. How are you doing? Yeah, doing well. How are you, Cynthia? I'm good. I'm feeling better. My cold isn't quite as bad, you know, as usual. Stuff goes away. Oh, that's true. Eventually you feel better. Yeah, right. Totally. So, Drea, I was thinking today about our topic, and for a variety of reasons, one of the ones under at the execution edge engine that we that's listed under an urgency of execution, one of the things resonated me with was discussing somebody who is or is not metrics focused. Because we live in a world of analytics, algorithms, metrics, quantum leaps, AI. And you know, for somebody who's not really technical, it's interesting to hear. So I thought I would just ask you about that for a minute. What do you think are the benefits of being metrics focused in an organization?
Traits Of High-Performing Metrics Leaders
Andrea MartinYeah, the main benefit is that if you are more metrics focused, it means that you have the ability to set, track, and then even act on the right performance indicators to drive results. If you actually have that information in front of you, the assumption then is that you are able to take the insights, the metrics that are being tracked, that you're focusing on, and use them to make better decisions. Because you can use the past information, you can use ongoing information to then decide where to continue to see what's potentially going on or recognize patterns. All of that is enabled by being metrics focused. What do you think about that?
Cynthia KyriazisSo when somebody is very high performing, and even it is their job to be metrics focused, what do we look for in those traits? Or what's the upside of having that if it in fact is your job?
Andrea MartinYeah, then consistent tracking probably indicates that someone is particularly metrics focused. Implementing that tracking and then also balancing using that information versus just collecting it would probably be another indicator if that's someone's job to make sure that they're not only keeping track of the right metrics, but then also utilizing them when needed, and then not leaning on them too much and maybe still having that room for other things like strategy and creativity, kind of take a step beyond that as well.
Balancing Data With Human Judgment
Cynthia KyriazisSo this is really interesting. So let's say that the individual supervises two or three or four people, and their job is around metrics and algorithms and technology and so on. What if one of those individuals really tends to go more to opinions, biases, reflections of human behavior for whatever reason? What do you do with that if their traits say they tend more towards that than actual metrics? I mean, they still do it, but they have their other interests, so to speak.
Andrea MartinYeah, that makes me think a little bit actually about kind of group functioning and how kind of groups come together. Because my first thought is great, you have more diversity of thought. You have someone who's oriented less towards the metrics and therefore will see other things and maybe pay attention to, bring them up and even advocate for other areas that could be important to at least be aware of. The other side of that is you don't want that person to then completely undermine or derail, bringing back that term, um, the efforts that you have within a metrics-driven team. So part of it is fostering the culture that you want to have. So as the person who is supervising or managing that group of individuals, celebrating progress on key indicators or things like that versus just efforts would be a way to kind of bring things back towards and reinforcing this more data-driven culture, but also understanding that maybe that person can be an advocate for different ideas. And that might strengthen the team to actually have diversity in that area versus just if everybody's looking at the metrics, it's all about the numbers, you might lose out on some of those insights, those ideas, and some of that just variation that might be interesting.
