I remember exactly what I was wearing that morning.
A green, black, and white geometric wrap dress. The kind you feel put-together in.
I had gotten up early to swing by my office at the Bellagio — I needed to grab the binders my boss had asked me to bring to our 8 a.m. meeting. I hadn’t gone home the night before with enough time to pack them up, so I went in early, stacked everything, and drove over.
My gas light was on, but I knew I had enough to get there.
I was that kind of prepared.
When I arrived, her assistant was acting slightly off. I noticed it, but I didn’t register it. Her office door was closed, so I sat in the waiting area with the binders in my lap.
They called me in.
She was there. So was HR.
I set the binders on the desk — dropped them, really — and said: “Well. I guess we won’t be needing these.”
And then something interesting happened.
While they started talking — explaining, outlining the terms — I wasn’t fully listening.
Not because I didn’t care. But because I was having a completely different conversation in my head.
I don’t like working for this guy anyway.
I already knew I wasn’t going to stay.
This might actually be okay.
That internal conversation mattered. But I’ll come back to it.
Because the real turning point wasn’t that morning.
It was weeks earlier. In my own office.
If this is resonating with you, save this — you may want to come back to it later.
My new boss had come over from another location. We were in my office, going through projects and priorities. The kind of working conversation you have when you’re trying to stay aligned with someone you didn’t choose.
At some point, his tone shifted. It got sharper. Edged.
And I thought: This isn’t okay.
So I said something. I told him his tone wasn’t acceptable.
He stopped.
Corrected it.
We moved on.
In the moment, it felt like a small win. I’d addressed something real. He adjusted. That was that.
But it wasn’t that.
Because that interaction didn’t stay in my office. It became part of how I was being seen at a level I wasn’t paying close enough attention to.
I was managing the moment. I wasn’t managing the longer picture.
Part of why is simple: I didn’t have a clear, consistent view of the value I was bringing or how it was landing at the leadership level. I was executing. I was delivering. But I wasn’t stepping back to ask — what story is forming about me up there, and am I shaping it?
That’s exactly why I now have leaders use a simple system — what I call the Value Vault — to make their value visible and track how it’s being experienced, not just delivered. When you have that clarity, you show up differently in high-stakes moments. Not just more strategically, but more grounded.
If I were in that situation today, I wouldn’t ignore what happened in my office. I would still address the tone.
But I would do it differently, in a way that maintained the relationship, kept the conversation productive, and accounted for the broader dynamic at play. Being right in the moment was never the goal. Being effective over time is.
Here’s what I understand now that I didn’t then:
Leadership isn’t just how you handle the work. It’s how you handle the moments around the work. The tone of a conversation. The way you respond under pressure. How you navigate tension with someone who has more authority. Those moments carry weight whether you intend them to or not.
Most people think career shifts happen because of big, visible decisions.
But often, they’re shaped by smaller moments, interactions that seem isolated, but aren’t.
And if you’re not paying attention to those moments…
you can miss what’s changing around you entirely.
Confidence was never the lever.
Awareness, positioning, and visibility are.
P.S. Here’s a link to download the Value Vault — a simple Wins Tracker to help you document and communicate your impact.:
