Serve to Lead: The Trait That Sets Great Leaders Apart

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Alejandro Luthe

By Alejandro Luthe

Director, IPADE

 

In an environment where leadership is so often measured in figures, control, and velocity, an uncomfortable but necessary question demands an answer: what truly distinguishes those who lead with lasting impact? From the humanist tradition of IPADE, this reflection begins with a clear conviction: the company is not merely a productive organization, but a community of people oriented toward a worthwhile purpose.

Within that framework, the executive ceases to be a distant authority and becomes someone who inspires, accompanies, and enables. As Carlos Llano argued, authority is not conferred by decree — it is earned through service. Not as an occasional gesture, but as a profoundly human way of exercising leadership.

Leaders who place themselves at the center generate rigid structures, a fear of failure, and relationships that never deepen beyond the transactional.

Cultivating service as a leadership philosophy — placing mission and people at the heart of every decision — is a way of directing with clarity, principled firmness, and genuine human proximity. It is an approach that tends to replicate itself outward, into families and communities alike.

A reflection that speaks directly to the executives, entrepreneurs, and decision-makers who understand that leading well is no longer sufficient — one must also know why, and for whom.

Read the full reflection in the current edition of Elite Business.

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