The LUMA Leadership Readiness Model

How Emerging Leaders Develop Real Leadership Capability

In many organisations, leadership potential is easy to recognise.

A technically strong engineer begins to take initiative within projects. A project manager becomes the person others turn to when situations become complex. A high-performing specialist consistently delivers results and is trusted by colleagues.

Promotion often follows.

These individuals are asked to lead teams, influence decisions, or take on broader responsibility. The assumption is often that strong performance will naturally translate into strong leadership.

Yet for many emerging leaders, the transition can feel unexpectedly challenging.

While their technical expertise is well established, the broader demands of leadership can feel far less familiar. Influencing others, navigating ambiguity, making decisions that affect teams or departments — these responsibilities require capabilities that may not have been part of their earlier career experience.

This is not a reflection of individual capability.

Instead, it highlights something more structural about how leadership development is often approached.

Over many years working with emerging leaders across technical and engineering organisations, one pattern appears repeatedly:

Insight alone rarely changes leadership behaviour.

Understanding leadership concepts or receiving feedback about personal style can be valuable. However, insight by itself does not always translate into confidence, capability or readiness.

This observation became the starting point for what is now known as the LUMA Leadership Readiness Model.

The challenge: insight without behavioural change

Many leadership development initiatives are designed around increasing awareness.

Participants complete psychometric assessments, receive feedback about their leadership strengths, and attend workshops exploring topics such as communication, influence or strategic thinking.

These experiences can provide meaningful insights. Leaders may leave a session with a deeper understanding of their behavioural tendencies or a clearer picture of how they would ideally like to lead.

However, a common gap often remains between awareness and application.

Leaders may understand what effective leadership looks like yet still feel uncertain about how to enact it in real situations.

For example, emerging leaders frequently report questions such as:

  • How do I influence someone more senior than me?
  • How do I challenge a decision constructively?
  • What if I make the wrong call?
  • Do I really understand the business well enough to lead others?

These questions are not unusual. Research consistently shows that many individuals promoted into leadership roles experience a period of uncertainty as they adapt to new expectations and responsibilities (Hill, 2003).

The reason is simple: leadership development rarely happens along a single dimension.

Effective leadership requires capability across multiple areas simultaneously.

The LUMA Leadership Readiness Model

Through observation and experience supporting emerging leaders, three interconnected areas consistently appeared to shape leadership readiness.

These became the foundation of the LUMA Leadership Readiness Model.

Leadership capability develops across three key domains:

  • Self
  • Others
  • Business

Each represents a different dimension of leadership capability. While these areas can be explored individually, leadership readiness tends to emerge when they develop together.

Figure 1: The LUMA Leadership Readiness Model — leadership capability develops through the interaction of Self, Others and Business.

Self: the foundation of leadership

Leadership always begins with understanding oneself.

Before leaders can effectively influence others or navigate complex organisational environments, they need clarity about their own behavioural tendencies and leadership identity.

Self-awareness involves recognising:

  • personal strengths and preferences
  • behavioural patterns under pressure
  • underlying motivations and values
  • how others experience one’s leadership style

Research continues to highlight self-awareness as a foundational leadership capability. Leaders who demonstrate greater awareness of their behaviour are more likely to adapt their leadership approach and build stronger relationships with colleagues (Eurich, 2018).

However, self-awareness alone is not enough.

Insight must eventually translate into behavioural choice.

Others: leadership is fundamentally relational

One of the most significant shifts individuals experience when moving into leadership roles is the realisation that success depends less on personal expertise and more on the ability to work effectively through others.

In early career stages, performance is often measured by individual output.

As leadership responsibility increases, success becomes increasingly relational.

Leaders must build trust, influence stakeholders, support team members and create environments where people can perform at their best.

Research into leadership effectiveness consistently emphasises the importance of relational capabilities such as emotional intelligence, empathy and trust-building (Boyatzis & McKee, 2005).

Business: developing leadership judgement

While leadership is deeply relational, it also requires the ability to navigate the broader organisational system.

For many emerging leaders — particularly those in technical or specialist roles — this can be one of the most challenging aspects of leadership development.

Leadership decisions often require balancing competing priorities, navigating ambiguity and making judgements without complete information.

Developing business judgement involves learning how to:

  • understand organisational context
  • recognise competing priorities
  • interpret complex information
  • make thoughtful decisions despite uncertainty
  • align team activities with broader strategic goals

How leadership capability develops

While the three domains of Self, Others and Business can be explored individually, leadership readiness typically emerges through their interaction.

  • Increased self-awareness may improve how a leader handles difficult conversations.
  • Stronger relationships may create opportunities to influence broader decisions.
  • Deeper business understanding may increase confidence when leading teams.

For example, a technically strong engineer may initially rely heavily on personal expertise to solve problems. As leadership capability develops across Self, Others and Business, they begin to step back, ask more questions and involve their team in shaping solutions.

Over time, their role shifts from solving every problem personally to creating the conditions where others can contribute and perform at their best.

Within the LUMA model, leadership development tends to follow a gradual progression:

Insight → Application → Capability → Readiness

Leaders first gain new insight into their behaviour, relationships and organisational context. They then begin to apply that insight in real situations. Through repeated practice and reflection, these new behaviours gradually strengthen into capability. Over time, this growing capability leads to greater leadership readiness.

This reflects the reality that meaningful leadership change rarely happens through a single learning event. Instead, it develops through experience, reflection and ongoing practice.

Why structured leadership development matters

Without structured support, many emerging leaders must navigate this journey largely on their own.

Organisations can accelerate leadership development by creating environments where leaders have opportunities to reflect, experiment and learn from experience.

  • structured opportunities for reflection and feedback
  • coaching conversations that challenge thinking
  • opportunities to apply learning between sessions
  • involvement of line managers or mentors
  • space to reflect on real leadership challenges

The thinking behind LUMA

The LUMA Leadership Readiness Model forms the foundation of the Fuel Your Potential leadership journey.

The programme was designed to support technically strong professionals as they step into broader leadership responsibility.

Rather than focusing solely on theoretical leadership concepts, the approach integrates development across the three domains of Self, Others and Business.

Leadership readiness as a journey

Leadership readiness rarely appears as a single moment of transformation.

Leadership readiness develops gradually as insight and experience begin to align.

More often, it emerges gradually as individuals integrate insight with experience.

When development across Self, Others and Business begins to align, leadership capability often expands rapidly.

The LUMA Leadership Readiness Model provides a simple way to understand this process and support emerging leaders as they move from potential to effective leadership.

Learn more

If you’re interested in learning more about the Fuel Your Potential leadership journey, you can explore the programme here:

Explore the programme →

Get in touch

Share This Insight