Case Insight: Seeing Systems And Strategy
Cynthia KyriazisOh, I'm so glad you brought that up because I was involved in a group that had somebody with this profile, totally understood metrics, did the metrics, got it, no problem. But the issue was that they were also, they could, as opposed to anybody else in the room, they could take a step back mentally and they could see the strategic approaches that were worth discussing. They could see the strategic outcomes that were a possibility that weren't on the table or in the discussion before, because they had that ability to step out of that detail, that drive and what they are to be doing, and kind of take a step back and see, as you said, a bigger picture. I think there's huge value in any employee that is capable of doing that. Because frequently, when you see someone like that, they'll go straight to here's the systems problem, here's the process problem, and they'll want to further go down the road of talking about all the numbers around the systems and the processes. I will say that at the think tank, Will Lindstrom has a metrics focus. Obviously, you know, he this is what he's done. He did an operational analysis before owning this company. He he loves the data that comes out of all of that. However, frequently, if not 50% of the time, when I ask Will a question about something, I don't know if it's the way I ask it or what specifically I'm asking, but it's like when I want to take a step back to talk straight more strategic than when he wants to talk about spreadsheets and that kind of thing metrics, he will respond to me with, oh yeah, that's easy to dishelp you with, Cynthia. And he will step back and immediately give me a strategic picture around it. Wow, that's great. That is really awesome, isn't it? That somebody can see both sides, uh, you know, their brain, their left brain and their right brain is working. And he can see it and he can explain it to me, who is somebody totally out of that arena, explain it to me so that I understand. And he's ready for it. It's not like I have to think about it. He just goes, Oh, that's it's always starts with, oh, that's easy, you know, because I guess what he does is really hard. And what I ask is really kind of easy to explain. But, you know, we live in a world where technology is, in fact, business and it's growing at a rapid rate, having more and more, and now we're at quantum computing. The understanding of metrics, which was our previous, uh, one of our previous podcasts, and then this one is a good match. It's a good match to think of, and maybe in many ways dispel the belief that if you are this way, you can't be strategic.
Andrea MartinGreat. You can have both that strategic perspective and that metrics focus.
Cynthia KyriazisAnd that metrics focus. Exactly. Exactly.
Grounding Strategy In Analytics
Andrea MartinI like to sometimes it's easy when you're more strategic oriented, or even when you see problems. I think a metrics focus can be really helpful because it can be great sometimes to see, even say one thing happens and you were wondering then, like, oh, is this something we need to be worried about, or is this something that's going to be continuous? You can look at the data then and look, go back to the metrics and understand on what scale is the situation, to what extent do I have to worry about it? Even simple things, like using just basic tracking analytics, can be a great way to ground yourself in understanding to what extent do I need to take this potential problem seriously, or is this just something to watch out for in the future? That's kind of that intersection too of where the metrics are really helpful to keep you accountable, maybe for to what extent to take things to the next level versus to kind of monitor them and just understand that there's something that might be emerging.
Cynthia KyriazisSure, because every trait that we talk about has areas where it you can go overboard on or underboard on, if you will. Right. Um it's so good to realize that human beings can naturally have the ability to do left and right thinking and sometimes need to be reined in a little bit uh based on whatever the question was. Right, exactly. That's really awesome. That was really interesting to me. And I will say that, you know, everybody that I work with for is tech and I'm not at all. It's interesting to me to see how each of them interact with the fact that they know I'm not and they are, you know, speaking that language. So it's really interesting to me. It's been interesting and really joyful type of working environment. So, do you have any last thoughts or any last takeaways around this one?
Dual-Thinking: Left And Right Brain
Andrea MartinI think the main takeaway that I heard is this notion of you can be both metrics focused and strategic. Also, this notion of there's maybe even a specific strength in being good at both and having that ability to not only see the metrics, focus on them, and then take a step back and see the bigger picture, or even hear and listen to and think about the bigger picture. So that's kind of my key. That transition, that ability is really cool and maybe the thing we should all be striving for versus being one or the other.
Cynthia KyriazisOne or the other, right. Agreed. My takeaway kind of dovetails off of viewers in that the individual always has to be responsible and you know attentive to their own developmental needs. But I think it's also really important for actually the CEO to do that with every trait, but especially if, you know, they may not have come to this, to their position because they were big metrics people. They may have come for another reason and understanding what their employees and how their employees and how their leadership team is using or does use a metrics. And where it works and where it doesn't, it'd be a great way to gently sway back and forth to learn a little bit more and help someone develop. That's a great insight. Well, it's the only one I got. So thank you so much, Treya, for again, as always, for everything that you share. Appreciate you. You too. Thanks. Dr. Thanks for listening to this episode of Leadership Traits Decoded. You'll be able to find all our episodes on the Performance Leadership Learning Lab website at www.plab.com. Or you can listen on your favorite streaming platform.
Closing And Where To Find Us
Andrea MartinWe'll be back soon to explore the next essential trait. Until then, feel free to connect with us on LinkedIn if you have any questions or ideas.
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