Leadership Is Not What You Intend but What Others Experience, Ciaran Casey Author

Leadership Is Not What You Intend but What Others Experience, Ciaran Casey Author

Author: Irish Tech News April 23, 2026 Duration: 6:38
Ciaran Casey has spent more than three decades working in leadership across sectors and geographies, yet his central argument is disarmingly simple. Leadership, he suggests, is not something a person possesses. It is something that happens between people.
Casey's book, Leadership in Tune: Cultivating Impact Through Connection, which will be published on May 27th, reflects both his professional experience and a period of deeper reflection. Having moved into leadership development in recent years, he found himself revisiting ideas he had encountered throughout his career, this time grounding them in lived experience. What emerged was a growing curiosity about a persistent gap.
"I have never met anybody who set out to be a bad leader," he says. "People come into leadership with good intentions, and yet the experience in the workplace does not reflect that."
The data supports his observation. Levels of engagement remain stubbornly low, with only a minority of employees fully invested in their work. Trust fluctuates, and organisational change often fails to deliver its intended outcomes. For Casey, the explanation lies not in a lack of effort, but in a misunderstanding of what leadership is.
Leadership tips with Ciaran Casey, Author
"We have a gap between good intentions and what people are experiencing," he says.
That gap becomes the starting point for a reframing. Leadership, in Casey's view, does not reside within an individual. It emerges only when an offer of direction or support is recognised and accepted by others.
"Leadership lives in the relational space between human beings," he says.
This shift has significant implications. It moves the focus away from personal traits such as charisma or authority, and towards experience. A leader is not defined by what they intend, but by how they are perceived.
"That shift is very significant, because it describes leadership as how it is experienced, not what someone has inside them," he says.
The consequences are both practical and inclusive. If leadership is defined by interaction rather than personality, the pool of potential leaders expands. Those who might previously have excluded themselves from leadership roles begin to see a different path.
Casey is particularly interested in the everyday moments that shape that experience. Leadership is not constructed through grand gestures, but through repeated interactions that build trust and connection.
"It is not about big speeches. It is about lots of moments, and how we interact with people in those moments," he says.
Central to this is the concept of attunement, the ability to read and respond to others with awareness and intention. In practice, this requires presence, attention and a willingness to engage beyond the surface of conversation.
"The greatest gift you can give another human being is your undivided attention," he says.
That attention extends beyond words. It includes tone, expression and the subtle signals that shape how communication is received. For Casey, leaders cannot afford to operate on autopilot. They must become conscious of how they show up in each interaction.
The emphasis on presence reflects a broader concern. As organisations become more data-driven, there is a risk that leadership becomes overly focused on measurement and outcomes, at the expense of relationships.
"We are obsessed with measuring things, and that risks moving us away from the relational practice of leadership," he says.
Yet for Casey, outcomes remain important. Leadership, ultimately, is about getting things done. The distinction lies in how those outcomes are achieved.
"Leadership is about making things happen through relationships," he says.
This framing introduces a second dimension to his thinking. If leadership is relational, it is also inherently linked to coordination. The need for leadership arises not from hierarchy, but from the need to align people towards shared goals.
"If we did not need to coordinate, we would not need leader...

Ever find yourself wishing you could keep up with the latest tech developments but your eyes are tired from staring at screens all day? Irish Tech News Audio Articles offers a straightforward solution by transforming written journalism into an accessible listening experience. This podcast delivers clear, narrated versions of the very articles published by the Irish Tech News team, covering everything from startup culture and innovation in Ireland to global trends in software, hardware, and digital policy. It’s designed for the commute, the gym, or those moments when you simply want to rest your eyes without disconnecting from the tech world. Each episode is a direct audio conversion, meaning you get the full depth and detail of the original reporting, just in a different format. Tune in to stay informed on the dynamic intersection of technology and business, all through the convenience of your favourite podcast app. Whether you're a industry professional, a keen enthusiast, or just curious about how technology is shaping society, this series brings the news feed directly to your ears.
Author: Language: en-gb Episodes: 50

Irish Tech News Audio Articles
Podcast Episodes
HCS invests €13.2M and creates 125 jobs [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 4:05
HCS, the Irish IT managed services and digital transformation company, has announced an investment of €13.2 million in the business by 2028 as it creates 125 new jobs, expands its footprint, and enhances its service offe…
NASA JPL, Ubotica and Open Cosmos collaboration [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 4:47
Ubotica Technologies and Open Cosmos have announced an agreement with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) to collaborate on the Flight Demonstration of Federated Autonomous MEasurement (FAME), under the Advanced Infor…
Harnessing AI: Ideas into Action for EU Innovation Month [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 4:00
Ireland welcomes the announcement of European AI Innovation Month, taking place from Dublin 14 October to Brussels 17 November 2026, a Europe-wide programme of events dedicated to accelerating artificial intelligence inn…