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Value of Time: The Cost of Ignoring Your Leadership Pace

What the Value of Time Dial Measures
Leaders don’t stall because they lack vision. They stall because they lack awareness.
After eight years of coaching with Integrus, I have seen this pattern play out again and again, especially around the Value of Time dial inside the Integrus 360 behavioral leadership profile.
The Value of Time dial measures your internal pace and answers questions like these:
- How urgent are you?
- How fast does your internal clock run?
- Do you naturally push for outcomes, or do you move at a more relational, unhurried tempo?
But, Value of Time is about more than productivity. It’s about your behavioral urgency and intensity and how your pace affects your influence, credibility, and the people around you.
Some leaders run hot: pedal to the metal, always moving, always thinking about the next benchmark.
Others are calm, steady, relational. They create space, don’t rush conversations, and resist artificial pressure.
Neither wiring is wrong. Both bring tremendous strengths, but unmanaged, either one can become costly.
The question isn’t, “Am I high or low?”
The question is, “Is my wiring helping or hurting my team and/or the mission?”
When Value of Time Is Low
Low Value of Time leaders are often:
- Relational
- Creative
- Calm under pressure
- Present with people
In pastoral care settings, this wiring can be a gift. You don’t want someone flying through a hospital ward like they’re clearing an inbox. But when unmanaged, low Value of Time can create:
- Vague expectations
- Missed deadlines
- Difficulty holding people accountable
I started working with a particular senior leader who was drowning. They were running from fire to fire, doing work they could do but shouldn’t be doing, and all the while believing they had a high Value of Time because they were solving problems and tackling important issues.
But, their Integrus360 data said otherwise.
We worked together to identify the behaviors contributing to his overwhelm, aligning them and their team to ensure everyone spent their time on their highest-impact work. And everything changed.
Months later, that leader texted:
“I’m living my best leadership life.”
Today, their team is thriving, benchmarks are being exceeded, and the mission is accelerating. Not because that leader's personality changed, but because they chose different behaviors.
When Value of Time Is High
On the other end of the spectrum, High Value of Time leaders:
- See the win quickly
- Push for outcomes
- Expect urgency
- Hate inefficiency
Without leaders wired this way, innovation would stall (Electricity might not exist!), and organizations would drift. But again, unmanaged strengths can become constraints, and Value of Time that's too high can create:
- Chronic frustration
- Unrealistic timelines
- Team anxiety
- High turnover
Another leader I had the privilege of working with had an urgency that was crushing their team. Turnover was high, expectations were unclear, and their team felt like nothing was ever enough.
The leader wasn’t malicious. They were just moving so fast they forgot to make sure their team was keeping up with them. They assumed everyone else was wired like them and saw what they saw.
They didn’t.
After hearing about the challenges they faced in their leadership, I asked for their permission to be a truth-teller.
"Of course!" they said.
I was kind but direct, and told this leader, “You’re the problem. But the good news is you’re also part of the solution.”
That was a turning point in their leadership.
It didn't happen overnight, in fact it took months to experience the full effect of his intentionality, but this leader adjusted their leadership behavior and saw a significant decrease in his team's frustration and anxiety. In fact, turnover dropped by 90%!
Same wiring, healthy leadership behaviors.
Pressure Reveals Your Default
Under pressure, we don’t become someone new; our leadership behaviors are exaggerated.
Leaders tend to revert to their default when the pressure is on, even if we have done the work to manage their constraints into healthy behaviors.
Low Value of Time leaders may slow down and get stuck when stress rises. Sometimes their default is to stay busy doing anything instead of making sure they're doing the most important things.
In contrast, when pressure rises around High Value of Time leaders, they may accelerate urgency and intensity, leaving their team behind, or worse, destroying their team in pursuit of accomplishing the mission.
An unhealthy Value of Time doesn’t just affect productivity.
It affects morale.
Retention.
Credibility.
And ultimately, the mission.
Most leaders don’t realize how their behavior shifts when stress rises. Even after reading this, many leaders might assume this doesn't apply to them because every leader has blind spots.
We assume we’re steady.
We assume we’re clear.
We assume we’re consistent.
But because pressure has a way of amplifying patterns we don’t always see, we created a simple one-page tool to help you uncover how stress may be shaping your urgency, clarity, communication, and expectations.
Download the free Pressure Pattern Map and discover your default pattern under stress.
It takes just a few minutes, and the insight could change how you lead the next high-pressure moment and save years of influence.
What’s the Cost of Ignoring This?
Choosing to ignore leadership constraints is definitely a choice you're free to make. But every decision has a cost/reward ratio, and the cost of ignoring an unhealthy Value of Time far exceeds the rewards.
It will cost you personally.
It will cost your relationally.
It will cost your organization.
And at the highest level, it will cost you your mission.
Because when you’re overwhelmed and burning out, the mission suffers. If your urgency is driving talent away, the mission suffers. And, if your lack of clarity creates confusion, the mission suffers.
Leaders don’t stall because they lack vision. They stall because they lack awareness.
If this message resonates with you, it may be time to see what your data says.
Complete your Integrus 360 and discover how your behaviors align with high-performing leaders in your field.
And if it's been more than 18 months since you have completed your 360, it's time to update your data.
Because circumstances change, leaders grow, and your data evolves with you.
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