Buffoon Busting - Eliminating Leadership Blind Spots
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Northbound Community and Courses.
Have you ever had a boss who was… kind of a buffoon? Not evil, not stupid—just unaware of how they land.
In this episode of the Northbound Podcast, Chris breaks down why leadership usually fails: not because of bad intentions, but because self-awareness is missing. You'll learn how blind spots hide behind confidence, how power quietly shuts down honesty, and how "that's just how they are" becomes a culture that protects the wrong things.
Chris introduces the idea of "buffoon busting"—practical leadership work focused on identifying blind spots, auditing your language, building feedback loops, and creating a culture where clarity replaces chaos. This isn't about shaming leaders. It's about removing what's in the way so you can lead boldly, humbly, and with real credibility.
Main Points-
What "buffoon" really means
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Not malicious, not stupid—often confident and well-intentioned.
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The problem is impact without awareness (power used casually, language used carelessly).
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"I didn't mean it that way" doesn't erase harm.
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How blind spots form
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Blind spots don't announce themselves—they often look like confidence.
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Power distorts feedback: the more power you have, the less truth you get.
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Silence can become fake approval; laughter can replace honesty.
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Culture can calcify bad behavior
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"That's just how he is" / "She didn't mean it like that" protects dysfunction.
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Sometimes the "dirt bag" truly doesn't know—because no one tells them.
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Common blind spot categories
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Language blind spots: "Relax, it was a joke," "You're too sensitive," "That's not what I meant" (invalidating/gaslighting).
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Gender & identity blind spots: talking over, dismissing until repeated, mansplaining, commenting on tone/appearance instead of substance.
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Emotional authority blind spots: using "intuition" to exclude; reframing dissent as ego/aggression; shutting down pushback.
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Control confusion: mistaking leadership for control instead of creating belonging.
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Leadership behaviors that reveal blind spots
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"Open door" leaders who punish honesty.
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Favoritism disguised as trust (rewarding yes-people).
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Asking for feedback but immediately defending or demanding examples to dismiss.
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If feedback feels threatening, the blind spot is already active.
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The Northbound way forward
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Being the buffoon isn't the failure—staying the buffoon is.
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Replace certainty with curiosity:
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"I missed that." "Tell me more." "What am I not seeing?"
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Audit language, watch who goes quiet, notice who never challenges you.
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Build structures: feedback loops, language/power audits, role play, coaching, "leadership mirror" sessions.
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Course / next steps
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"Buffoon busting" course includes checklists, feedback sheets, deeper videos, and optional 1:1 Zoom coaching.
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Focus: build a culture where clarity replaces crisis and chaos.
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Leadership breakdown is usually a self-awareness problem, not an intent problem.
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Power reduces honesty—leaders must design feedback back into their world.
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"That's just how they are" is a cultural excuse that protects dysfunction.
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Dissent isn't disloyalty—shutting it down creates blind spots and resentment.
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Credibility grows when leaders can say:
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"I was wrong." "I'm sorry." "Help me understand."
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If nobody challenges you, that's not peace—that's data.
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