News / Executive Leadership

December Is When Leadership Is Remembered

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Dec 11, 2023

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Jeremy Kullmen

Executives reflecting on year-end performance in a modern office

This is the month when follow-through becomes narrative and the organization decides what leadership stood for.

It is December, and the year is no longer theoretical. Strategies have either held up or cracked under pressure. Promises have been kept, revised, or quietly abandoned. Employees are no longer waiting to see what happens next-they already know. December is the month when leadership intent turns into leadership record.

For executives, this is not a wind-down period. It is a defining one. How leaders show up now will shape how this year is talked about long after the calendar turns.

The Story of the Year Is Already Being Written

Right now, people across the organization are forming a single, coherent narrative about the year. They are not cataloging every decision; they are deciding what leadership stood for when things got hard.

They remember where leaders focused attention, how transparently they communicated, and whether difficult moments were handled with clarity or avoidance. Those impressions will not reset in January. They will carry forward as assumptions about credibility.

What You Choose to Close-or Leave Open-Matters

December is not the time to introduce new initiatives. It is the time to resolve old ones. Unfinished decisions, ambiguous commitments, and half-executed changes create drag that spills directly into the new year.

Leaders who bring closure now, by making final calls, clearly stopping work, and explaining what will not continue, send a powerful signal of discipline. Leaders who avoid closure push uncertainty forward and tax already-thin patience.

Fatigue Is Visible-How You Respond Is Cultural

The organization is tired. The past year has demanded sustained effort under persistent uncertainty, and that strain is evident. Pretending otherwise damages trust.

Leadership in December requires restraint as much as drive. Pressuring teams for unnecessary late-year heroics signals that optics matter more than judgment. Leaders who acknowledge effort, protect recovery where possible, and model sustainable behavior reinforce a culture people want to stay in.

Compensation, Recognition, and Silence Are Being Interpreted Right Now

Year-end decisions around bonuses, promotions, and recognition are landing emotionally, not analytically. People are drawing conclusions about fairness, priorities, and who the organization truly values.

Equally important is what leaders explain and what they avoid. Clear, honest communication, even when outcomes disappoint, builds more trust than polished silence. Right now, ambiguity is being filled in by assumption.

January Will Expose What December Avoids

Any issue left unresolved this month will resurface in January with more urgency and less goodwill. Misalignment, confusion, and quiet resentment do not disappear with the holidays.

Leaders who confront reality now, directly and visibly, enter the new year with momentum. Those who postpone hard conversations will spend the first quarter repairing damage instead of executing strategy.

December Is a Leadership Multiplier

Actions taken this month carry disproportionate weight because people are paying close attention. Small decisions, clear explanations, and visible judgment will be remembered far longer than their size would suggest.

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December Is When Leadership Is Remembered | Ventrix Intelligence