Why Empathy Fails as a Leadership Strategy — And How to Use It Without Losing Control
Empathy isn’t the problem.
The problem is what leaders do with it.
When empathy becomes an end in itself, it replaces accountability with accommodation. Managers become therapists for system failures they no longer have the authority to fix.
High-performing enterprises don’t confuse understanding people with running the enterprise. They use empathy as a diagnostic tool — to identify friction, enforce standards, and protect performance. Anything less turns leadership into an emotional concierge service.
That’s why the Woods HR Power Model™ makes empathy a control point in the enterprise operating system — so it drives execution, not excuses.
The HR Power Model™: What Comes After Ulrich
Most CHROs weren’t hired to redesign the system—they were hired to protect it. The Ulrich model gave HR structure, but it quietly disempowered the function. It taught HR to align, not to intervene. What we need now isn’t refinement. It’s replacement.
In this new article, I introduce The HR Power Model™—a bold redesign of HR’s role, authority, and purpose. This isn’t about influence. It’s about power. And we’re done asking for permission.