Create space — be a liberator, not a tyrant
Multipliers create an environment where people’s best thinking is expected and safe; Diminishers create tension that shuts thinking down.
Why it works
A leader’s emotional climate is contagious. When leaders signal — explicitly or through micro-behaviors — that wrong answers are costly, people shift into self-protective mode: they say what is safe rather than what is true, and they wait for signals rather than initiating. Liberators create the opposite climate by explicitly holding their own views lightly, welcoming challenge, and treating mistakes as learning rather than evidence of failure. This is the psychological safety mechanism: the belief that interpersonal risk-taking is safe.
How to do it
- Require the best of people by setting high standards while explicitly signaling that the path to meeting them can be imperfect.
- Share your own opinions last, or tentatively, so they do not foreclose the room’s thinking.
- Respond to a mistake with "What did we learn?" rather than "Who dropped the ball?"
- Create a deliberate "fast failure" culture: small, recoverable mistakes surfaced early are cheaper than large covered-up ones.
Evidence
Psychological safety research (Edmondson) demonstrates that interpersonal safety is a consistent predictor of team learning and performance. Wiseman’s liberator discipline is a leadership-behavior account of how to produce that climate. (observational)
Psychological safety research is strong but observational. Wiseman’s liberator/tyrant typology is from field interviews and resonates with the research but is not independently validated.
Sources
- Edmondson (1999), Psychological safety and learning behavior in work teams, Administrative Science Quarterly
Common mistake
Believing that high standards and emotional safety are in tension — Wiseman’s data found that Multipliers hold higher standards than Diminishers while creating better climates. The error is thinking you must choose.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach helps you identify the micro-behaviors through which you are unintentionally creating a diminishing climate — the comments that shut down thinking — and prepares alternative responses.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).