The Career-Ending Mistakes 73% of Leaders Never See Coming

Discover the five ethical blind spots that have destroyed brilliant careers—and the 3-minute audit that can protect yours.

A solitary business figure stands at the center of a crossroads, illuminated by golden light against a backdrop of converging steel-blue pathways, symbolizing ethical decision points in leadership.

It Never Starts with a Big Decision

“There wasn’t one big moment where I chose to compromise my values.”

Those words came from a C-suite executive whose career lay in ruins; not from a single dramatic failure, but from a thousand tiny decisions he never recognized as ethical crossroads.

Here’s what research reveals: 73% of ethical failures in organizations stem from a failure to recognize the ethical dimension of a business decision—not from deliberate misconduct.

The problem isn’t that leaders lack moral intent. It’s that they have blind spots.

And by the time most leaders see them, it’s already too late.

Inside This Free Guide

The Business Decision Disguise

How ethical issues hide behind "that's just how our industry works"—and the one question that exposes them instantly

The Thousand Small Steps

Why "just this once" is the most dangerous phrase in business, and how to recognize when you're on a slippery slope

The Gray Area Fog

The difference between genuine complexity and using ambiguity as an excuse to avoid courage

The Loyalty Trap

How to tell whether you're being loyal to a person or complicit in their actions

The "I'm Powerless" Illusion

What an ancient Jewish exile in a corrupt Persian empire can teach you about influence without authority

BONUS: The 3-Minute Ethical Audit

A quick assessment you can use before any major decision

This Guide Is For You If...

Your Next Ethical Crossroads Is Coming

You won’t get a warning. It won’t announce itself with neon signs.

It will look like a scheduling problem. A judgment call. A favor for a colleague. “Just business.”

The leaders who navigate these moments successfully aren’t smarter or more moral than those who fail. They’ve simply learned to see what others miss.

This guide will help you see it first.

Name

Check your email – download link inside. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.