Leading in a Changing World

The Shift in Leadership

By 2025, leadership is more dynamic than ever. According to McKinsey & Company, successful leaders will need to be adaptable, empathetic, and comfortable with technology — able to guide their organizations through rapid change and uncertainty.

Beyond Traditional Skills

It’s no longer just about management expertise. Today’s executives must champion diversity, foster innovation, and embed sustainability into their strategies. For example, Unilever demonstrates that purpose-driven leadership can fuel growth while making a positive social impact.

Becoming Leaders of the AI Era

To succeed in an AI-driven world, future leaders should:

 

  • Embrace Lifelong Learning: Continuously update their knowledge on emerging technologies and trends.

 

  • Understand AI’s Role: Learn how AI can support decision-making and operational efficiency without replacing the human touch.

 

  • Cultivate Ethical Leadership: Ensure responsible use of AI, focusing on transparency, fairness, and social good.

 

  • Foster Innovation: Create a culture that encourages experimentation and adapts quickly to technological advances.

 

The Path Forward

Organizations need to identify and develop leaders who combine human qualities with technological savvy. The leaders of 2025 are those who can balance vision, purpose, and innovation — shaping a future where technology serves people, not replaces them.

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5 essential entrepreneurial skills for success are;

  • concentration
  • organiztion
  • innovation
  • discrimination and
  • comunication

 

What is Faraday's electric motor?

An electric motor converts electrical energy into physical movement.

Faraday's motor used magnets and wire to create electric energy.

To make it, he took a nail and around 100 loops of copper wire. In the middle of the nail he placed a hole and put a wooden spindle into that hole, he wrapped the nail in the copper wire and connected it to a battery.

He then took a horseshoe-shaped magnet and placed his copper wrapped nail in the middle of the horseshoe.

With this, he saw that the wooden spindle would turn.

This was because the two opposing poles of the magnet were working against one another creating energy!

This simple mechanism would eventually become the electric motor that works in many things used today, like computers, mobile phones and electric toothbrushes.